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Defining Free Speech

Charity Sweet | 01.08.2006 10:38 | Education | Globalisation | Indymedia | London | World

Why has the noun and right of free speech been removed from the 10th edition of the Oxford Dictionary? Does this have anything to do with Tony the Toad's rediculous Socpa Act? Are you old enough to remember Perry Mason, the detective? Do you like secret societies? I have a few questions in my mind...


My opinion/my heart/my mind 30/07/06


R.S.V.P. / S.O.S. / A.S.A.P.
Defining free speech


1610 words




Dear Mr. Oxford:
Dear Perry Mason:

Hello… Is anybody home? The lights appear to be on…
Knock, knock
Who’s there?
Orange…
Orange who?
Orange you glad you’re still breathing?

Some would say yes and some would say no. So many are just trying to survive this living nightmare called ‘modern’ life. “Do this, don’t do that. Can’t you read the signs?” - classic lyrics from a classic 70’s band.

Are you “Just another brick in the wall”?

“My mama, loves me - she loves me. She get down on her knees and hug me. She loves me like a rock. She loves me like a rock, oh baby she loves me.” The music was so much ‘kinder’ then. I am just 40 years old and that’s the word I am searching for - kind.

p.779 Concise Tenth Edition Oxford Dictionary
kind: noun. 1. class or type of people or things having similar characteristics 2. character; nature - the trials were different in kind from any that proceeded them 3. each of the elements (bread and wine) of the Eucharist.

kind: adjective. 1. considerate and generous 2. (kind to) not harmful to 3. archaic affectionate, loving
Origin: old English gecynde ‘natural, native’; middle English ‘well-born, well-bred’ whence ‘courteous, gentle’

Hmmm… bears some thought.
Humankind. Kind of says it all when properly defined in black and white.
Hmmm… free speech.

p. 406 £2.99 old paperback Oxford dictionary
free speech: noun. the right to express your opinions

Concise Tenth Edition Oxford Dictionary (hard cover)
“The foremost authority on English language”
“The world’s favourite dictionary”
“The World’s Most Trusted Dictionaries” - front cover of said dictionary

[scanning the first column of p.564 for free speech; free space… free spoken… no free speech(?)]

p.564 Concise Tenth Edition Oxford Dictionary
free spoken: adj. archaic speaking candidly and openly


My dear Mr. Oxford, speaking candidly and openly can get me arrested and has got me cautioned as a serious organised criminal while curiously, the noun free speech no longer appears in your most recent dictionary(?) and is barely exercised in English society since Tony the Toad tried to ‘grinch’ it through his ridiculous SOCPA legislation, specifically section 132-137, enacted by section 138; his feeble attempt to shield himself and his political cronies from public protest regarding his asinine actions in collusion with Bushy Boy from across the pond, amongst other well known war criminals and war mongers. WTF mate? Also, while I have your attention, something else caught my attention on the exact same pages of both the ‘old’ and ‘new’ Oxford dictionaries I own.

p.406 £2.99 old paperback Oxford dictionary
Freemason: n. a member of an international order set up to promote fellowship and mutual help, with elaborate secret ceremonies
Freemasonry: n. [no written definition offered (?)]

Cool - I don’t much like secrets nor secret societies; rather reminds me of Aleister ‘creepy’ Crowley and the Golden Dawn - regardless. I am not into Satanism/evil.

p.564 Concise Tenth Edition Oxford Dictionary
Freemason: n. a member of an international order established for mutual help and fellowship, which holds elaborate secret ceremonies
Freemasonry: n. 1. the systems and institutions of the Freemasons 2. instinctive sympathy between people with something in common

What exactly is this secret something that Freemasons hold as a uniting bond? What is the secret that so many in positions of power share? Something is an unspecified or unknown thing - singular; a thing in common - an action, an activity, a secret, a concept or a thought. Is it an inanimate object that every mason owns? Highly unlikely.

Mr. Perry Mason, what is your ‘thang’? What unites y’all? What’s the secret to your ceremonies? ‘You can only but ask.’ - a very wise Irish woman taught me the importance of that phrase. It reminds me of the words to the song ‘Lean on me’. (I adore Bill Withers and his music.)

