February 13, 2019

Kamala Harris is "bluntly putting down markers on nuanced topics to help inoculate her from false critiques with answers that also illuminate how she views her own identity."

That's from Politico, "Why Kamala Harris is glad people are asking if she's black enough/The candidate is looking to head off a problem that dogged Barack Obama" by Christopher Cadelago.

First, I don't believe that Politico knows that Harris is "glad." Also, I wouldn't use the word "dogged" with Barack Obama, given that he was dogged with the question of the literal eating of dogs.

But what I want to do is count the metaphors in the quote I put in the title:

1. bluntly — The adjective leads us to think we'll be referring to something that could be sharpened — like a weapon or a pencil — but in this case is not.

2. putting down markers — "A marker, to a gambler, is an I.O.U. ... The gambler's definition of marker as 'promissory note'' appeared first in 1887, but was popularized in Damon Runyon's 'Guys and Dolls'' in 1932: 'Now I am going to pay my landlady, and take up a few markers here and there, and feed myself up good.' A 1934 film based on a Runyon tale about a little girl used as an I.O.U. was titled 'Little Miss Marker.''' Wrote William Safire, a while back, in the NYT. (Here's the film clip with Shirley Temple as an IOU in human form.)

3. nuanced — "Nuance" comes from words that mean cloud. We're talking about subtlety in shading. How could you in an unsharp way put an IOU on a cloud?

4. inoculate — To inoculate is to engraft or implant. The "ocu" part actually means "eye," because it was a plant eye that was engrafted. We now have to think of the IOU as something that, engrafted into a cloud, is like the germs put into the human body to produce immunity from the disease that would be caused by those germs if the body had encountered them in some other way. The disease in this image is "false critiques," and the immunity is "answers." This is the one metaphor the writer probably thought about consciously. A good writer would notice that this is the central, useful metaphor and edited out any hint of a metaphor that doesn't fit — including "dead metaphors" like "bluntly." (Here's George Orwell on dead metaphors.)

5. illuminate — Now, it's about giving light. The light source is the "answers," but, as we just saw, within the inoculation metaphor, the answers were immunity. Immunity resists disease. That's a good thing. Let the answers be good in that form. Don't change them into something else that you think is good. I like light, but you're annoying me with the task of picturing light along with sharpness, gambling, clouds, and inoculation.

In short, don't mix metaphors. And I miss William Safire. I should read a lot of his old columns and get some ideas about how to write the kinds of things I'd like to be able to just read, but he's not there anymore to write them for me.

147 comments:

Kay said...

Is there any particular Safire piece or pieces you would recommend to someone who is curious about his work?

rhhardin said...

Dead metaphors aren't exactly mixed metaphors, except in rare cases where they stir to live and battle.

Miss Butler drew the teeth of Miss Andersen's forehand, to remember an example of Fowler.

Other than when that happens, mixing is okay.

AustinRoth said...

Poor Kamala. So feeling the love of a press pushing her candidacy. She is going to be crushed by them turning on her when Michelle announces she is running. Then they will crush her on behalf of Michelle.

Kay said...

Reading some old Safire columns from 2009, and they’re great!

rhhardin said...

I bet markers is a golf reference.

rehajm said...

In short, don't mix metaphors

Yep- keep it straight. It ain't rocket surgery.

Ann Althouse said...

@rhhardin

It's not okay. Writers get away with it, and you and many others are indulgent. I'm not, and I think I'm right.

Yes, if you have to read for work or some practical purpose, it's good not to get distracted by the bad writing. But it's still bad writing, and some people, like me and dead Safire and dead Orwell, hold writers to a higher standard.

It's the readers who suffer. It's harder to read the jumbled up writing and it's awful that we're encouraged to numb our minds so we don't even notice the concreteness behind the words and everything becomes abstraction.

Dave Begley said...

Ann: Could you make a tag "Clearing the field for Kamala" of "Kamala is the one?"

These stories are ridiculous.

Ralph L said...

Althouse critiques with answers that also illuminate how she views her own identity.

tomaig said...

You and James Taranto should start a Safire-styled "On Language" column...I'd read it!

Ann Althouse said...

"A spirit of national masochism prevails, encouraged by an effete corps of impudent snobs who characterize themselves as intellectuals."

Ralph L said...

some people, like me and dead Safire and dead Orwell, hold writers to a higher standard.

I would not like to be held by someone dead.

Ann Althouse said...

"You and James Taranto should start a Safire-styled "On Language" column...I'd read it!"

I could collect the Safire-ish things from the blog archive and make a free-standing book (in Kindle).

Maybe when I finish my adventures in eye surgery. (Soon!!)

It can go along with this new "Bonfire of the Vanities" thing.

Hmm. "[Sa]fire of the Vanities."

rhhardin said...

