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Friday, October 05, 2007
Paul Greenberg :: Townhall.com Columnist
Minds Running in Idle
by Paul Greenberg
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Will the Dems' health care Christmas Present to America be an improvement or detriment to our health care system?


Alexander Kuzmin, the young can-do mayor of an oil town in Siberia, has barred his staff from using certain phrases. They’re the kind that have become the bane of citizens who have to deal with bureaucrats anywhere.

For example: “I don’t know,” “I can’t,” and “It’s not my job.” Plus a dozen or so others. They’ll be familiar to anyone who’s had to deal with bureaucrats in this country, too. Or at least their lackluster spirit will be. There’s that old standby, “We’ll get back to you.” And my own personal favorite: “I just work here.”

Any staffers who give folks the run-around in Mayor Kuzmin’s town “will near the moment of their departure” from city hall, warns the mayor.

What a pity the offending phrases themselves can’t be fired from the language.

Any editor will have his own, ever-growing list of annoying banalities that he’s grown tired of blue-penciling — from moribund metaphors (ducks in a row) to suspect superlatives (the best and brightest).

Robert Hartwell Fiske, the perpetually irritated author of “The Dimwit’s Dictionary” has compiled a long list — indeed, whole books — of such dimwitticisms. No wonder he always seems in a foul mood. Imagine spending a lifetime compiling examples of language gone stale.

Joseph Epstein, who may be the best essayist America has going at the moment, has called Fiske “a fanatic, an extremist who apparently believes that clear language is our only hope for clear thought, that dull language deadens the mind and dampens the imagination….” Or as Mr. Epstein sums it up, hackneyed language just plain makes life drearier than it ought to be.

I’ve never met the gentleman, but Mr. Fiske sounds like my kind of guy. I picture him perpetually banging his head on his desk as he reads this stuff. There’s something to be said for that reaction. It relieves frustration, restores the circulation, and may not be nearly as painful as quietly enduring a cliche that was fresh in about 700 B.C. No wonder editors walk around with that punch-drunk look.

Some writers seem to think only in a chain of cliches, as if they had lost the capacity for original thought or experience. When suspect phrases are used together, or maybe even woven into one endless loop of non-thought, they’re particularly deadening:

“He got his ducks in a row so everyone would be reading from the same page in response to the hue and cry from the administration’s best and brightest.”

That’s the sound of language, and therefore thought, running in idle.

Then there’s the popularity of overused punctuation, like the ubiquitous quotation marks that now smudge the language like flyspecks. They show up on signs, in contemporary prose, in ads, and even in the air (air quotes). They’re used for purposes for which they were never intended, including emphasis.

The other day, those inverted commas popped up in a letter from John White, chancellor of the University of Arkansas’ Fayetteville campus, to its newly hired Athletic Director, Jeff Long:

“You will recall our discussion of the special role Razorback athletics plays for the State of Arkansas,” wrote the chancellor. “Arkansans consider themselves ‘winners’ when the Razorbacks win….”

Why the superfluous quotes around winners — to indicate skepticism? That’s why they’re sometimes called scare quotes or sneer quotes. But surely that’s not the purpose in this case. Any outward show of skepticism on the chancellor’s part about the central place of football, our state religion, in Arkansas’ psyche would be heresy.

Maybe the quotes are there to signal that the chancellor is using a metaphor — lest we be too dense to realize it on our own.

Or maybe, as I suspect, the chancellor in his own vague way is using the quotation marks around “winner” to indicate more than just success in an athletic contest but a whole attitude toward life — an attitude that encompasses not just winning a game but pride, achievement and confidence in general. As in a winning personality.

If that’s what he meant, why not say so? For the same reason teenagers of all ages take refuge in mental shorthand (“whatever”) when words fail.

Am I making too much of the importance of language? I don’t think anyone can. On that subject, I share Robert Hartwell Fiske’s fanaticism.

