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- From: weemba@sagi.wistar.upenn.edu (Matthew P Wiener)
- Newsgroups: alt.fan.dan-quayle
- Subject: Re: Bush wins doublespeak award
- Message-ID: <98821@netnews.upenn.edu>
- Date: 23 Nov 92 14:35:14 GMT
- References: <D2150056.jasl3x@erics.infoserv.com>
- Sender: news@netnews.upenn.edu
- Reply-To: weemba@sagi.wistar.upenn.edu (Matthew P Wiener)
- Organization: The Wistar Institute of Anatomy and Biology
- Lines: 101
- Nntp-Posting-Host: sagi.wistar.upenn.edu
- In-reply-to: erics@infoserv.com (Eric S. Smith)
-
- In article <D2150056.jasl3x@erics.infoserv.com>, erics@infoserv (Eric S. Smith) writes:
- >> 'And what of Quayle? Well, the third-place Doublespeak Award went to
- >> 'all politicians who exploited the term "family values" this year.
-
- >> Well, who won second place?
-
- >Not quite a Republican sweep, second place was awarded to both the
- >Republican *and* the Democratic parties, for reasons that are easily
- >surmised.
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Here's a summary from the November 20th issue of the Champaign-Urbana
- "News-Gazette" that I received in e-mail:
-
- Doublespeak Awards Find Fertile Ground in Politics
- ==================================================
-
- (Champaign-Urbana, November 20, 1992) -- Doublespeak has just
- about driven William Lutz to the brink of -- "mental activity at
- the margins."
-
- That euphemism was just one gem discovered by the Rutgers
- University English professor for the 1992 Doublespeak Awards,
- announced today in Urbana by the National Council of Teachers of
- English.
-
- The annual awards -- intended to call attention to language that
- is "grossly deceptive, evasive and euphemistic" -- were bestowed
- during the council's convention in Louisville, Kentucky.
-
-
- Among the nominees:
-
- *** Instead of being laid off, workers are "involuntarily
- terminated" as companies "reposition," "reshape," "realign" and
- "reduce duplication" through a "release of resources," "permanent
- downsizing" or "payroll adjustment."
-
- *** Along with other newfound freedoms, the people of Moscow can
- now visit "intimacy salons" -- sex shops, as they are known in
- other countries.
-
- *** U.S. soldiers should pay close attention to the Army's
- warning that exposure to nerve gas may cause "immediate permanent
- incapacitation" -- that is, death.
-
- *** Students who stand still are now in a state of "spatial
- anchoring."
-
- *** Removing books from the library isn't censorship, just a case
- of "weeding" books.
-
- *** Colleges don't drop failing students, they "expedite their
- progress toward alternate life pursuits."
-
- *** Electric fans are now "high-velocity, multipurpose air
- circulators."
-
- *** Radio and television commercials are now referred to as
- "value minutes."
-
- *** A U.S. Department of Energy nuclear fuel dump is a
- "monitored retrievable storage site."
-
- *** The Environmental Protection Agency now refers to acid rain
- as "wet deposition."
-
- *** Politicians in Canada engage in "reality augmentation" but
- would never say that they'd lied.
-
-
- And the winners are:
-
- 3rd place -- All the politicians who put the phrase "family
- values" at the center of the 1992 political campaign. An
- ambiguous and vague phrase, it "exploited intense feelings
- aroused by the idea of the family to celebrate their [i.e.
- politicos] own idea of what constitutes the best domestic
- arrangement."
-
- 2nd place -- The Republican and Democratic parties for "claiming
- they are for reforming the way political campaigns are financed,
- even while they continue to seek and accept large contributions
- from special-interest groups, corporations, and wealthy
- individuals."
-
- 1st place -- President Bush for various novel uses of language,
- including calling for "less proliferation of all different kinds
- of weapons" as the Department of Defense reversed a 25-year
- policy and began supporting arms trade shows around the world.
-
-
- Finally, the 1992 George Orwell Award for Distinguished
- Contribution to Honesty and Clarity in Public Language went to
- Donald Barlett and James Steele, authors of "America: What Went
- Wrong." The authors received the award for cutting through "the
- political and economic doublespeak used to justify the economic
- policy of the 1980s" to reveal "who is and isn't paying the price
- in the '90s."
- --
- -Matthew P Wiener (weemba@sagi.wistar.upenn.edu) "[George Bush] is a man
- who was born on third base and thinks he hit a triple." --Jim Hightower
-