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This article is written in
American English, which has its own spelling conventions (color, defense, traveled) and some terms that are used in it may be different or absent from other
varieties of English. According to the
relevant style guide, this should not be changed without
broad consensus.
Abortion terminology
I have no problem using "pro-life" or "pro-choice" if it's in quotation marks (which we can easily do here). However, we should not use it in Wikipedia's own voice, because these terms are euphemisms/political terms that are not used by the majority of cited sources. (In fact, it is these terms that are "politically correct" - they serve to obscure rather than enlighten).
The Washington Post, New York Times, Philadelphia Inquirer, CNN, NBC, CBS don't use either of those terms (see
here). Nor does NPR (see
here). Nor does the Wall Street Journal, which says: "The stylebook also advises that abortion rights is the preferred term, instead of the edgy pro-life and pro-choice, which should be used only in quotations. But antiabortion (as in antiabortion advocate and antiabortion campaigner) is considered a neutral term in the stylebook" (
link).
Neutralitytalk 21:42, 19 June 2017 (UTC)reply