By now quotation marks are used out of habit, just for the heckuvit — not only around a direct quotation, where they belong, but as decoration in general. Like so many curlicues on Victorian houses, furniture, stationery, anything. They have become the most over-used and under-needed of all our linguistic symbols, spreading like a plague of measles, settling over the language like a swarm of gnats.

It’s all enough to make an editor wish that, like the mayor of a little Siberian oil town, he had the power to ban annoying linguistic habits. Perhaps if Mayor Kuzmin ever tires of his day job, he could apply for one as night copy editor for a morning paper. He seems to understand the problem.

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Agreement
Well Mr. Greenburg, here is at least one agreement and comment.

I am solidly on your side. It is sheer work to read the writings of morons (of which we have many) and to listen to the conversations of the young.

We aren't going to change it though, it is a done process, a done deal, a deal done gone bad, and whatever.

guilty
'I' 'tend' to "overuse" quotes I 'guess'. :-)

"African-American" is another indicator of lazy reporting. I remember that an African-American hair was found in Nichole Brown's driveway. I heard a witness state on television news that he saw an Africa-American male near a scene. Tell me, how does a hair or a man's appearance determine citizenship?

Don't get me started on the misuse of the word only.

listen closely to the news and throw up. These people are supposed to be pros.

It doesn't matter if
you ban the use of these phrases and words. That's like getting rid of the symptoms of a cold by taking various OTC products to eliminate sniffles. You remove the indicator but leave the underlying problem., the government bureaucrat.

Look at out current congress and how they label things. Children’s health care for poor people means children up to 25 years old and poor is up to $80,000.00. Wouldn’t it be wonderful if they defined poor that way for paying taxes?

Other examples include agencies like the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC). They are supposed to be dedicated to equal opportunity but instead they push quotas, set-asides, and unequal opportunity in an effort to achieve equal outcome.

If we used real words and phrases now instead of Orwellian Newspeak, the Democratic Party would be called the Communist(D) Party. That is how we have been labeling them in other columns.

Here's one for you.
How about void where prohibited? Does it mean that you should look for signs that say VOIDING PROHIBITED and void there? Will the voiding police be summoned?
I agree that the language has become stale with linguistic shortcuts. I wish that so-called journalists would get their feces consolidated.

I don't know
I would prefer hearing I do not know as opposed to more BS. Further, my need to know does not necessarily extend to the person I am speaking with.

Not to mention
the misuse and misspelling of cliches!

Look at the number of media people who say *reign him in*, *tow the line*, *wreckless driving* and *pour over the data*. These misused phrases show two things: an inability to understand homonyms and a lack of ability to decode the words themselves. For example, as I have patiently explained more times than I can remember, RECKLESS is derived from the word RECK (as is the word reckon) meaning KNOW. So reckless driving is ignorant or careless driving, which can be easily discerned if you have a decent vocabulary. Reign is what the queen does. Reins are what you use to stop a horse. And you do not pour over a book unless you are Niagara Falls; pore is the word you want, if you are going to use the cliche at all.

Some cliches have disappeared because nobody undestands them anymore. When I was young we used to talk about people doing a Land Office business; now they talk about a Box Office business because people have forgotten what a Land Office was. I have the feeling that the above will be gone soon for the same reason.

What about "thons"?
You know, we had marathon, walkathon and just about every other thon you can think of as if "thon" meant somethon.

Cliches
As I POURED over the previous posts, at some POINT IN TIME, I realized the comments were RIGHT As REIGN.


PeterE
Let's not forget the "gates" (sorry for the quotes, Mr. Greenberg): monicagate, troopergate, plamegate, yaddayaddagate...

Me, too, FOWG
'I' (also) 'tend' to "overuse" quotes I 'guess'. :-)

What really bothers me is the profligate use of profanity. It's not just the moral issue of blasphemous language, or the fact that I'm old-fashioned enough to think it shouldn't be used in front of ladies or strangers, but it displays a shocking lack of creativity! There are many more adjectives in the language besides "f---in'"! And if you are going to insult someone, why not do so in a fresh new way instead of recycling the same old expletives?


