Monthly Archives: December 2005

2005's Hottest Trends

Media, The Zeitgeist

‘A Heart, a Cross, and a Flag’ were the things that Peggy Noonan saw ‘rise from the rubble’ of post-Sept. 11 America. By 2005, a very different set of emblems had emerged to animate the American imagination. Let us examine them, shall we …

More of 2005’s Hottest Trends“count among them a dog, a kid, and a continent” in my new WorldNetDaily.com column. Comment are, as always, welcome.

2005’s Hottest Trends

Media, The Zeitgeist

‘A Heart, a Cross, and a Flag’ were the things that Peggy Noonan saw ‘rise from the rubble’ of post-Sept. 11 America. By 2005, a very different set of emblems had emerged to animate the American imagination. Let us examine them, shall we …

More of 2005’s Hottest Trends“count among them a dog, a kid, and a continent” in my new WorldNetDaily.com column. Comment are, as always, welcome.

Give Peace A Makeover

Left-Liberalism And Progressivisim, War

Cindy Sheehan has blamed the media for retarding the peace movement in the United States. But according to “The Babe Theory of Political Movements,” which Sheehan should study closely, the peace movement has a problem: it’s ugly. The media doesn’t forgive ugly. If Sheehan wants to give peace a chance, she’ll need to give it a makeover. A disheveled woman with leathery skin and a dopey inflection is not going to get the attention she craves.”

The excerpt is from my new FrontPageMagazine column, Give Peace A Makeover. Comments are welcome.

Thanks to Frank for sending a link to “Breasts Not Bombs.” The pictorial is a study in how truly ugly the antiwar Left is, body and mind. To assault others with such impropriety strikes me as passive-aggression. Warning: You’ll need multiple barf bags.

Updated: Conjugate The Verb, Dammit!

English, Journalism

Kiefer Sutherland, in the role of Jack Bauer of “24,” was about to chop off a colleague’s hand. The Counter Terrorist Unit underling had been cuffed to a ticking time bomb. Saving his life meant severing the tethered hand. Or at least that was the scenario painted. So, on what was I fixated? I was fuming over scriptwriters and actors who can’t conjugate the verb to “lie.” Sutherland had just instructed the soon-to-be handless colleague to “lay” still. Bill Clinton did the same in a recent interview: “The Democrats cannot lay down and die,” he told the interviewer. Almost every single person on TV does it, with the exception of Dan Rather, Tom Brokaw, and other old-timers. I once wrote to Bill O’Reilly for writing “laying on the beach,” or something similar, in a column. He never wrote back, but the error was promptly rectified, although he repeats it constantly in speech.
It’s “lie down and die,” not “lay down,” stupid! Repeat after me: “I am lying on the bed now. I lay on the bed yesterday. I had once lain on that very same bed. And I will, no doubt, lie on it again.”
Another conjugation crime is, “I had went” instead of “I had gone.”
Some time ago, I remarked to a writer that the past indicative and past participle of “spit” is “spat.” He had written something to the effect of: “yesterday I spit on his porch.” I like hillbilly culture but that was taking it to extremes.
Professor Michael Strumpf, creator of The National Grammar Hot Line, agrees. He has straightened out thousands of errant–and often arrogant–Americans over the years.
We all make mistakes. I’m always grateful when a vigilant reader corrects my spelling; it’s not very good. But some mistakes are particularly bad.

Update: Writer Kevin Grace has been brooding about bad writing, and, in particular, one “passionate voice for stupidity since well before 1984, who can’t write for toffee”: ex-politician Sheila Copps. Kevin wonders whether perhaps newspapers are just giving their readers what they want. “If literacy is now supererogatory and editors are otiose, if bad writing now pays better than good, then why kick against the pricks?”

Kevin’s premise here, however, is that newspaper editors know better. For the most, I think they don’t. Having retired the old guard, newspaper executives hire the young and hip only. The latter think it archaic and stodgy to insist on rules of usage (I’m not even sure their schools teach them the basics any longer). They court lax standards and would gladly sacrifice precision and passion for laidback coolness and ennui (it’s much less threatening to HUGE egos; Wonkette’s prose, anyone?).

As the post’s title suggests–and as Kevin knows all too well–the bad drive out the good.