You know, Klipshorn was right I think when he spoke of the `blanketing' effect of ordinary language, referring, as I recall, to the part that sort of, you know, `fills in' between the other parts. That part, the `filling' you might say, of which the expression `you might say' is a good example, is to me the most interesting part, and of course it might also be called the `stuffing' I suppose, and there is probably also, in addition, some other word that would do as well, to describe it, or maybe a number of them. But the quality this `stuffing' has, that the other parts of verbality do not have, is two-parted, perhaps: (1) and `endless' quality and (2) a `sludge' quality. Of course that is possibly two qualities but I prefer to think of them as different aspects of a single quality, if you can think that way. The `endless' aspect of `stuffing' is that it goes on and on, in many different forms, and in fact our exchanges are in large measure composed of it, in larger measure even, perhaps, than they are composed of that which is not `stuffing.' The `sludge' quality is the *heaviness* that this `stuff' has, similar to the heavier motor oils, a kind of downward pull but still fluid, if you follow me, and I can't help thinking that this downwardness is valuable, although it's hard to say how, right at the moment. So, summing up, there is a relation between what I have been saying and what we're doing here at the plant with these plastic buffalo humps. Now you're probably familiar with the fact that the per-capita production of trash in this country is up from 2.75 pounds per day in 1920 to 4.5 pounds per day in 1965, the last year for which we have figures, and is increasing at the rate of about four percent per year. Now that rate will probably go up, because it's *been* going up, and I hazard that we may very well soon reach a point where it's 100 percent, right? And there can no longer be any question of `disposing' of it, because it's all there is, and we will simply have to learn how to `dig' it--that's slang, but peculiarly appropriate here. So that's why we're in humps, right now, more really from a philosophical point of view than because we find them a great moneymaker. They are `trash,' and what in fact could be more useless and trashlike? It's that we want to be on the leading edge of this trash phenomenon, the everted sphere of the future, and that's why we pay particular attention, too, to those aspects of language that may be seen as a model of the trash phenomenon. And it's certainly been a pleasure showing you around the plant this afternoon, and meeting you, and talking to you about these things, which are really more important, I believe, than people tend to think. Would you like a cold Coke from the Coke machine now, before you go?

- Barthelme, Snow White

tcrosse said...

Ignore those nattering nabobs of negativism.

Ann Althouse said...

"I would not like to be held by someone dead."

Sometimes I imagine myself accompanied by the ghosts of Safire and Orwell.

That is pretty creepy.

Which dead people are your companions? Famous dead people. Don't tell me about your parents, etc. Not here anyway. You can tell me about your parents in the next (or last) café. Ratsby is ready to listen.

Jaq said...

I get the image of a cat peeing around the house.

tcrosse said...

I miss Norma Loquendi.

TerriW said...

"Bluntly" is an interesting choice with the Harris smoking marijuana topic, as well.

Jaq said...

Mark Twain, Thoreau, Dostoyevsky, Hemingway, David Fucking Foster Wallace.

traditionalguy said...

In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God... all things were made by Him, and without Him was not anything made that was made.

That was by a great writer, William Tyndale, known as the man who gave God an English voice.

Kevin said...

Argle-bargle.

Ralph L said...

I can't read "nuanced" without remembering David Gergen calling Bill Clinton "thoughtful and nuanced" on TV in 1992 or 3 (before he officially worked for him). Obviously, Bill's pants crease was ruined by use.

chuck said...

Journalists should avoid the BS style, it gives the game away. Hey, kid, want to buy a tube of toothpaste?

Rocketeer said...

Which dead people are your companions?

Nikola Tesla, Henry Ford, George Washington Carver and...Marcus Aurelius.

Wince said...

tim in vermont said...
I get the image of a cat peeing around the house.

My mind went to cow farts.

chuck said...

Which dead people are your companions?

Franklin, Maxwell, Darwin.

traditionalguy said...

My dead companions would be John Steinbeck and Walt Whitman.

Fernandinande said...

"Black black blackety black" said the puff piece, "black black!"

people are asking if she's black enough

I skimmed the puff piece and didn't see any such person actually mentioned or quoted - because they're black, and therefore cannot be criticized.

"She answered doubts about her African-American heritage", but she didn't answer an actual person who asked an actual question.

“I am black and I am proud of it," she said bluntly.

No, you are a mulatto, and your standard-issue dishonesty and racism are boring.

Bob Boyd said...

Dogs put down markers. The method of the message seems blunt, but other dogs find them nuanced and illuminating.

Dear corrupt left, go F yourselves said...

Or - how the media democratic Party will turn Kamala into a god.

CJinPA said...

It's conventional wisdom that the "not black enough" claims "dogged" Obama, but I recall very little attention brought to it AT THE TIME THE DOGGING WAS SAID TO HAVE OCCURRED.

That is, to the degree it happened, it was an example of racism coming from the Left, and from non-white sources. Which is problematic for The Narrative. It only became conventional wisdom after the election, when it could be discussed vaguely enough to not harm The Narrative.

I do recall several references to it, just not many, or maybe none, that were contemporaneous, which is when it would have mattered.

tcrosse said...

Which dead people are your companions?

Robert Benchley, S.J. Perelman.

Ralph L said...

My mind went to cow farts.

That would be putting up markers.

HT said...

"Also, I wouldn't use the word "dogged" with Barack Obama, given that he was dogged with the question of the literal eating of dogs."

OMG, you have got to be kidding me.

Fernandinande said...

2. putting down markers — "A marker, to a gambler, is an I.O.U.

Actually the phrase means "To publicly demonstrate to others what one is capable of or intends to do."

To inoculate is to engraft or implant.