One more thing...
Is anyone else irritated by all the slashes/slanted lines, in the air as well as on paper/in print, that everyone/most people seem to use these days...? Not to mention the overuse of ellipses...

Profanity
I'm surprised at myself, but I find it annoying to hear words like "Hell" sung in a pop song as an expletive by a female who sounds like an overgrown teenager. It just takes away from the song, I guess.

Language
13. Pet Peeves-Language
"Blood-thinner”-this term is used to refer to clot preventers. Patients would come in and say they were weak or cold-natured, and would attribute this to the fact that their blood was "thin." To me thin means less viscous; for example, if you add water to syrup, it becomes thinner, and, if you boil off some water, it becomes thicker. When a patient takes Coumadin or Heparin to prevent clots, the density of his or her blood is not all changed from when he or she was not taking the medications, nor is the viscosity of the blood altered. I know that most doctors use the term, but just because a lot of people say or do something doesn't make it correct. Early in his tenure ninety-five percent of the Germans thought Hitler was right, but they were all wrong.
"At this point in time" = now
"First of all" = first (bad)
“Second of all = second (even worse)"
‘Third of all = third (still worse)
"And so on and so forth" = nothing (Allen Keys says this often)
"If you like, and, if you will" = nothing
"You know" You don't know, usually, or there would be no need for the speaker to tell you.
This is from essay No. 13 on my web page:
http://home.earthlink.net/~baleslynnwood/

Another
evidence of Republican Fascists wanting to control every little aspect of Americans' lives. Schiavo wasn't bad enough, interfering between a husband and wife in medical matters, now you aholes want there to be a WORD POLICE???

Fascist un-American political party is how one describes the GOP. Besotted with power, titillated by dictator-like abuses of said power, now you want Americans to bow to your WORD POLICE??

Vote Democratic, Save America from the Fascists
Save Freedom, Vote Democratic

IF YOU BELIEVE THAT AMERICA IS THE BEST, MOST HONORABLE AND MOST FREE NATION IN THE WORLD, THEN YOU UNDERSTAND THAT AMERICANS DON'T LOWER THEIR STANDARDS AND MORALS TO THE IMMORAL DEPTHS THAT THEIR ENEMIES DWELL BY SANCTIONING TORTURE OF CAPTURED COMBATANTS - IF YOU BELIEVE SO, THEN YOU ARE A DEMOCRAT. AND IF YOU ARE A DEMOCRAT, THEN YOU BELIEVE IN AMERICA AND HER POWER AS A SHINING CITY ON THE HILL TO THE WORLD. YOU WON'T SANCTION NOR ABIDE THE SULLYING OF OUR GREAT NAME AS A NATION BY TORTURING CAPTURED COMBATANTS.

So if you believe in America, vote to save it by voting for a Democrat at any and all levels of government.


peace

Sports announcers are the worst!
Feeling masochistic? Tune into any game being broadcast by John Madden. I doubt you can listen for more than 10 minutes.

In sportscaster school, they have banned the use of the word an. For example, "That's a excellent catch there, Bob"; "He's a outstanding, young player with a real future"; and, "Oh, there's a injury that can really hurt."
It just goes on and on. Tune into any college or pro football game this weekend.

Interestingly, most of these characters have college degrees in English.

What bothers me is an audience of youngsters who pay more attention to the game than they do in English class.

Mea Culpa and a couple of pets
Pet peeves, that is.

First, the Mea Culpa; Yes, I do habitually put the word "Progressive" (singular or plural) in quotes. I consider this appropriate because those who define themselves so are in fact extremely non-progressive in thought and action (in fact, de Torquemada would be proud of them for their rigidity of thought), so they are in fact inverting its meaning. And as a further plea of guilty, I tend to use the same quotes when I refer to Napoleon Bonaparte as a "military genius", because he was actually a complete moron who was just repeatedly and undeservedly lucky. The same cannot be said for the French Army, or France as a whole, under his command.

