| I don't like words that hide the truth. |
| I don't words that conceal reality. |
| I don't like euphemisms,
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| or euphemistic language. |
| And American English is loaded with euphemisms. |
| Cause Americans
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| have a lot of trouble dealing with reality. |
| Americans have trouble facing the truth, so they invent
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| the kind of a soft language to protest themselves from it, and it gets worse with every
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| generation. |
| For some reason, it just keeps getting worse. |
| I'll give you an example of that. |
| There's
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| a condition in combat. |
| Most people know about it. |
| It's when a fighting person's nervous system
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| has been stressed to it's absolute peak and maximum. |
| Can't take anymore input. |
| The nervous
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| system has either (click) snapped or is about to snap. |
| In the first world war, that condition was
|
| called shell shock. |
| Simple, honest, direct language. |
| Two syllables, shell shock. |
| Almost sounds like
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| the guns themselves. |
| That was seventy years ago. |
| Then a whole generation went by and the
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| second world war came along and very same combat condition was called battle fatigue. |
| Four
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| syllables now. |
| Takes a little longer to say. |
| Doesn't seem to hurt as much. |
| Fatigue is a nicer word
|
| than shock. |
| Shell shock! |
| Battle fatigue. |
| Then we had the war in Korea, 1950 Madison avenue
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| was riding high by that time, and the very same combat condition was called operational
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| exhaustion. |
| Hey, were up to eight syllables now! |
| And the humanity has been squeezed
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| completely out of the phrase. |
| It's totally sterile now. |
| Operational exhaustion. |
| Sounds like
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| something that might happen to your car. |
| Then of course, came the war in Viet Nam, which has
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| only been over for about sixteen or seventeen years, and thanks to the lies and deceits
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| surrounding that war, I guess it's no surprise that the very same condition was called post-
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| traumatic stress disorder. |
| Still eight syllables, but we've added a hyphen! |
| And the pain is
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| completely buried under jargon. |
| Post-traumatic stress disorder. |
| I'll bet you if we'd of still been
|
| calling it shell shock, some of those Viet Nam veterans might have gotten the attention they
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| needed at the time. |
| I'll betcha. |
| I'll betcha.
|
| But. |
| But, it didn't happen, and one of the reasons. |
| One of the reasons is because we were using that soft language. |
| That language that takes the life out of life. |
| And it is a function of time. |
| It
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| does keep getting worse. |
| I'll give you another example. |
| Sometime during my life. |
| Sometime
|
| during my life, toilet paper became bathroom tissue. |
| I wasn't notified of this. |
| No one asked me if
|
| I agreed with it. |
| It just happened. |
| Toilet paper became bathroom tissue. |
| Sneakers became
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| running shoes. |
| false teeth became dental appliances. |
| Medicine became medication. |
| Information
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| became directory assistance. |
| The dump became the landfill. |
| Car crashes became automobile
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| accidents. |
| Partly cloudy bacame partly sunny. |
| Motels became motor lodges. |
| House trailers
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| became mobile homes. |
| Used cars became previously owned transportation. |
| Room service
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| became guest-room dining. |
| And constipation became occasional irregularity. |
| When I was a little
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| kid, if I got sick they wanted me to go to the hospital and see a doctor. |
| Now they want me to go
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| to a health maintenance organization...or a wellness center to consult a healthcare delivery
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| professional. |
| Poor people used to live in slums. |
| Now the economically disadvantaged occupy
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| substandard housing in the inner cities. |
| And they're broke! |
| They're broke! |
| They don't have a
|
| negative cash-flow position. |
| They're fucking broke! |
| Cause a lot of them were fired. |
| You know,
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| fired. |
| management wanted to curtail redundancies in the human resources area, so many
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| people are no longer viable members of the workforce.