Nope.

tcrosse said...

Is Kamala black enough? Taranto would call that a question nobody is asking.

Skeptical Voter said...

Osculating posteriors---and a particular posterior at that--is what the press has been doing re Kamala Harris for the last six weeks or so.

But at least she is half real Indian--although the Cherokee nation might not agree.

MD Greene said...

Hard to know which is worse -- the candidate's faux-serious recitation of anodyne platitudes or Politico's cliche-riddled blather pretending to take it seriously.

Not looking forward to 2020.

stevew said...

My writing education was guided by The Elements of Style. The great majority of what I write is related to my work - non-fiction, explanatory or instructive in nature - and so I do not employ metaphors, and it is easy to follow Strunk & White's rules. News and opinion writers have a harder time of it, but they are professionals so we expect better.

Simpler is better. Omit needless words, and metaphors (and certainly don't mix them) is wise advice to the writer that wants to communicate clearly. Isn't communication the goal of the writing?

Bob Boyd said...

There will be many things the media will be letting us know we won't be allowed to talk about unless we want to be called racist.

Fernandinande said...

Speaking of creepy non-white, non-male politicians, muslim Rep. Ilhan Omar sent a letter to "USA Powerlifting" threatening to take their money if they don't let men compete in the women's division.

MadisonMan said...

I'm laughing that there's an 'Obama eats dog' tag.

wsw said...

"nuance(d)" is one of those bullshit journalism devices separating the lofty from all the rest of us rubes who always seem to miss the point. -WSW

Fernandinande said...

News and opinion writers have a harder time of it, but they are professionals so we expect better.

I often get the impression that those scribblers are frustrated novelists who dislike reporting facts and ideas in a clear, understandable manner.

Retail Lawyer said...

If what you are saying is disagreeable or nonsense, or relies on assumptions that are, vague and confusing writing is helpful. And it can also signal to readers that you are hip, woke, a fellow traveler, or in crowd member.

traditionalguy said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Michael K said...

She is going to be crushed by them turning on her when Michelle announces she is running.
I expect that, if Harris stumbles, Mooch will be right there in an instant,

Fernandinande said...

I'm not [indulgent], and I think I'm right.

Well, all your descriptions of the supposed metaphors were wrong.

HT said...

"I'm laughing that there's an 'Obama eats dog' tag."


Helps with the demonization.

BudBrown said...

Hey, it's a minefield out there. You get read by some twitterer who made it to a nuanced studies class and got distracted from texting by the word intersectionality because it sounds like sex could be involved and they're outraged, not so much because sex isn't involved but because of the oppression, and you like the word blunt, fits nice, this aint no ditzy dame, she's blunt, but if you point out she's bluntly highlighting then the twitterer will think high yellow or something and start twitteraging about your impudent intersectionality transgression and you could get hung out to twist in the windmills of their minds.

buwaya said...

The reporting of facts in a clear understandable manner is not a goal of such writing.
These people go to school to learn something else entirely.
It is all for propaganda, so emotional effects, for a given audience, are the entire point.

It will not do to simply present the public with data. As Churchill commented about Allied propaganda, the truth is precious, and must be attended by a bodyguard of lies.

There are enormous resources devoted to this system, that does not pay for itself commercially. It all exists for another purpose. Its human components are trained and chosen for their roles. One doesn't spend such money, absorb such losses, as a charity, for some altruistic reason.

chickelit said...

Fernandistein said...
Speaking of creepy non-white, non-male politicians, muslim Rep. Ilhan Omar sent a letter to "USA Powerlifting" threatening to take their money if they don't let men compete in the women's division.

So you think the Musselman shouldn't win at American women's powerlifting too, Fernandistein? I can't imagine what sort of mind thinks like that. Sad.

Ann Althouse said...

"Is there any particular Safire piece or pieces you would recommend to someone who is curious about his work?"

If you click on my Safire tag, you'll only get posts where I found something he wrote useful to a topic that I was doing for some reason.

I can't remember any particular column, only the pleasure of reading his weekly column.

There are collections of his columns, "The Right Word in the Right Place at the Right Time: Wit and Wisdom from the Popular "On Language" Column in The New York Times Magazine" and "No Uncertain Terms: More Writing from the Popular "On Language" Column in The New York Times Magazine." (Those are Althouse portals to Amazon, ie, the "Amazon Associates" program that gives me a percentage.)

If you have a NYT subscription, it's easy to find the old columns in the archive.

Enjoy!!

Jaq said...

Helps with the demonization

Yes, right thinking people know that just because something is true doesn’t mean you should discuss it when it comes to Obama.

Mike Sylwester said...

... to help inoculate her from ...

Should be

... to help inoculate herself ....

-------

... from false critiques ...

The word false is presumptuous.

Lucien said...

When it comes to mixing metaphors just shoot from the seat of your pants:then grab the bull by the horns and let the chips fall where they may.

Aspirationally, I’d like Groucho to be my companion.

Howard said...

Blogger buwaya said...

The reporting of facts in a clear understandable manner is not a goal of such writing.
These people go to school to learn something else entirely.
It is all for propaganda, so emotional effects, for a given audience, are the entire point.

