7 Matching Annotations
  1. Apr 2016
    1. On the contrary, literacy improves. The latest studies (from a team at Coventry University) have found strong positive links between the use of text language and the skills underlying success in standard English in pre-teenage children. The more abbreviations in their messages, the higher they scored on tests of reading and vocabulary

      Proving that texting is not damaging the ability to communicate properly, that children are actually scoring higher on reading and vocab scores

    2. English has had abbreviated words ever since it began to be written down. Words such as exam, vet, fridge, cox and bus are so familiar that they have effectively become new words

      Texting and how its damaging the English language with individuals not using the full word, this form of writing has been around since words began to be written down

    3. 2b or not 2b?

      The article discusses texting and that it's actually been around for some time, that it is breaking up the ability to form sentences and individual are breaking up words and abbreviating, which actually has been around for decades

    4. As a new variety of language, texting has been condemned as "textese", "slanguage", a "digital virus". According to John Sutherland of University College London, writing in this paper in 2002, it is "bleak, bald, sad shorthand. Drab shrinktalk ... Linguistically it's all pig's ear ... it masks dyslexia, poor spelling and mental laziness. Texting is penmanship for illiterates."

      Texting is taking away from actually having a real conversation

  2. Mar 2016
    1. In still other words, what if we chose to accept the fact that every few years, despite all reasonable precautions, some hundreds or thousands of us may die in the sort of ghastly terrorist attack that a democratic republic cannot 100-percent protect itself from without subverting the very principles that make it worth protecting?

      Interesting thought, to randomly give up x amount of lives to make the ultimate sacrifice for freedom and the american principles

    2. Would it be monstrous to refer to the 40,000-plus domestic highway deaths we accept each year because the mobility and autonomy of the car are evidently worth that high price?

      comparing domestic highway deaths to an act of terrorism but as an monstrous experiment,

    3. What are the effects on the American idea of Guantánamo, Abu Ghraib, Patriot Acts I and II, warrantless surveillance, Executive Order 13233, corporate contractors performing military functions, the Military Commissions Act, NSPD 51, etc., etc.?

      Not sure what the effects of Guantanamo are