User talk:72.230.135.241

deadname
You are mistaken about the grammar here. "One holds one's beliefs", not "I, you, he, they hold(s) one's beliefs". If you object to the singular "their" then you should be changing it to "his/her". However, singular "their" has also been acceptable practice in English for many centuries. Equinox ◑ 15:09, 20 November 2015 (UTC)

I know of no English style manual or guidelines that suggests of using the singular "their" is acceptable, except informally. Having read many texts from the 19th and early 20th Centuries, I have seldom encountered a published example where "their" was used to refer to a singular person. As it was, I thought "one's" sounded less stilted than "he or she," hence the change I made. But if that is not considered correct, and "their" is deemed to be more acceptable in this case, so be it.