It will not do to simply present the public with data. As Churchill commented about Allied propaganda, the truth is precious, and must be attended by a bodyguard of lies.

There are enormous resources devoted to this system, that does not pay for itself commercially. It all exists for another purpose. Its human components are trained and chosen for their roles. One doesn't spend such money, absorb such losses, as a charity, for some altruistic reason.


Ah, yes. It's a well oiled machine designed by Rube Goldberg and operated by the Little Tramp in Modern Times. Brilliant.

Birches said...

I don't know how that sentence made it past an editor. My eyes glossed over half way through and I thought, "I bet Althouse is blogging about how horrible this sentence is."

Howard said...

Do you think Trump will continue to live rent free in liberals minds 2-years after his departure as prodigiously as Mooshell and Barack Hussein?

chickelit said...

Walking a mile for Kamala in her shoes Pinches the old man's toes.

buwaya said...

It is "well oiled" indeed. Check out just the publicly available financial data on these entities. They don't come cheap.

Absorb that "big picture", and then consider just what its all for.

mockturtle said...

Parsing aside, it's unreadable.

Howard said...

The big picture is an inkblot and the Doctor says you are a paranoid manic. NEXT!

Ann Althouse said...

“Actually the phrase means "To publicly demonstrate to others what one is capable of or intends to do." ”

The stuff at your link supports me!

Your marker is the demonstration that you are good for the amount you’re trying to bet.

You’ve just got it put more abstractly and I’m filling you in on the concrete image.

Howard said...

buwaya: you must do some investigating because the real conspiracy is your heirs are encouraging your fancy night terrors so you will go away and leave them to party in SF on your dime.

gg6 said...

'90 lady cops on the road
And I'm arrested for doing eighty
Like Hamlet, all about "words, words, words"
Divide a whole into thirds, thirds, thirds
Just relax; if you wanna know me, here's two facts
I hate catchy choruses and I'm a hypocrite
Hungry hungry hippo-crite'
OED:
blunt, adj. and n....Dull, insensitive, stupid, obtuse: said, it appears, originally of the sight, whence of the perceptions generally, and the intellect. (Now generally with some antithesis to sharp, as in sense …
marker, n. .... I. A person who or implement which makes a mark or marks; a person who records, notes, or observes something.
boring in bore, v.transitive......To weary by tedious conversation or simply by the failure to be interesting....

Ann Althouse said...

Dittoypur attempted disagreement about inoculate. And reread what I wrote.

Ann Althouse said...

“Dittoypur attempted disagreement about inoculate. And reread what I wrote.”

Soon I’ll see clearly!

That should read, Ditto your...

Charlie Currie said...

Ben Rhodes may have been delusional about Iran, but when it came to journalists, he was spot on.

gg6 said...

Now a "disagreement" can be 'attempted'?! Hmmmm.
words, words, words

khematite said...

In the context of that Politico sentence, I took "putting down markers" to refer to something more like a naval term about marking a location in the water. In "The Caine Mutiny" (novel and movie), Captain Queeg is labeled a coward by some of his crew for shirking his responsibility to take landing Marines as close as possible to the place on the beach they're to occupy.

Instead, Queeg is said to have dropped yellow dye markers in the water showing the landing party the approximate path to take to their spot on the beach, but then has turned his ship around and quickly retreated from the enemy fire. Members of Queeg's crew dub him "Old Yellow Stain" and behind his back sing a song with lyrics mocking his cowardice.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7lRoVFdbBNc

Not really a great metaphor for what Kamala Harris is trying to do (marking her stances on various issue?), but then either is the analogy used by the Politico writer.

buwaya said...

Sadly, my heirs do not live in San Francisco, they have all moved, now, to follow their careers. Its one of my faults (many faults, you are welcome to name the others) to boast about our children, their qualities and successes, and I would love to do so here, but I cannot. Lets just say that they surpass us, and in them I am entirely satisfied, and even delighted.

My "night terrors" aren't. We, ourselves, are well-armored and quite well placed to evade the tricks of history, or much more so than most. Money and passports, and position, matter a lot. I write out of a mixture of fascination and disgust, to a degree impersonally. It is like being a spectator ashore, watching a lovely vessel, with a rich and glorious history, being steered onto a reef.

gspencer said...

Didn't she say the other day she smokes and inhales blunts?

narciso said...

saffire started out as a publicist for tex mccrary, then ended up one of nixons speech writers, so he had a little more experience than the usual times columnist

gg6 said...

Charlie Currie said...:Ben Rhodes may have been delusional about Iran, but when it came to journalists, he was spot on.'
Indeed. 'He is the very model of a modern major mouthpiece...' CHORUS

buwaya said...

And experience teaches that there are very few actual paranoids, who fantasize dangers.

Paranoia, as it is usually labelled in American political speech, is the natural consequence of experience and perspective.

Howard said...

A spectator has no skin in the game, yet fanatical gesticulates with spit fleckeled vigor. It's like being in a rubber room of your own creation. I'm sure your kids joke about how kookier Dad gets every day.

CJinPA said...

saffire started out as a publicist for tex mccrary, then ended up one of nixons speech writers, so he had a little more experience than the usual times columnist

He authored remarks that would have been remembered for a century or two: the draft presidential statement eulogizing the Apollo 11 astronauts if they were stranded on the moon. Fortune and American engineering rendered it a footnote.

