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Featured Article
We’re Killing
Our Language
We are! We’re
killing our language. All of us! And as a marketing type, I
have to plead guilty to aiding the process. Words no longer
mean what they once meant. Take “new” for instance. In the
language of marketing, “new” no longer means brand spankin’
new. It can mean just a different color, a different package,
a slightly different formula. But truly new? Not really. And
marketers aren’t the only guilty ones.
Management types have been killing the language since at
least the industrial revolution. I remember a time – not that
far back, though – when the newest management practice went by
the acronym “MBWA.” What it stood for, really, was – are you
ready for this? – Management By Wandering Around. Heck,
management has been doing that for years, sometimes aimlessly,
but always keeping an eye on employees. You walk, you watch,
you soon learn who’s performing, who’s not. Seems that wasn’t
really anything “new,” either.
Management has also come up with some nice names for things
that already have not-so-nice names. But managers feel better
using their nicer names. Take the word “problem,” for example.
Problems are inherently bad. Always were. That’s why
management likes to refer to problems as “challenges” and
“opportunities.” They’re much nicer words. But you can believe
that when a manager hears either one, he or she knows there’s
a problem.
Then there are lawyers. OK, attorneys if you prefer. Books
have been written about what they’ve done to our language –
made it undecipherable. And in the process reduced the once
powerful comma to little more than sticky tape with which to
connect an endless series of disjointed phrases.
Now our elected officials and the bureaucrats in D.C. have
come up with the mother of all language killers. We’ve known
for a very long time that these officials have very little
respect for our language. Add your own examples here, please.
And it doesn’t make any difference which party label they‘re
sporting, either. Could the cause be something in the air that
hangs over D.C.? Or maybe something in the water?
Now they’ve taken a very powerful word – “hunger” – and
decided to abolish it. No, not abolish hunger. That’s too
difficult. What they’ve abolished – at least as it applies to
people in the U.S. – is the word “hunger.” Because, they
claim, it can’t be quantified. But, it seems, hunger can can
still exist in other countries.
Anyway, some bureaucrat, with the blessing of our elected
officials, have now said that in the U.S. “hunger” no longer
exists. In its place they’ve chosen to use two clever phrases
that closely resemble each other, perhaps to confuse us even
more – “low food security,” and “very low food security.”
Why, because there’s less stigma attached to having
millions of people go to bed at night experiencing “low food
security” than there is to having them go to bed feeling
hungry. Could it be that “very low food security” may actually
mean they’re starving?
Who are these people who suffer from this… I’m sorry.
“Suffer” is probably the next word our pals in D.C. will send
into retirement. Allow me to rephrase: “Who are these people
who experience this sensation of “low” or “very low food
security?” Buried deep in the report that abolished “hunger”
was a description of them: Families with an annual household
income of $37,000 or less.
Moving right along, if we don’t watch out, we’ll soon live
in a world where black means white, peace means war, up means
down and rich means poor. Then those of us who earn our
livings as wordsmiths, corporate managers, lawyers, elected
officials and bureaucrats will have to find something else to
tinker with. Or start saying what we mean.
© 2006, Philip A. Grisolia, CBCPhil
Grisolia is by profession a “wordsmith” - occasionally
with a sense of humor. An accredited Certified
Business Communicator (CBC), Phil is also a consultant
and business coach to owners of small and start-up
companies, an author, educator and an award-winning
copywriter. To learn more about Phil and the types of
help he provides for his clients, visit
PhilGrisolia.com . While there, sign up for a free
subscription to his best-in-class newsletter - Making
Sense of Marketing™.
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