
Feedback is our weekly column of bizarre stories, implausible advertising claims, confusing instructions and more
Epidemic fact-intolerance
BEMUSEMENT was a widespread reaction to 47 US senators – Republicans all – posting an “” to Iran in early March, advising the country that it was wasting its time hammering out a deal to limit its nuclear activities with US president Barack Obama and five other leaders (22 November 2014, p 7). Without the approval of Congress, they wrote, it would be a mere executive agreement that Congress could change or a future president nullify at will. As , none of that is true.
Many of these senators are lawyers. All employ them. Surely, they knew that? Sadly for èƵ readers – and other members of what a senior adviser to Republican president George W. Bush “the reality-based community” – if you want to believe something badly enough, facts just get in the way.
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A week later, 30 senators sent to Obama’s health and agriculture secretaries, “concerned with the scientific integrity” of a committee that, they said, had recommended the removal of “lean meat” from US dietary advice. As the Center for Science in the Public Interest , “the Senators could not have read… much past page three, since page four clearly states that ‘lean meats can be a part of a healthy dietary pattern’.”
Intriguingly, many of those also signed the Iran letter, and 23 are on a roster of climate deniers (). Fact-intolerance seems to be habit-forming.
Would you dare open junk mail offering a “free pre-paid cremation”? Andy Johnson-Laird fears “it might be the death of me”
We would like to record…
FEEDBACK would like to record that David Icke and co-defendants have agreed to pay CAN$210,000 () in damages and legal costs to settle a libel action by a Canadian activist lawyer, . Distribution of Icke’s book Children of the Matrix must be discontinued for containing defamatory material. Icke is, of course, the former football commentator who in 1991 that he was the Son of God, and who now holds that we are in thrall to an international banking conspiracy of shapeshifting lizards who are of no particular Earthly religion, oh no. That is all.
The scienciest neologisms
WHAT, we asked, should we call the phenomenon of spelling errors that reveal an accent (21 February)? Readers dug into their Greek, always a source of the scienciest neologisms. Alexander Pettigrew came up with “merophones” using the prefix “mero-” meaning “partly”. Lawrence D’Oliveiro says “why, homeophones, of course,” from the Greek “similar”. Grant Hutchison recalled, as we often do, “the theological debate between the (who held that the Father and the Son were of identical substance) and the (who held that They were of similar, but not identical, substance)” and therefore proposes “homoiphones”.
More accent-induced confusion
GOING back to English roots, Ben Haller proposes, on the grounds that the phenomenon of accent-induced semantic confusion depends on one’s mental state, that the results be “headphones”. In a linguistic grey area, Alex MacDonald finds “duplocates”.
Actual research on accents
MEANWHILE, Dom Watt has come up with the apparently “nibboleth,” which “may come in useful when spellings ‘go brogue’, so to speak.” He also reports actual research on the question: Uta Papen and Kevin Watson at Lancaster University, UK, are on “the connection between UK children’s spelling and their speech”. We await the results with interest. Not least out of gratitude for this, we will henceforth collect “nibboleths”.
What makes an accent?
SIX readers took us to task for our purported example of an actual homophone, “which witch”. In their various flavours of Scots the sounds “w” and “wh” are quite distinct. Are there any pairs of words whose pronunciation is identical in all accents and dialects? How many have to agree on a pronunciation for it to be an accent, not an idiosyncrasy? The usual definition, ““, doesn’t quite cut it here.
Now, nibbolethic determinism?
FEEDBACK is reminded by the above phenomena of our observation that anyone speaking on the news about “pleece” has probably spent a lot of time in friendly meetings with the constabulary and may have gorn native. That struck us in the late phase of our picaresque past, in which we were regularly meeting with people who refer to themselves as “Senior Pleece Officers”.
Are there other examples of semantic-accentual confusion related to occupations, rather than to regional culture? Can we look forward to nibbolethic determinism?
Peaky Peak Palin pachyderm
FINALLY, returning us to the legislative suspicion of truth, John Leland directs us to a certain previous governor of Alaska discussing “that 800-pound elephant in the room at the White House”. Prospect magazine as “Peak Palin”. Filthy socialist European readers and those who conspiratorially welcome our new UN black-helicopter metricated overlords will recognise 800 pounds as around 360 kilograms, or a little over one-thirteenth of the mass of Feedback’s standard 5-tonne African elephant. Are Sarah Palin’s elephants very hungry?