Johnathan Birks said...

William Safire wouldn't get a receptionist job at the NYT today.

Johnathan Birks said...

"Didn't she say the other day she smokes and inhales blunts?"

Listening to Snoop and Tupac. All the while locking up drug offenders.

Ken B said...

My guess is that put down a marker refers to marking a path or boundary. Some use the phrase lay down a marker, with the same meaning.

The IOU is really strained. That metaphor involves other people taking the IOU, and the uncertainty of an IOU undercuts the purpose of the metaphor.

CJinPA said...

Listening to Snoop and Tupac. All the while locking up drug offenders.

She said she listened to these gentlemen when she was in college, which turns out was before they had released any music.

That fits in with the Politico narrative: She has to fib like this to "illuminate how she views her own identity."

FIDO said...

Larry Niven's Laws for Writers. They are:

Writers who write for other writers should write letters.

Never be embarrassed or ashamed about anything you choose to write. (Think of this before you send it to a market.)

Stories to end all stories on a given topic, don't.

It is a sin to waste the reader's time.

If you've nothing to say, say it any way you like. Stylistic innovations, contorted story lines or none, exotic or genderless pronouns, internal inconsistencies, the recipe for preparing your lover as a cannibal banquet: feel free. If what you have to say is important and/or difficult to follow, use the simplest language possible. If the reader doesn't get it, then let it not be your fault.

Everybody talks first draft.

Ken B said...

Giving me an IOU is not something you do, it is something *we* do. It does not advertise your intent, it advertises your inability. Althouse is just wrong here.

Jaq said...

It is a sin to waste the reader's time

Mark Twain said it was a hanging offense, since you were destroying human life.

Michael K said...

It is like being a spectator ashore, watching a lovely vessel, with a rich and glorious history, being steered onto a reef.

That's why I have no interest in living to 100 as my mother did. She had the most glorious life, in spite of two world wars.

We shall not see their like again.

Jaq said...

Blogger Howard said...
Do you think Trump will continue to live rent free in liberals minds 2-years after his departure as prodigiously as Mooshell and Barack Hussein?


It wasn’t conservatives slobbering over her at the Grammies.

narciso said...

a little background, on tex from his son


http://kevinmccrarynyc.blogspot.com/

buwaya said...

Perspective is a difficult thing. Its not just about politics, it is so in any field. The history of a technical system is also important.

It requires processing great masses of information, past data, and then to see it as it is, or could be, with some immediacy. This is a genuine problem with reading history, as even the most avid can mistake this as just a lot of stories. The best stories, mind you, but stories. The connection of the range of possibility in the real world, about which you may get a call, or text, or email tomorrow, does not happen.

Needless to say, the teaching of history in the US today is a complete disaster. Not only is it unable to make that connection, but it even fails to teach all the good stories.

History also teaches that history sneaks up on you, but it never does so without signs and portents.

And further, that what is being discussed, the problem definition and the actual considerations, the salient facts , among people who make the largest and most significant decisions, is very rarely known to the people on whom history will spring. Or be sprung. In that sense, but not just that, all history is a history of conspiracies and secret knowledge, a "Secret History" in the Procopian sense. This well understood, among the knowledgable, simply in an empirical way.

mockturtle said...

Per buwaya: It is like being a spectator ashore, watching a lovely vessel, with a rich and glorious history, being steered onto a reef.

Beautiful, and sadly accurate, illustration.

Professional lady said...

I like it when people get to the point. I consider a literary work a masterpiece when, after finishing it, I say to myself "There was not one word in that book that shouldn't have been there."

BudBrown said...

Oh great. This post has got me hanging out with Spiro Agnew. Yikes. A sister gave me a Spiro Agnew watch one Christmas but I lost it. Are there Trump watches?

bagoh20 said...

Obsess much? You deliberately chose the definitions of those words that don't fit the metaphors. They have other definitions that work just fine. Do you really not know that "bluntly" can be used other than as related to sharpness?

Blunt

1. Having a dull edge or end; not sharp.
2.
a. Abrupt and often disconcertingly frank in speech: "People [in the Western US] are blunt
with one another, sometimes even cruel, believing honesty is stronger medicine than
sympathy" (Gretel Ehrlich). See Synonyms at gruff.
b. Stark; unadorned: "The blunt truth ... is that he is devoid of political courage"
3. A rolled cigarette of marijuana. Term used by boomers in a failed attempt to indicate they are down with the younger generation.

Ralph L said...

Never be embarrassed or ashamed about anything you choose to write

Shouldn't that be: Never write anything that will embarrass or shame you?

Matt said...

"The candidate is looking to head off a problem that dogged Barack Obama..."

She's looking to get in front of something that followed Obama? I can't find any support for this, but "head off" sounds like it has something to do with horses - putting yourself as an obstacle in front of a horse so it will stop or go another direction. Dogging sounds like something to do with sheep dogs - bothering sheep, nipping at their heels so they will go a certain direction.

StephenFearby said...

'Kamala Harris is "bluntly putting down markers on nuanced topics to help inoculate her from false critiques with answers that also illuminate how she views her own identity."'

