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Showing Original Post only (View all)The strangest insult in US politics: why do Republicans call it 'the Democrat party'? [View all]
The Democratic party? Robert F Kennedy Jrs never heard of it.
On Tuesday, the former presidential candidate issued his latest condemnation of the Democrat party, endorsing a bizarre linguistic tradition among haters of the institution. As Donald Trump told a rally in 2018: I call it the Democrat party. It sounds better rhetorically. By better, of course, he meant worse, as he explained the next year: he prefers to say the Democrat party because it doesnt sound good.
In removing two letters from Democratic, the former president is adopting a jibe thats been around since at least the 1940s. Opponents of the party long ago decided, for some reason, that this brutal act of syllabic denial would shame their opponents. Democrats dont seem particularly devastated by the attack, but Republicans and those who love them have stuck with it. We hear it regularly from party luminaries such as JD Vance, Mike Johnson and Nikki Haley; pragmatic independents like RFK Jr; and media voices across the vast spectrum from Fox News to Infowars. Last week, even Tulsi Gabbard, once a Democratic presidential candidate herself, wrote an op-ed proudly describing her departure from the Democrat party and support for Trump.
But even if the misnaming doesnt exactly leave liberal snowflakes in tears, it does serve a purpose, says Nicole Holliday, acting associate professor of linguistics at the University of California, Berkeley. Its a marker of affiliation an indicator of the media a person consumes and the politicians they listen to. She recently heard a friend remark on Democrat party policies and asked why they used the term; the friend wasnt even aware they had done it. Language is contagious, especially emotionally charged political language, Holliday says. Most of the time, we dont have the cognitive bandwidth to think very hard about every single word that were using. We just use it because its what other people do.
That lack of awareness shows how normalized its become, says Larry Glickman, Stephen and Evalyn Milman professor in American studies at Cornell University, who likens the term to a schoolyard taunt. It suggests the party is outside the mainstream of American politics so much so that were not even going to call them by the name they prefer. We refuse to give them that amount of respect.
On Tuesday, the former presidential candidate issued his latest condemnation of the Democrat party, endorsing a bizarre linguistic tradition among haters of the institution. As Donald Trump told a rally in 2018: I call it the Democrat party. It sounds better rhetorically. By better, of course, he meant worse, as he explained the next year: he prefers to say the Democrat party because it doesnt sound good.
In removing two letters from Democratic, the former president is adopting a jibe thats been around since at least the 1940s. Opponents of the party long ago decided, for some reason, that this brutal act of syllabic denial would shame their opponents. Democrats dont seem particularly devastated by the attack, but Republicans and those who love them have stuck with it. We hear it regularly from party luminaries such as JD Vance, Mike Johnson and Nikki Haley; pragmatic independents like RFK Jr; and media voices across the vast spectrum from Fox News to Infowars. Last week, even Tulsi Gabbard, once a Democratic presidential candidate herself, wrote an op-ed proudly describing her departure from the Democrat party and support for Trump.
But even if the misnaming doesnt exactly leave liberal snowflakes in tears, it does serve a purpose, says Nicole Holliday, acting associate professor of linguistics at the University of California, Berkeley. Its a marker of affiliation an indicator of the media a person consumes and the politicians they listen to. She recently heard a friend remark on Democrat party policies and asked why they used the term; the friend wasnt even aware they had done it. Language is contagious, especially emotionally charged political language, Holliday says. Most of the time, we dont have the cognitive bandwidth to think very hard about every single word that were using. We just use it because its what other people do.
That lack of awareness shows how normalized its become, says Larry Glickman, Stephen and Evalyn Milman professor in American studies at Cornell University, who likens the term to a schoolyard taunt. It suggests the party is outside the mainstream of American politics so much so that were not even going to call them by the name they prefer. We refuse to give them that amount of respect.
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/article/2024/sep/05/democrat-party-republicans
Repubes works for me.
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The strangest insult in US politics: why do Republicans call it 'the Democrat party'? [View all]
Ponietz
Sep 2024
OP
In my area the adopted it . The sign in the window says "Democrat Party" Headquarters
ms liberty
Sep 2024
#3
Long article in Slate 1/21/23: The Real Origins of the "Democrat Party" Troll
highplainsdem
Sep 2024
#10