As for the peeves (good boys- HEEL!), they are as follows;

1. The use of "dived" as the past tense of "dive". I have actually heard supposedly professional broadcasters do this, notably at swimming and diving competitions. Not only is "dove" the correct form, but the word "dived" is not a recognized word in any dictionary I've ever seen.

2. The answers to questions from citizens that are given by public officials, as quoted by Mr. Greenberg in the essay above. As Robert Heinlein said, whether it's a military officer or other rank answering a question from a superior officer, or a public official answering an inquiry from a citizen who after all pays his or her salary, the words "I don't know" must never be used.

The correct answer is, "I'll find out, sir!"

Or "madam", as the case may be.


cheers


eon

HOMOSEXUAL COMMUNISTS
It is refreshing that there remains among us someone being the Language Police. Clearly not to put Language Police into quotes for the emphasis I saw my error in doing so and will make amends to frame my communications with proper emphasis and references. Language when written tempers the soul and clears the mind, unless the person writing is being paid and pressured to be rhetorical, absurd, critical, and abusive which was the recent case of MoveOn.Org and Media Matters.org.
Now the homosexual community has driven in high gear bulldozing all opposition with their creation “homophobe” which supplements a Latin and Greek origination into a couplet of dubious definition. “Homo” is the term of defined science for applications of the human corpus; ergo, “Homo Erectus” for both male and female. “Phobe” is from the Greek as a reference to fear of the gods. A “Phobic” was at odds with the spiritual forces at work in homes and fields; ergo, a sinner chased and haunted by an avenging god or goddess. Phobics dwelled in caves or scurried in the middle of the night to escape their fears of the god’s wrath; ergo, being a phobic hiding from the gods was not a good thing.

This term “homophobic”, by its description, is one hiding from the new gods and goddesses that make up the homosexual community. It is a term with an intrinsic sense of threat imposed by it; ergo, oppose us and risk the consequences which is the case in fact when confronting the homosexual community. So now with language to oppose one couplet with another I change "homosexual community" to "Homosexual Communists" and to Hell with them all.

FULL POSTING AVAILABLE AT JAMES (underscore)

I use quotes...
....often when describing a leftist's commentary as they feign concern for my freedoms. Quotes help to emphasizing their glaring lies such as when they claim to have my best interests in mind as they raise my taxes or force me to help pay for another government social program that is doomed to perpetuate misery. My response is to say, please don't, sir (or madam), I can't afford your "caring".

The Russian mayor has the right idea regarding training his city workers. I recently called the state to find out the status of my license renewal, and all the woman would say is, "it takes 6 to 8 weeks, sir". When telling her it has been almost 8 weeks, she repeated the phrase. No explanation or effort to find out where my renewal was in their machine.

This phone-answering clerk probably makes 25 to 30 grand a year, and all she did was parrot the line. No other words were said.

"Good enough for government work", I guess.

Like
We like, so like, need those, like word police.

Unfolding
The phrase, '...as the story unfolds...' used by talking heads drives me up a wall!

Ugh!!
Same goes for baseball announcers who say, '...that was a nice piece of hitting...'.

And of course
One of the most frequent offenses is the use of "strived" as the past tense of "strive". I have lost count of the number of times I have heard newscasters say that some diplomat or other "Strived to broker an agreement" between two parties (Israel and Syria, North and South Korea, etc.).

Someone can "strive" to accomplish something, or can be "striving" to succeed at it, but once it's over and done with, they either "have striven" to accomplish their objective, or they "strove" to do so.

And in my opinion, "professional newscasters" who don't understand this basic rule of English grammar do not deserve either appellation.


cheers

eon
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