I think a much better take then "gambling markers" is animal scent marking:

"...Scent rubbing is often performed with scent marking and self-anointing, and is typically used by animals to scent mark an object in their surroundings. This marking can be used as a means of communication between species."

"...Differences in gender and age exist for scent rubbing, with adults and males performing the behaviour more frequently than juveniles and females in many species."

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scent_rubbing

MayBee said...

I'm thinking if the wrong sort of person had said a black person was bluntly putting down markers, it would have gotten the Trump Tweet TRAIL treatment

I'm Full of Soup said...

Liberals love to try to make big points using the word nuance yet the word nuance means "a subtle difference in or shade of meaning, expression, or sound."

mockturtle said...

And further, that what is being discussed, the problem definition and the actual considerations, the salient facts , among people who make the largest and most significant decisions, is very rarely known to the people on whom history will spring. Or be sprung. In that sense, but not just that, all history is a history of conspiracies and secret knowledge, a "Secret History" in the Procopian sense. This well understood, among the knowledgable, simply in an empirical way.

I'm currently reading about the 14th century, which exemplifies that perfectly. History doesn't just happen. Other than occurrence of plagues and natural disasters, it is devious human ambition that steers it.

Fernandinande said...

You deliberately chose the definitions of those words that don't fit the metaphors.

Heh, that metaphor stuff was pretty Dippy Dawg.

They have other definitions that work just fine.

None of those words or expressions were metaphors.

1. bluntly — The adjective ... (adverb) in an uncompromisingly forthright way.

2. putting down markers — idiom, as above.

3. nuanced — characterized by subtle shades of meaning or expression.

4. inoculate — to protect as if by inoculation

5. illuminate - clarify or explain (a subject or matter).

tcrosse said...

Nuance was attributed to John 'I was for it before I was against it' Kerry in 2004.

n.n said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
n.n said...

Markers are used by hunters to track the progress of their prey. Illuminate or light up is the action taken to expose and disorient a target. Blunt force trauma can be used in lieu of a scalpel to prepare the selected undesirable for processing. Identity it a nuanced coding of diversity or color judgment used by racists and other low information bigots.

donald said...

Gram Parsons. I gotta whole lotta him in mean other than being rich and talented.

JackWayne said...

Between writer H and writer B there is one I always read and one I skip.

Bay Area Guy said...

Love Safire, not too big a fan of Kamala, though.

Caligula said...

"What was you listening to when you was high? What was on? What song was on?” the host, Charlamagne tha God, said.

Another host suggested, "Snoop?"

"Definitely Snoop, Tupac for sure," she said.

Fox News: "Kamala Harris says she listened to Snoop Dogg, Tupac while smoking weed in college years before they made music."

Huffington Post: "Right-Wingers Obsess Over Kamala Harris’ Music Picks While Smoking Pot In College"

So, she's authentically unauthentic? As in, fake? Given her age and ethnicity, perhaps she'd have done better to speak of college days filled with the smell of blunts and the sounds of Bob Marley.

donald said...

Me not mean.

Limited blogger said...

The vetting of Kamala will be done by these independent/neutral entities? Ok, good, thanks.

Earnest Prole said...

Politico knows that Harris is "glad" because pure propaganda pieces like these are cooked up with either the candidate or the campaign manager.

PM said...

All I care to know about someone's identity is on their driver's license.

Agh, forgot.
CA now offers a non-binary gender option thanks to that asshat Sen. Scott Weiner.

Char Char Binks, Esq. said...

Kamala is more Indian than Fauxcahontas, less Indian than Nikki Haley, and that is enough.

AZ Bob said...

"Kamala Harris is "bluntly putting down markers on nuanced topics to help inoculate her from false critiques with answers that also illuminate how she views her own identity."

When people communicate like this, they are usually trying to obfuscate something that is fairly unsophisticated.

Or as a friend is fond of say, "That's a lot of happy horseshit."

One word that jumps out is "nuanced." It inoculates the speaker from clear thinking.

Char Char Binks, Esq. said...

"Me not mean."

Me not neither.

JAORE said...

My dogs put down markers too. But they are more consistent in their actions.

mccullough said...

When interpreting books, essays, poems some readers often consider the etymology of the word as well as its best known uses/associations, which aren’t even known to most.

The stakes get even higher when interpreting religious texts.

I think most popular writing can’t withstand this kind of scrutiny but it’s fun to subject it to the traditional methods of literary interpretation.

The expression “step on my dick” might send the scholar scurrying to find the origins of the word dick for penis. And then associate the word dick with Nixon, the most famous dick of all. Then follow up that dick is short for Richard and go into the origins of Richard and Richard the Lionheart.

That “Trail” Trump referenced in the Warren Tweet the other day triggered the SJW exegetes. Trail is the Trail of Tears. It can’t mean Trail is into lag behind, a very common use of the word. Trail is often used in “campaign trail.” Trail of Tears isn’t well known.

The trail is not a word from any Native American language. It’s Latin. To pull.




narciso said...

Moldea interference (which Ken Starr shepherd through the publisher) is a compendium of all organized crime connections to sports, in a tangential way he referenced safire because his boss, had represented casinos in the 50s

Anthony said...

