Words Worth
Topic: Trying (Futilely) To Keep Up
Posted by Everyman - 11:36:52 EST
As I have listened and read about the horrific events in a small school in Connecticut - about which, more tomorrow - my thoughts have turned to one of the wordsmiths of our age, George Carlin, now gone to his own reward.
He comes to mind when I encounter words like this:
The odds are extremely high that the killer was either afflicted with an antisocial personality disorder – meaning a person without conscience or empathy – or suffering from some other personality disorder.
What's wrong with the single word "psychopath"?
Why is the generic "personality disorder" to be preferred?
An inordinately shy boy or girl - or a loudmouthed bully, for that matter - may have a "personality disorder".
No harm (or not much; nothing lethal), no foul.
Or, as Carlin asked . . .
Why is post-traumatic stress disorder syndrome better than "shell-shocked"?
Why are we so determined to sit idly by and suffer the dumbing down our language?
When and why did a spade stop being a spade?
No politically-incorrect, or insensitive, offense intended.


