http://www.townhall.com/columnists/WalterEWilliams/2008/02/06/silly_talk
 
Silly Talk
By Walter E. Williams
Wednesday, February 6, 2008


It's not easy being me. I'm disturbed by statements that many Americans
accept or don't question that are ludicrous, if not crazy. The terms
"change," "agents of change" and "change agents" are being bandied by
presidential hopefuls, their supporters and media commentators. I'd like to
ask Americans listening to these people whether they are for or against
change. For one to be for or against change, in any generic sense, qualifies
as stupid, but maybe public stupidity is the stock and trade of politicians.


Politicians and media people don't have a monopoly on silly talk. How many
times have you heard a weatherman say that the sun will try to come out
later in the day? Sometimes their prediction turns out to be false and I
wonder whether they would explain it by saying the sun didn't try hard
enough. But it's not just weathermen who use teleological explanations,
ascribing purposeful behavior to inanimate objects. I'm currently listening
to CD lectures on particle physics and I'm told that strange quarks want to
decay. I'm wondering how the professor knows what a strange quark wants; has
he interviewed one? 

But it gets worse and sometimes mildly unpleasant. An information operator
might tell me that the number I want is 61o-777-8o7o. In the past, I have
asked operators whether I'd reach my party by pressing the telephone's "o"
key instead of the zero key. Operators have always told me that to reach my
party, I'd have to press the zero key, whereupon I'd ask them, why did they
say "o"; were they deliberately trying to sabotage my communication efforts?
Our brief conversation begins to go politely downhill. Giving them the
benefit of the doubt, maybe their source of confusion stems from the fact
that the zero key doubles for the operator key. 

But there's hope for the future. In my classes, when the opportunity arises,
I give my students the definitions for "o" and zero. "O" is a vowel and the
15th letter of the English alphabet. Zero is defined as any number that when
added or subtracted from another number does not change the value of that
number. 

I have other problems. When I attended Stoddart-Fleisher Junior High and
Benjamin Franklin High schools, during the '40s and early '50s, teachers
insisted on proper grammar, even though these schools were predominantly
black and among Philadelphia's lowest ranked in terms of academic
reputation. 

How many times have you heard a statement such as "Tom and myself were
working together"? When one of my students makes such a statement, I ask,
"If Tom were not with you, would you say, 'Myself was working alone'?" Words
such as "myself" or "himself" are reflexive pronouns. Their proper use
requires reference to the subject of the sentence. For example, "Tom injured
himself." A reflexive pronoun can also be used intensively for emphasis,
"Tom himself was injured." In both cases, himself refers back to Tom, the
subject of the sentence. 

How about, "He is taller than me." Whenever I hear such error, I visualize
Dr. Martin Rosenberg, my high school English teacher, with his hands on his
waist, sarcastically asking a student, "Do you mean 'He is taller than me
am'?" "Am" is the understood, elliptical, or left out, verb at the end of
the sentence. The subject of a verb must be in the nominative case. To be
grammatically correct, the sentence should be, "He is taller than I." 

I wonder whether it's just me, or is anyone else bothered by silly talk? It
might be that I'm getting old and out of touch, or it might be that I'm
suffering from having received my education before it became fashionable for
white people to like black people and nonsense was unacceptable. 



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