I’ve actually wondered if some dead person is looking out for me. I’ve been in a couple of tight spots that could have gone horribly wrong. Actually several. Wouldn’t know who though. Lately I’d like to think it’s been TE Lawrence. Probably some no/name ancestor.

But thank you!

Bad Lieutenant said...

rhhardin said...
You know, Klipshorn was right I think

rh, do you do anything but quote?

buster said...

Althouse @ 7:58:

Sometimes I imagine I am accompanied by Anselm of Canterbury.

Howard said...

Blogger tim in vermont said..... Mooshell and Barack Hussein?
It wasn’t conservatives slobbering over her at the Grammies.

In the moment and in mind are two different states... one of being and one of obsessing.

buwaya said...

On translating history from a story into reality -

This is a bit of a psychological matter, and very "fuzzy". Perhaps it is more difficult to describe than to understand, once one understands.

It helps, I suppose, to have history happen before you. Something written about after the fact, that you witnessed, in person, before your eyes at the time. I was looking over my contact prints of the hundreds of rolls I took in 1983-86, of people on the street, the great men and women, the players and the spear carriers of that distant drama. Some people have had that sort of advantage, if that's what it is, as in many cases it takes the form of being a victim, collateral damage or cannon-fodder.

I also have the advantage of having been raised in a city of ghosts, among the ruins of history, and many of its survivors. It is like a doubter of Christ's resurrection, not only being told of it by eye-witnesses, but seeing Jesus himself, and moreover being able to put ones fingers on his wounds. For me history wasn't just books, it was the table-talk, it was the family story, it was the dead people at every table. They had seen MacArthur and Yamashita, and spoken to Quezon, and seen the men of Iwabuchi at their bloody work. The trauma worked itself out over decades.

And, at least, in the architecture, one could put ones fingers on the stigmata of the city's crucifixion. This stigmata persisted. I recall one day as a teenager, when I was supervising the making of foundations for a relatives real estate venture on Manila's Dewey boulevard. I was the "señorito" on the spot, the owners rep, very much a fifth wheel by American standards, but over there it was expected. Upon starting one dig, after just a few spadefuls, the workmen began finding masses of broken Chinese porcelain. Ancient porcelain. But it was not put there ages ago. The lot was the site of the pre-war mansion of a prominent family we knew, and this was the remnant of their old collection of Chinese antiques, lost when the house burned in 1945. These were relics of the decisions of Iwabuchi, Yamashita, the Japanese government, and Generals MacArthur and Krueger.

Anonymous said...

rhhardin said...
I bet markers is a golf reference.
2/13/19, 7:47 AM


As a retired surveyor I think it may be a clumsy way to say she's staking out her metaphorical territory. Surveyors set corner monuments, or markers, to establish the limits of a piece of real property.

tcrosse said...

The article refers to blunt Magic Markers.

Doug said...

Again this morning, I got out of bed, went to my knees, made the Sign of the Cross, and thanked God for the democrat presidential candidates.

July of '20, the dNC will be BEGGING Howard Schultz and Bloomberg to run as dems.

buwaya said...

On the matter pertinent to this case, that of what is known and unknown, relevant to political decisions, and of the certainty of conspiracy -

History teaches.

I brought up Procopius, and his "Secret History". Procopius worked for the great general Belisarius, and was an eye-witness to most of his career, and was quite the insider in Byzantine politics. He wrote the "official history" of the times of Belisarius and the reign of Emperor Justinian, as a contemporary chronicle. But he also wrote the subversive "Secret History", revealed only centuries after, with the rest of the story, unofficial but greatly at odds with many of the facts and entirely so with the tone of the official story.

Today you also have secret histories. Consider Robert Caro, the favorite of our esteemed salonniere. The "first draft" of history, the official story available from the press to the public about Lyndon Johnson and, moreover, about the entirety of US politics of the day, was, well, incomplete. Or rather, in many aspects, entirely deceptive. Caro used information quite easily available to LBJ's contemporaries to reconstruct a quite Procopian "secret history". This information, had it been related to the public at the time, would have had an enormous effect on your politics. The public was not told, a matter of a series of organized and tacit conspiracies.

I use Procopius and Caro simply as examples.

This sort of conspiracy is not a sometimes-thing, but the regular order of business, always. And it is deliberate. This must be understood right off. You are not being told about most of the information relevant to making informed decisions on political matters. Any point in our past offers scope for a "secret history", but I would say you are, today, even worse-informed than Johnson's voters.

Who will find and tell you all that is relevant about K.Harris (for one)? I doubt we will find out in our lifetimes. At some point, hopefully, some new Procopius or Robert Caro will write a "secret history" and those few future people with an interest in the past will finally know that which we contemporaries should know.

Doug said...

Maybe when I finish my adventures in eye surgery. (Soon!!)
While they're cutting, why not see if they can remove that stupid Marxist feminism?

Doug said...

Ignore those nattering nabobs of negativism.

Spiro Agnew. Was Safire his speech writer?

Doug said...

Which dead people are your companions?
Hunter S. Thompson, Jayne Mansfield, McKinley Morganfield.

Doug said...

There will be many things the media will be letting us know we won't be allowed to talk about unless we want to be called racist.

Okay. I'm racist. Now what?

tcrosse said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Ann Althouse said...

