When you hear "Elitist", you know you are "Uppity"

Sep 05, 2008 07:18

Recently, at the RNC Convention in St.Paul, Rep. Lynn Westmoreland, R-Ga, was conversing with reporters and said:

"Just from what little I've seen of her and Mr. Obama, Senator Obama, they're a member of an elitist-class individual that thinks they're uppity."
When asked to clarify that he actually used the word "uppity", Westmoreland confirmed it ( Read more... )

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technoshaman September 5 2008, 14:40:22 UTC
That, ah say, that Georgia so-called representative is about as sharp as a bowlin' ball. Makes me glad I'm *from* that state... as in, far away.

I think we all ought to get uppity. We don't *need* his steenking permission to make ourselves better. They gonna call us something? Let's live up to it. In spades.

"Uppity? Yer damn right, Mister Congressman. We are all about making ourselves better than the likes of *you*."

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codeamazon September 5 2008, 14:47:14 UTC
The thing I find fascinating about that quote is the phrasing. "that thinks they're uppity". Parsed, it means he's saying that the Obama's they they are uppity. I've been puzzling over it and what I keep coming back to is that it suggests the use of the word was intentional, not inadvertent. The question then is why? Why is having a two-bit politician make such an incendiary statement worth the risk? They're going to inflame a lot of people -- possibly to action. They must think that they're also going to appeal to or crystalize the thinking of more people.

Or he's just so stupid he can't form a sentence.

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mouser September 5 2008, 14:56:59 UTC
"uppity" to want to move above the station I think they should be in.

"elitist" to be (or believe they are) at the pinnacle of ones station.

...

I need a better dictionary I guess...

In fairness, that's PROBABLY not what he meant by "uppity". What he PROBABLY meant was "one that intentionally causes controversy without a reasonable cause."

But yea. Word choice fail. BIG time.

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srmalloy September 6 2008, 01:52:13 UTC
So am I the only one cringing at the horribly-crossed construction "they're a member of an elitist-class individual"? Plural, then singular, then a phrase implying being a component of a singular object... And then the last phrase, which as I read it declares that the 'elitist-class individual' (of which Senator and Mrs. Obama are collectively 'a member') thinks that Senator and Mrs. Obama are 'uppity'. Does Rep. Westmoreland have some personal acquaintance of this 'individual'?

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