“…For no one can fill those of your needs that you won’t let show. I’m gonna’ call on you brother when I need a hand; we all need somebody to lean on. I just might have a problem that you’d understand…” I always think of this song as a prayer when I sing it.

Does your secret have anything to do with the noun and God given right of free speech being removed from p.564 of the Concise Tenth Edition of the Oxford Dictionary? Just a thought. Both definitions appeared on the same page in the reality of the Oxford dictionary of days gone by and the situation being in today’s present day modern reality, is, the noun Freemasonry has gained a written definition while the noun and right of free speech has been removed/omitted/deleted from the exact same page, only to be replaced by an adjective that is not a right by definition. I am simply stating and questioning the obvious.

I do not accept the loss of the definition of the right of free speech from your dictionary, Mr. Oxford, nor from English society, Toady: ‘less speed, more haste.’ The same clever Irish woman taught me that one too. Are you paying attention Toady? Mr. Perry Mason, what is this instinctive sympathy or fellow feeling between masons?

instinctive: adj. related to or prompted by instinct
instinct: n. 1. an innate pattern of behaviour in animals in response to certain stimuli 2. a natural or instinctive way of acting or thinking 3. a natural propensity or skill

[part of who you are; part and parcel of how you act or think - thinking often reflects into action; a natural propensity or skill]

sympathy: n. 1. feelings of pity or sorrow for someone else’s misfortune 2. understanding between people; common feeling
fellow feeling: n. sympathy based on shared experiences

Something intuitive; something you all have in common; based on a shared experience - a common way of thinking and acting. I don’t give up. What’s the ‘coo’ Mr. Perry Mason? I believe it involves some form of sympathy.

Personally, I have always loved the word empathy; in fact, greatly preferred it over its counterpart of sympathy. An old Navy sea dog taught me that ‘sympathy’ is in the dictionary “right where it belongs - between ‘shit’ and ‘syphilis’”. Instead of feeling sad for someone and looking down your nose while you do nothing, humanity should feel for and understand her fellow man - empathy - which should lead humanity into action; that’s what emotions are for.

The word emotion stems from the Latin verb motere: to move; motivate. Emotions are meant to lead the body into action(fight or flight response, mating), not apathy which is controlled through greed and fear - advertising and the news. Sympathy can drain you while empathy can empower you. Empathy is a noun meaning having the ability to empathize - a verb, an action.

empathize: v. understand and share the feelings of another

Understanding is always important in my mind. Sympathy can be an understanding between people or a common feeling and the primary definition of sympathy is feelings of sorrow for another’s misfortune. To sympathize is to feel or express sympathy which appears directly linked to misfortune whereas empathy is understanding and sharing the feelings of another without any directed link or specific ties to misfortune or feelings of sadness or sorrow. Sharing joy is amazing!

A common feeling of pity, a shared understanding based on shared experiences - eugenics keeps popping into my mind, for some odd reason; a Darwinian selection of the fittest complete with a modern day fight or flight response: today’s refugees fleeing their homeland and armed nationals, men and boys, defending and protecting their homes and families from foreign invaders; sometimes even daring to retaliate!

p.491 Concise Tenth Edition Oxford Dictionary
eugenics: plural noun (treated as singular) the science of using controlled breeding to increase the occurrence of desirable heritable characteristics in a population eu + gen + ics

eu: Greek ‘well’
eus: Greek ‘good’
gen: Greek genes ‘born’ of a specified kind
Greek gignomai ‘be born, become’
gen: biblical reference to Genesis
ics: suffix (forming nouns) denoting a subject of study or a branch of knowledge or a field of activity: politics

I spy with my little eye… the truth always comes to light. Considering the fact that eugenics was the predecessor to the Nazi train of thought, I find this rather kind definition of such an evil way of thinking - eugenics - highly offensive, personally. I will be writing my next paper on the pioneering of eugenics in Canada during the early 1900’s, before(?) the Nazi’s even existed, trust.

p.592 Concise Tenth Edition Oxford Dictionary

genocide: n. the deliberate killing of a very large number of people from a particular ethnic group or nation

Political eugenic thinking enables today’s genocide of the Lebanese children, the Palestinian children, the Iraqi children and the babes of many other nations; think about it for just a minute. Genocide is not kind. Nations are made up of children and families of varying ethnic groups. Genocide is innately wrong.