You can turn down your sensitivity to metaphor (or lapse into numbness), but I am choosing here to turn my sensitivity as high as possible for the purpose of discussion.

If I turned my sensitivity down, I would still find metaphor in: "putting down markers," "inoculate," and "illuminate."

There's clearly a bad mixed metaphor problem, and I wanted to go after it by finding as much metaphor as possible. Orwell (at the link) distinguishes "dying metaphor" from completely dead metaphor, and I'm happy to conceded that "bluntly" and "nuanced" are dead metaphors. I just wanted to talk about them anyway, and I know that I have a more concrete mind than most readers. It's something that helps me write. I see images in the words and try to get them to fit together in a way that makes sense within the hidden metaphors.

Michael K said...

These were relics of the decisions of Iwabuchi, Yamashita, the Japanese government, and Generals MacArthur and Krueger.

A friend of mine bought an antebellum house in Tuscaloosa AL. He was moving there to take a faculty position at U of AL.

A year after they moved in, a big storm toppled an ancient tree in the front of the house. He looked into the hole left by the rootball, there was a pile of silver plates and bowls. No doubt they had been buried by the family before the siege of the U which was a fortified military school during the Civil War. For some reason, perhaps they had died or moved away, they never came back for the family silver. Here it was 130 years later.

tcrosse said...

Spiro Agnew. Was Safire his speech writer?

"After Nixon's 1968 victory, Safire served as a speechwriter for him and for Spiro Agnew; he is well known for having created Agnew's famous term, "nattering nabobs of negativism." - wikipedia

Bill Peschel said...

Coincidentally, I found Safire's rules for writers and put them into the manuscript of a quotebook I'm working on.

"Remember to never split an infinitive."

The rest of the list comes from "How Not to Write":

The passive voice should never be used.
Do not put statements in the negative form.
Verbs have to agree with their subjects.
Proofread carefully to see if you words out.
If you reread your work, you can find on rereading a great deal of repetition can be by rereading and editing.
A writer must not shift your point of view.
And don’t start a sentence with a conjunction. (Remember, too, a preposition is a terrible word to end a sentence with.)
Don’t overuse exclamation marks!!
Place pronouns as close as possible, especially in long sentences, as of 10 or more words, to their antecedents.
Writing carefully, dangling participles must be avoided.
If any word is improper at the end of a sentence, a linking verb is.
Take the bull by the hand and avoid mixing metaphors.
Avoid trendy locutions that sound flaky.
Everyone should be careful to use a singular pronoun with singular nouns in their writing.
Always pick on the correct idiom.
The adverb always follows the verb.
Last but not least, avoid cliches like the plague; seek viable alternatives.

Bill Peschel said...

I should have reread my post. I meant to say I put the first one in. The rest readers will have to find on their own.

Safire lives!

tomaig said...

Perhaps the "bluntly" was a reference to her marijuana use?

Achilles said...

Howard said...
Blogger buwaya said...

...

There are enormous resources devoted to this system, that does not pay for itself commercially. It all exists for another purpose. Its human components are trained and chosen for their roles. One doesn't spend such money, absorb such losses, as a charity, for some altruistic reason.

Ah, yes. It's a well oiled machine designed by Rube Goldberg and operated by the Little Tramp in Modern Times. Brilliant.

One of the best things about this blog is watching drooling leftist idiots like Howard try to engage buwaya.

Known Unknown said...

Althouse is never wrong. At least not according to her.

Known Unknown said...

I like Howard. He can be interesting and artful with language, even if we disagree on things.

Known Unknown said...

"The passive voice should never be used."

Unless it's a cop shooting someone, then have at it.

Wilbur said...

A marker in golf is an individual assigned with the task of keeping the score for a player. Normally one player acts as the marker of another player in his group, one who not his or her partner.

A marker is also the name for the object, usually a coin, used to mark the position of one's ball on the putting green.

buwaya said...

Damon Runyon, "Little Miss Marker"

Its in a bunch of Damon Runyon collections, including I believe what I have, "Guys & Dolls: The Stories of Damon Runyon" W. Kennedy ed.

It is of course also a Shirley Temple movie.

Gahrie said...

Yes, if you have to read for work or some practical purpose, it's good not to get distracted by the bad writing. But it's still bad writing, and some people, like me and dead Safire and dead Orwell, hold writers to a higher standard.

It's the readers who suffer.


And yet if we "misinterpret" what you have clearly written, you blame us

techsan said...

1. bluntly: while smoking a joint
2. putting down a marker: gambling...many do this high?
3. nuanced: from a word that means "cloud"...see smoking a joint
4. inoculate: "like the germs put into the human body to produce immunity from the disease that would be caused by those germs if the body had encountered them in some other way". an argument for medical weed.
5. illuminate: weed...it opens your eyes.

See also: "Kamala Harris says she listened to Snoop Dogg, Tupac while smoking weed in college years before they made music"

The metaphor is bonged.

AZ Bob said...

I bet Harris is exaggerating her pot experience to try to be cool. It reminds me when Obama said the White Sox were his favorite team and he was asked who was his favorite player. And because it was BS he said, "All of them." Warren sent out a video of her sipping a beer. It is the same stunt.