Tipsheet

Why Liberals Using 'Latinx' to Describe Latinos Is a Symptom of a Larger Problem

There has been a recent trend among progressive liberals who insist on using "Latinx" to describe the Latino community at large and it's a symptom of larger problem. The problem is they are looking down at a group for their backward way of life while using them to bludgeon conservatives.

Searching on Twitter, you'll find an endless amount of verified users using "Latinx," the gender neutral term for Latino, since the Spanish language is gendered and skewed towards the masculine side. A group of all females would be referred to as "Latinas," but all it takes is one male to be part of the group and it would then be referred to as "Latinos."

According to progressives, this is a problem. Now there are Latinos who have adopted the new label and it would certainly be different if there was a large reckoning within Spanish-speaking countries on changing the very foundation of their language, but that's not the case since Twitter is not entirely representative of the real world.

Even progressive pollsters found a whopping 98% would label themselves as something other than "Latinx." Because that's the thing, there's already a gender neutral term for us: Hispanic. There's also just describing yourself as your country of origin or where you draw your heritage from. Progressives are trying to solve a problem that does not exist to score woke points from other races.

Credit: ThinkNow

If using "Latinx" would be beneficial to your political aspirations, it has yet to be realized. Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) officially dropped out on Thursday after not winning a single state. While the reasons why she performed poorly are many, clearly going all in on "Latinx" did not help.

Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-WA) even boasted about how strong Sen. Bernie Sanders' (D-VT) support was among the Latino community, and he does so without using "Latinx."

It's smart for Sanders to not use the term as Warren did because, as demonstrated above, the vast majority of Hispanics do not use the term and it looks like a white person subtly telling them that the language they use at home or at work is inherently sexist and to vote for them to help solve this problem that was unknown to them. Quite the winning message for a growing electorate.

It also ignores that it is a (non)issue the Hispanic community does not care about. They care about healthcare, immigration reform, and economic progress, which is why Sanders is winning them over with his message, though Trump is winning them over for similar reasons.

So while a very small, yet vocal, minority use "Latinx,"it's not an actual thing within the Latino community and it's condescending to pretend otherwise.