I recently saw the phrase 'food insecurity' and while I've heard it before, I never realized how weird of a phrase it was. It's poverty, food insecurity is the definition of poverty. But because people have phones or something it doesn't count as poverty?
I never googled "food insecurity" because I could imagine what the definition was. But check out the third sentence on the health.gov page. Emphasis mine.
Food insecurity is defined as a household-level economic and social condition of limited or uncertain access to adequate food. In 2020, 13.8 million households were food insecure at some time during the year. Food insecurity does not necessarily cause hunger, but hunger is a possible outcome of food insecurity.
And look at the phrasing - "13.8 million households". How many people is that?
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Libs love terms that they can use to make something they don't want to think about more abstract. In this case - they can avoid having to use sentences like this...
They don't get enough to eat.
They don't have enough to eat.
Sometimes they don't have enough to eat.
And libs don't want to seem cruel and dismissive so they would like to avoid...
Sometimes they are forced to skip meals because they don't have enough money.
Sometimes they go hungry because they don't have enough money.
Enter "food insecurity". Voilà!
They suffer from food insecurity.
No mention of troublesome words like eat, meals, money, hungry or god forbid hunger.
I think they mean that a person is food insecure if they have to consistently worry about where their next meals will come from, even if they do end up eating every meal.
As much as I hate liberals, the more lib thing to do would be to strictly define the hunger stat to something like "missed more than 3 meals in a row in the last month" or some shit to keep the stats down.
I fucking hate what libs have done to the English language. It's not meant for this kind of bullshit. It was developed by bog people, Hagar the Horrible and flea ridden dirt farmers who's boss made them speak French. We're best off when we're blunt.
"A true ruler is the wielder of names. By names she cuts the world as she pleases, and she cuts herself into greater forms still. She is not shaped by the world, but instead becomes the shaper. There's work to be done."
People with power define how we use language, and its fucking awful how they use it to inculcate themselves further into power.
I don't think it's a problem that language becomes more precise and technical over time. What is a problem is gating off understanding of precise and technical use of language behind hundreds of thousands of dollars of private education and then looking down on people for not understanding words. Imo it's a modern day expression of classism - the new version of laughing at poor people because they don't know the correct fork to use for the second course.
I'm an absolute fucking English language simp, just a giant sloppy word nerd. I am really into JRR Tolkien. I speak in a normal conversation like Matt Christman rants. I am INTERESTED in etymology. Chuds using military sounding jargon 'tactically ascertaining a potential development' and libs making therapy language part of their everyday speech is way more painful to me than anyone who is speaking 'incorrectly' due to class reasons. Those people are genuinely doing a better job at English cause they're not using words they think they should be using and instead yknow, conveying thought through language.
It sounds more like a disease that unlucky or careless people might contract than a very societal rot foisted on the most vulnerable from the sheer greed of the least vulnerable.