Opinion The Hidden Grammatical Reason That ‘Weird’ Works - Applying “weird” to MAGA is a great debate team tactic, a deceptively complex rhetorical trick that uses the simplest of language to make a sophisticated point

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Pablo Delcan

By John McWhorter
Opinion Writer
Aug. 22, 2024, 3:00 p.m. ET

When Gov. Tim Walz called Donald Trump and his worldview “weird,” it got immediate attention, launched a thousand memes and may very well have helped him land the job as Kamala Harris’s running mate. Michelle Obama’s dictum that “when they go low, we go high” is admirable, but there’s a lot to be said for the occasional step or two down the ladder. To many observers, “weird” immediately seemed right, a fresh approach to the mix of childish cattiness and outright menace coming from opponents of Walz and Harris. But the reasons for its success as an epithet aren’t as obvious. They come from deep in the word’s history, and in the ultimate purpose to which we put language.

In Old English the word meant, believe it or not, “what the future holds,” as in what we now refer to as fate. The sisters in “Macbeth” were the “weird sisters,” in the meaning of “fate sisters,” telling the future. But they were also portrayed as ghoulish in appearance and attire. With the prominence of this play and similar fate-sister figures in other ones, the sense set in that “weird” meant frighteningly odd.

In the 20th century, the word lost its hint of the macabre as its meaning became something quieter. “Weird” now means peculiar — perhaps passingly so, but against what one would expect.

In this sense, “weird” has settled into a realm of the language that isn’t taught as grammar in our schools but should be. Verbal communication is not only about whether something is in the past or the future, or whether it is singular or plural. It’s also about what is novel. We tend to seek people’s attention to tell them something they don’t yet know.

Imagine someone new to the English language asking you what the “even” in “He even had a horse” means. It would be hard, because school doesn’t teach us about the role that identifying novelty plays in how we form sentences. “He even had a horse” implies that someone’s possession of a horse, as opposed to just a big backyard, a fence and some dogs, is unexpected. All languages have ways of doing this. In Saramaccan, a language I have studied that was created by Africans who escaped slavery in Suriname, a little word, “noo” — pronounced “naw” — shows that something is news. “Noo mi o haika i” means not just “I will call you” but also “So, OK then, I will call you.”

Applying “weird” to MAGA is a great debate team tactic, a deceptively complex rhetorical trick that uses the simplest of language to make a sophisticated point: that the beliefs that MAGA is supposed to be getting us back to defy expectation, usually for the simple reason that they’re false.

The idea that Central American countries engage in an effort to send criminals to America not only is mean, it also fails to accord with any intuitive or documented analysis. The idea that we should all go smilingly back to an era when it was illegal for women to obtain an abortion — as though there was something sweet about Roberta’s situation in Theodore Dreiser’s “An American Tragedy” in 1925 — goes against what 90 percent of Americans espouse. It is callous to a degree that a great many find perplexing. The idea that a single woman without children is less qualified to lead is jarring even amid the trash talk flying throughout our political landscape.

The typical response to all of this from the outside is to shudder at the nastiness. But an equally valid response is “Huh?” And that’s why “weird” works.
“Weird” works in another way, too: There is no great comeback. You can’t respond to being called peculiar by simply saying, “No, I’m not,” though Trump tried: “He said we’re weird,” the candidate complained, “that JD and I are weird. I think we’re extremely normal people, exactly like you.” Just asserting it convinces no one. Nor does the “No, you are!” defense. On X, Representative Matt Gaetz jibed: “The party of gender blockers and drag shows for kids is calling us weird? Ok.” But we’ve heard all that before. “Weird” is a way to call out the unexpected. Any perceived weirdness on the left is old news. It’s the Democrats who are offering the novel take.

