See original article: Everyday words and phrases that have racist connotations

Here’s a perfect example of how to snap your fingers and make some innocuous phrase racist:
CNN “reports” that the real-estate term master bedroom is racist. How? Let’s hear their explanation:
“The phrase “master bedroom” first appeared in the 1926 Sears catalog, according to the real estate blog Trelora. It was a feature of a $4,398 Dutch colonial home, the most expensive in the catalog, referring to a large second floor bedroom with a private bathroom.
“‘Master bedrooms’ were more widely implemented in American homes after World War II, intended to give working parents a private space within their own homes, Trelora notes.
“While it’s unclear whether the term is rooted in American slavery on plantations, it evokes that history.”
Okay, lemme get this straight: There’s no record of the term master bedroom appearing before 1926; its first recorded use and every use since has been a real estate term referring to the biggest bedroom in the house, often with its own bathroom.
But that doesn’t matter. There’s no evidence linking it to slavery or plantations, but it doesn’t matter. The word master is hereby branded racist and nothing but racist. Retroactively, even.
The term master bedroom doesn’t evoke slavery. CSS evokes it.
Congratulations to CNN, today’s Daily Duh Award winner!
