I am making no such claim otherwise, Sci. As I said, if others (I'd used Europe as an example) don't want to use "AD/BC", fine. I just happen to think it's being a bit overly sensitive,
It's overly-sensitive for a Jew not to want to be pressured into using a phrase that declares Jesus to be her Lord?
To put it another way:
Let's say that history unfolded differently. Instead of the Christian civilizations of Europe experiencing the Renaissance and then engaging in a global quest for colonies, wealth, and domination, defeating the Islamic civilizations in the quest for global power, let's say that the Islamic world won. Let's say that the Islamic civilizations eventually colonized and dominated Europe in the same way the European civilizations did to the Middle East, and colonized North and South America, and dominated Asia for centuries, etc. And let's say that they had their own Enlightenment, and their own wars over colonies, and that things are generally roughly similar to how they are today. Most people in America are Muslim, most Muslims are about as tolerant of non-Muslims as Christians in America are in real life, and there's a minority population of Christians and Jews.
Now, because damn near everyone uses the
Islamic calender. Religious institutions, government, civic organizations, businesses, secular organizations, etc. It's just the all-pervasive calender that everyone uses. And let's say that this Islamic America used a parallel year naming scheme; instead of "in the Year of Our Lord," they used the phrase, "in the Year of Allah," dating from the Hijra. (The real Islamic calender, when adapted to Western languages, uses the Latin phrase "anno Hegirae," "in the Year of the Hijra," but I'm altering that so it's a closer parallel.)
Now, if you're a Christian living in this Islamic alternate history, wouldn't you resent being pressured to use a phrase that declares belief in Islamic theology? If you lived in yet another alternate history, say, one where America is dominated by Hindus, wouldn't you object if you were pressured to use a phrase meaning "in the Year of our Lord Brahmin?" Wouldn't you prefer to use a phrase like "Common Era," that lets you use the same calender system the rest of society uses, but which doesn't pressure you to declare a god in which you don't believe to be your lord?