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handmade34

(24,076 posts)
Tue Dec 24, 2019, 05:50 PM Dec 2019

Republicans...'assault the English language'... [View all]

https://www.alternet.org/2019/12/republicans-feel-obligated-to-assault-the-english-language-with-terrible-grammar-in-order-to-show-that-theyre-true-conservatives-report/?utm_source=&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=3310

The conservative movement in the United States used to pride itself on having intellectuals like George Will and the late National Review founder William F. Buckley, who spoke with a posh Mid-Atlantic accent that sounded quasi-British. But these days, many right-wing politicians and media figures champion a certain anti-intellectualism —and journalist Christian Schneider, in an article for the conservative website The Bulwark, notes that some Republicans go out of their way to butcher the English language even if they have Ivy League educations.
One example, Schneider notes, is referring to the Democratic Party as “the Democrat Party.” And Republican Sen. Josh Hawley is among the offenders: the Missouri senator, Schneider writes, “fancies himself a salt-of-the-earth Midwesterner who doesn’t truck with fancy elites” — even though he attended Yale Law School.

“Saying ‘Democrat’ instead of ‘Democratic’ has become a shibboleth — a verbal handshake to signal that you’re on Team Red Hat,” Schneider explains. “It’s about as annoying as people rolling their r’s when ordering a burrito to prove they once vacationed in Cozumel. But whatever. Triggering Democrats has become so important to Republicans that they’re willing to assault the English language if the people who like good grammar are the bad guys.”...….
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OTOH, I am a liberal Democrat living in the Pacific Northwest who can slip into his original Aristus Dec 2019 #1
bet you can... handmade34 Dec 2019 #5
I always find it funny that I use an accent often equated with poor intellect Aristus Dec 2019 #6
I can't help it, Aristus Skittles Dec 2019 #7
Even so, Southerners can take a short one-syllable word, and turn it into a long Aristus Dec 2019 #8
in NC, I heard "boiled eggs" as BALD EGGS Skittles Dec 2019 #10
In Texas, it's 'boled eggs'. Aristus Dec 2019 #11
I still remember someone in Texas asking me for a pen Skittles Dec 2019 #12
Yeah. Aristus Dec 2019 #13
I would have probably attacked someone for making it two syllables Skittles Dec 2019 #14
I know. Aristus Dec 2019 #15
I don't mind southern accents as long as they don't speak SLOOOOOOOOOOWLY Skittles Dec 2019 #16
That's not me. Aristus Dec 2019 #17
actually, when I think about it Skittles Dec 2019 #18
And irregardless is not a word, FFS! 🤬 madinmaryland Dec 2019 #19
Uh, OTOH? YOHABLO Dec 2019 #20
Yeah. The piece is about how well-educated conservatives dumb down their speech Aristus Dec 2019 #21
Yes, but it's so obviously juvenile utopian Dec 2019 #2
People--esp. politicians--learn how to use language for implicit solidarity. Igel Dec 2019 #3
It's about more than cheap shots : Mike Niendorff Dec 2019 #4
Heard Senator John Kennedy, who attended Oxford, on the radio last night. Midnight Writer Dec 2019 #9
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