Hitler anyone??? Tony… you are a war criminal - many times worse!

Is humanity still humane?
Does free speech still exist Mr. Oxford?
What is your secret, Mr. Perry Mason?

This enquiring mind wants to know… just trying to understand my roots.


Anti copyright Charity Sweet defining free speech as the right to express your opinions; my apologies to Pink Floyd and the other artists I have quoted a few lyrics from - my heart is in the right place; sincere gratitude to Mr. Doug Russong - Grade 10 English , Dartmouth High School, who taught me to understand poetry and the importance of the 5 w’s

Charity Sweet
- e-mail: charitysweet@hotmail.co.uk

Comments

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Additional definition

01.08.2006 13:11



Nutter: (noun) 1) author of the posting above 2) lunatic 3) person who collects nuts


Norville B


Thank you Charity.

01.08.2006 18:30

Thank you Charity, that was very moving, you have a great skill with words, unlike the Oxford dictionary, who appear to misplace them. I would like to suggest that the above personal attack upon you was done by a police officer, possibly one of the bastards from Charing Cross, since we all know that theylook at this site regularly. Since the above author 'Neville', or whatever his name was, didn't even choose to back up his opinion, or even make any sort of an arguement, I put it to him that he is the nutter. Congratulations 'Neville', you have the intellect of a prize turnip.

Sick of attacks on perfectly good people.


Fair point

02.08.2006 12:19


You're right - I apologise. it was a lazy, cheap attack, more motivated by being in a bad mood and not understanding what the hell Perry Mason, old knock-knock jokes and rambling mixture of stream-of-consciousness remarks had to do with concerns about freedom of speech and Tony Blair.

But I accept now that Charity has a surprisingly valid point tucked away in there.

I'd been loathe to look it up - it's a bit like telling people that "gullible" is no longer in the dictionary.

But sure enough, if you look up "free speech" in the online Oxford English dictionary only one reference now comes up. And it's quite creepy, because it is:

gag1

• noun 1 a piece of cloth put in or over a person’s mouth to prevent them from speaking. 2 a restriction on free speech.

• verb (gagged, gagging) 1 put a gag on. 2 choke or retch.

— ORIGIN perhaps imitative of a person choking.


So "free speech" isn't there any more, but "gag" is. So the situation may be worse than Charity suggests.

Hope my apology is accepted.

Norville B


Apology accepted... I won't be gagged Nova Scotia style

23.08.2006 11:59

I have very thick skin to protect my very soft heart. I also have a silly high I.Q. which means nothing to me. The last grade I completed in lamestream education was grade 9. I couldn't fit into the system of perverts and nonses that are so often found in the Halifax Regional Municipality, Nova Scotia Canada, school system.

Funny enough, things still haven't changed there. When I went back to Canada in 2003, I caught two nonses who happened to be my children's principals. Mr. Tom MagGuiness (you dirty bastard) used to perve on me when I was in his grade 8 maths lesson. I was 13, 14? He turned out to be my sons elementary school principal.

I kindly told him that I remembered him and did he remember me? They moved him onto another school.

Then my daughters principal of her Junior High school - Mr. Brownlowe (you skeezy son of a bitch) told my 13 year old daughter "I like the way you walk" WTF mate? Surprisingly, he was moved onto another school.

How many teachers came forward to me with their knowledge of a paedophile ring with the halifax Regional Municipality Schoolboard? And if that wasn't enough... I learned from the mom's of several children who had been placed in special needs of PAEDOPHILE INSURANCE?

Which brings me back to the word GAG.

When a child is molested with the Nova Scotia school system, no investigation is made. A check is made payable to the parent and is issued with a gag order. The nopnse is question is never questioned and moved onto the next school. Should the parents breech the GAG ORDER, they can be sued for the payout the recieved to keep the silence of the knowldege that PERVERTS ARE THE REAL TERRORISTS IN SOCIETY.

CALL ME OSAMA MAMA

They are gonna have to kill me to shut me up up.

What kind of bastard thinks its fine as kind to bomb babies? The same bastard who happily molests them.

I wish the world to wake up to the real threat of the homeland... nonses in power making decisions that threaten the welfare of society at all levels.

Charity Sweet
mail e-mail: charitysweet@hotmail.co.uk