|
| Smug, greedy, well-fed white people have invented a language to conceal their sins. |
| It's as simple
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| as that. |
| The CIA doesn't kill anybody anymore, they neutralize people...or they depopulate the
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| area. |
| The government doesn't lie, it engages in disinformation. |
| The pentagon actually measures
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| nuclear radiation in something they call sunshine units. |
| Israeli murderers are called commandos. |
| Arab commandos are called terrorists. |
| Contra killers are called freedom fighters. |
| Well, if crime
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| fighters fight crime and fire fighters fight fire, what do freedom fighters fight? |
| They never
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| mention that part of it to us, do they? |
| Never mention that part of it.
|
| And...and some of this stuff is just silly, we all know that, like on the airlines, they say want to
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| pre- board. |
| Well, what the hell is pre-board, what does that mean? |
| To get on before you get on?
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| They say they're going to pre-board those passengers in need of special assistance. |
| Cripples!
|
| Simple honest direct language. |
| There is no shame attached to the word cripple that I can find in
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| any dictionary. |
| No shame attached to it, in fact it's a word used in bible translations. |
| Jesus healed
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| the cripples. |
| Doesn't take seven words to describe that condition. |
| But we don't have any cripples
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| in this country anymore. |
| We have The physically challenged. |
| Is that a grotesque enough evasion
|
| for you? |
| How about differently abled. |
| I've heard them called that. |
| Differently abled! |
| You can't
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| even call these people handicapped anymore. |
| They'll say, "Were not handicapped. Were
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| handicapable!" These poor people have been bullshitted by the system into believing that if you
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| change the name of the condition, somehow you'll change the condition. |
| Well, hey cousin,
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| ppsssspptttttt. |
| Doesn't happen. |
| Doesn't happen.
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| We have no more deaf people in this country, hearing impaired. |
| No ones blind anymore, partially
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| sighted or visually impaired. |
| We have no more stupid people. |
| Everyone has a learning
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| disorder...or he's minimally exceptional. |
| How would you like to be told that about your child?
|
| "He's minimally exceptional." |
| "Oohh, thank god for that." |
| Psychologists actually have started
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| calling ugly people, those with severe appearance deficits. |
| It's getting so bad, that any day now I expect to hear a rape victim referred to as an unwilling sperm recipient.
|
| And we have no more old people in this country. |
| No more old people. |
| We shipped them all
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| away, and we brought in these senior citizens. |
| Isn't that a typically American twentieth century
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| phrase? |
| Bloodless, lifeless, no pulse in one of them. |
| A senior citizen. |
| But I've accepted that one,
|
| I've come to terms with it. |
| I know it's to stay. |
| We'll never get rid of it. |
| That's what they're going
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| to be called, so I'll relax on that, but the one I do resist. |
| The one I keep resisting is when they
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| look at an old guy and they'll say, "Look at him Dan! He's ninety years young." |
| Imagine the fear
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| of aging that reveals. |
| To not even be able to use the word "old" to describe somebody. |
| To have
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| to use an antonym. |
| And fear of aging is natural. |
| It's universal. |
| Isn't it? |
| We all have that. |
| No one
|
| wants to get old. |
| No one wants to die, but we do! |
| So we bullshit ourselves. |
| I started bullshitting
|
| myself when I got to my forties. |
| As soon as I got into my forties I'd look in the mirror and I'd say,
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| "well, I...I guess I'm getting...older." |
| Older sounds a little better than old doesn't it? |
| Sounds like it
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| might even last a little longer. |
| Bullshit, I'm getting old! |
| And it's okay, because thanks to our fear
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| of death in this country, I won't have to die...I'll pass away. |
| Or I'll expire like a magazine
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| subscription. |
| If it happens in the hospital, they'll call it a terminal episode. |
| The insurance
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| company will refer to it as negative patient-care outcome. |
| And if it's the result of malpractice,
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| they'll say it was a therapeutic misadventure. |
| I'm telling you, some of this language makes me
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| want to vomit. |
| Well, maybe not vomit. |
| Makes me want to engage in an involuntary personal
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| protein spill. |