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Radical Centrist
Join Date: Jan 2001
Location: Cottage of Prussia
Posts: 31,423
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Tipster, you're reading someone from another culture and some of the subtlety of informal language is lost.
It's funny, you know, I took some time to compose this entry and selected my language carefully in the section you object to most strongly. If I was standing around with a group of friends, and saw someone walking on all fours in this way, I know what I would say: "Look at that retard!" But I was recently watching an interview with actor John C. McGinley, whose son was born with Down Syndrome; and McGinley said that it really bothers him to hear people use the term "retard". That's fair, I thought, and since Mr. McGinley did such a fine job in "Office Space", I was moved to feel that actually using the term "retard" was mean-spirited of me. So: what's another term to use for someone acting strangely to try to get attention? Because when you see strange behavior, half the time it's someone who's actually mentally handicapped, the term I decided to use instead; the other half the time, it's someone pretending to be, or something similar, to get attention. "Spazz", I thought, has fallen so far from its original derivative that it's fair game. But apparently it has NOT fallen that far in other cultures! So you see, in writing informally -- purposefully outside of journalistic style -- you always risk that someone will find your approach rude. OK. Your other beefs, however, are merely incorrect. "inbred" is precisely what the family is; that's how the different genes wind up expressing themselves. "devolution", if it really is a word, is the take of the researchers: Quote:
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