The goal here is not getting down into the mud but opening ourselves to broader perception. Outsiders can view MAGA with dismay, intimidated by how many people subscribe to it, watch its adherents portray themselves as the only true Americans and shake our heads in horror and submission. Or we can dismiss MAGA as more heat than light. We can resist the notion that the essence of America is an ideology whose figurehead lost the popular vote in the presidential election of 2016, lost the election entirely in 2020 and may well lose again this fall. “Weird” pegs MAGA as a detour, a regrettable temptation that a serious politics ought to render obsolete. Calling it “weird” is deft, articulate, and possibly prophetic.

It’s also an example of the power of language, in particular a kind of grammar that too few people are taught. Wouldn’t more kids take interest in the subject if they knew they could use it to shut down a bully.

John McWhorter (@JohnHMcWhorter) is an associate professor of linguistics at Columbia University. He is the author of “Nine Nasty Words: English in the Gutter: Then, Now and Forever” and, most recently, “Woke Racism: How a New Religion Has Betrayed Black America.” @JohnHMcWhorter

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To be quite honest the best thing the right could do right now is ignore kamala and hollywood and start just going straight for streamers, and influencers that matter.

Remember these days a Michael franzese or count dankula would be great for Trump to do an interview with atm. He could get a lot I mean a lot of swing voters that way.
Trump's recently done an interview with Theo Von on YouTube.
 
I've said it elsewhere, but the Republicans are really dropping the ball on this Weird thing. If I was them I would literally run one single ad until election time, on repeat everywhere. One ad is all they need:

Scene 1: A Hispanic nuclear family doing normal things with a caption saying "This is weird".
Scene 2: Trannies trooning with a caption saying "This is the new normal".
Scene 3: A white nuclear family doing normal things with a caption saying "This is weird".
Scene 4: Gay pride parade with leather twinks with a caption saying: "This is the new normal".
Scene 5: A black nuclear family doing normal things with a caption saying "This is weird".
Scene 6: Drag queen story hour at your local library with a caption saying "This is the new normal"
Closing scene: Black screen white letters "Embrace the new normal. Vote Democrat."

That's it. This is literally all they need to do. But they won't because they're fucking retarded.
 
I see a lot of left wing media crowing about how weird kills the MAGA
They're literally just wishing. They defeat the strawmen they create every single day with everything they do.

One of the strongest things they have going for them is how they don't actually care if something is true, it only matters that they believe it and can make YOU believe it.
 
That's just encouraging bullying with extra steps. I mean as someone who got fucked over by "zero tolerance" shit as a little kid like a lot of people did by the actual bullies gaming the system and getting me framed as some kind of antagonist by them I've seen this shit before and I know what you are bitch. Fuck this shit.
They justify their actions by saying they are "punching up" much like how they say white straight Christian men cannot be victims of oppression.
 
Why are you insulting the Great Weird Al Yankovic?
That's a "weirdalwalker". They look like weird al but they aren't weird nor are they al. They;ll call you weird as an insult on social media because any other insult isn't advertiser money friendly. Maybe they'e grown in labs by companies wanting to bank on weird al? honestly i don't know where they come from.
 
...it's not complicated, subtle, or any kind of 35d chess, nor does it require 5 million words to explain.

Nobody feels bad saying weird, because it's not a slur, it's not a swear, and it's vague enough it can mean anything you don't find palatable or normal.

Insomuch as it works (in the sense that anecdotally this is literally the only thing I hear anyone around me say about Vance, but that's WA for you), that's all it is, nothing more.
 
Argumentum ad populum is a fallacious argument but it works well for propaganda. There’s nothing sophisticated in saying “you’re bad and everyone thinks your crazy.” The left has always been claiming that ideas they don’t like are extremist, super dangerous, and held by a minority. Nothing kills an idea like lack of engagement and support whether it be perceived or real.

Leave it to a leftist faggot to claim that herd mentality and marginalization is a big-brain move and worthy of praise. I’m sure he loves shadow banning for the same insidious reasons.

Where the accusation of weird does hit is with Vance, but not when it comes from the left. He’s got a lot of ideological incongruences like criticizing people for being too poor to have kids in this unsafe country full of murderous niggers/browns. That's not the argument the left is making but it can tag along.
 
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