New York Times Columnist David Brooks Falls Victim to the Damp Squid
New York Times columnist David Brooks, considered by his Times colleagues as a Republican that Obama can do business with, has the persona of a sophisticate who may well admire the cut of the president’s jib (whatever that means).
But Brooks (or his copy editor) fell victim to the dreaded "damp squid" in his Friday column "The Big Society." The correct phrase is "damp squib," a Britishism for an event that fails to meet expectations.
The Big Society started in part as a political gadget, as a way to distinguish the current Conservatives from the more individualistic ethos of the Thatcher years. It has turned out to be something of a damp squid politically. Most voters have no idea what the phrase "Big Society" means. But, substantively, the legislative package has been a success. The British government is undergoing a fundamental transformation.
(The online version was corrected to read "damp squib" at some point late Friday morning or early afternoon.)
A squib is a small explosive device; a damp one would fail to perform. Squids are already damp, rendering any reference to their dampness redundant. The Times also used "damp squid" back in 1999, but a Nexis search indicates the paper has employed the phrase correctly on 13 occasions.
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Comments
The pseudo "conservative?"
Submitted by NJRightWinger12 on Fri, 05/20/2011 - 1:25pm.
This guys about as right-winged as O'Bozo!
Spell check
Submitted by Sasquatch on Fri, 05/20/2011 - 6:44pm.
My guess is that the article went though some sort of spell-check before being published, and because spell-check works perfectly and is smarter than we are, it auto-corrected 'squib' to 'squid.' Since no one proofreads anything anymore, it went undetected.
Kind of like what happened a while back in a handful of articles about the royal wedding that referred to 'Princess Eugenie' as 'Princess Eugene'.
Just a hunch...
No offense, but the Brits
Submitted by Rusty Shackleford on Fri, 05/20/2011 - 8:54pm.
No offense, but the Brits have an unhealthy obsession with naming things after Squids. People are squids, money is squids, everything is a squid over there. This is America and there's just no difference between a squib and a squid. I'm sorry, but both are such stupid labels for anything that's not a mollusk that I'm going to side with Brooks on this one.
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