The following comment was posted, showing how Trump’s list of banned words could be used creatively.
Psychology professor here. My new email sig is below. Feel free to borrow or adapt (no attribution needed). My version has all the banned words in bold italic purple. (But the bold italic purple disappeared when the comment was posted.)
Join me, activists and advocates, in the project of smashing barriers, interrupting oppression, searching out our own biases, respecting pronouns, increasing diversity, equity, and inclusion in the workplace, and fighting for social justice. Let us join in allyship and provide culturally responsive, identity-affirming care to marginalized, underserved, and/or vulnerable populations. We will think historically and systemically from an intersectional, feminist, anti-racist, anti-colonial position. We will celebrate our diverse backgrounds and cultural differences. We will fight for accessible mental health care and embrace climate science. We will challenge institutional racism and call out hate speech. We will not tolerate discrimination against people, whether the discriminatory words or actions are based on race, ethnicity, citizenship, country of origin, sex, gender, sexual preference, (dis)ability, religious beliefs, socioeconomic status, or any other aspects of our cultural identities. We are a nation of indigenous people and immigrants. Harm to one of us is harm to all of us. WE WILL NOT BE SILENCED — especially in and around the Gulf of Mexico.

Very clever! We should have a contest to see who can find all the banned words, lol.
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Nicely done!
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Well done!! Made me smile – and made me sad too, to know how real this is…..
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DIANE and ALL: They should know better than to tell Americans they cannot use this or that word–I mean look what happens with banned books–“How to boost sales in the USA–get your book banned.”
But banning words is folly anyway on philosophical grounds–and it just reveals how very shallow they are (probably Russell Vought’s idea–probably never heard of a metaphor).
It’s not the word, however; it’s the meaning(s), and meanings move around–the same word can have multiple meanings depending on that other little word: context and usage. Their own oh-so-common use of Orwell’s double-speak testifies to that point. (Speaking of the lack of self-reflection.)
I want to say to the person who started that whole idea: “Are you STUPID? or what?” Oh well. My neck is getting a good round of exercise here–my head is going back and forth, back and forth–all the while my lip coils, then comes the laughter. (Boing, boing, boing.) CBK
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Addendum: A case in point . . . in Trumplandia, Good means Bad, and Bad means Good–and that list gets longer every day.
And now I cannot think of “Alice in Wonderland” without thinking of Trumplandia–it changed its meaning. It must be a real feather in Trump’s hat (rather than on a bird) that people write books about how ignorant he is that will be around long after he dies. How ironic–he closes libraries and people write more books. CBK
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