Here on zoochat, we're often implored to "listen to the experts" when it comes to conservation, husbandry, taxonomy, etc...
So why not listen to the experts when it comes to social injustice too? And it seems to me that those who have experienced those injustices their whole lives -- and over multiple generations -- are indeed the experts. If they say that the names are a barrier -- whether that be individual names of particularly bad historical figures, or the entire racist/ sexist/ imperialist naming schema as a whole -- then why not defer to them on this, their field of expertise?
Indeed, I wonder if the insistence on not deferring is itself a part of the larger problem. We know that science, and conservation, and zookeeping are all fields that share in the same troubled past that these bird names do (as does nearly everything else in our societies, of course). So if we want -- and need -- allies for conservation, then why not start with a show of good faith?
This seems like it would be an even easier decision for anyone who believes that the names are "trivial" or "tilting at windmills". After all, isn't the first rule of negotiation to give in on things you don't care about as much, to build good will towards the things you really do care about? And doesn't the refusal to give up the old-white-guy names send a signal that those names, and the collective history that they represent, are actually an important part of your current project, rather than a trivial part of the past?
At which point, the title of this thread (Reckoning with the Racist Past of Bird Names) really does begin to take us into reckoning with the racist Present of science, of conservation, of social responsibility.
You and I might feel there is a huge break between the old science that wanted to name all the animals and the new science that wants to conserve all the animals. But if it looks to others like we're clinging to those old-white-guy names, then we may need to ask ourselves how much of a break there really was. Or if there's actually been one at all.
It's well and good to say we're in a crisis and we need immediate action (sentiments that I agree with, by the way). But since that's the case, why not listen to communities who have been in crisis for centuries, to learn how they survived, and what they recommend. People who can see how the "ecosystems" of power and knowledge and oppression are intertwined in ways that may not be as obvious to those who haven't had that experience. People whose pain has been caused by some of the very same factors that have caused our climate predicament and our extinction predicament.
Yes, we are in an urgent ecological crisis. And we're going to be in one for a long time. I doubt that any of us on these forums would dream of discouraging a young child from pursuing a career in science or conservation, just because we have a crisis now that they can't immediately fix. So why would we leave in place a set of naming conventions that have the same impact? What are we saying about ourselves and our priorities if we let that happen? What are we telling people about what conservation is? And who it is for? And who it is meant to benefit?
TLDR: There's an old saying that there is honor among thieves. Apparently there are honorifics among thieves too! If we want to convince marginalized communities that science and conservation have truly given up their prior thieving ways, perhaps dropping the thieving names is a place to start.