I feel the same way as well. Not a fan of the dot/feather thing and don’t use it. Though since they did strip my college of it’s feather for being the Tribe, I suppose that’s now an un-PC thing to say as well.
A lot of newer history books seem to be using “Amerindian.” Native American always seemed like a poor descriptor to me. You end up with sentences like “The Battle of Horseshoe bend was fought between the Americans and the Native Americans, although some Native Americans fought with the Americans against the Native Americans who were fighting the Americans.” I can’t speak for the Amerindian community, but I assume that Indian isn’t considered an offensive term for the same reason that Deutsche people don’t resent being called Germans.
It sounds like the issue there is not that the word “Indian” is offensive (if “American Indian” is okay then “Indian” on its own can’t be that bad), but rather that it causes confusion. Madison at least does have a sizable Indian-from-India population.
Please also note that the UW-Extension is not a university, it provides educational programs for the general public. “The University of Wisconsin” would refer to either my alma mater, the University of Wisconsin-Madison, or to the statewide university system. This PDF has nothing to do with instruction or policies at Wisconsin universities. I can’t find that it is linked to from anywhere on the UW-Extension website either – even running a search doesn’t produce it. I’m guessing this is an orphan file leftover from some diversity seminar.
If I hear that a woman is fragile, I think she has osteoporosis or something. And they don’t really define it otherwise, since they skirt around describing the offensive definition. Is it maybe referring to the stereotypical difference in physical strength? Or worse, some idea that women are more emotional so you can be more harsh to men?