prog: (coffee)
prog ([personal profile] prog) wrote2006-05-26 11:56 am
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You know, I'm actually rather uncomfortable with the current popular usage among the Daily Show-watching set of using "[has] balls" and "[is a] pussy" as slang for possessing admirable bravado and contemptible cowardliness or passivity, respectively.

Since the people employing the phrase are the furthest thing from ripsnorting redstaters, I suppose that there's a sense of ironic fun to be had by stepping briefly into George Liquor's shoes for a moment, passing an indictment as one who believes that men primarily validate themselves by going in there and changing the world, and women do it by quietly submitting to authority.

It's a little shocking to hear it coming from you, and so we all laugh. But when I hear you say it over and over again, I do start to wonder.

[identity profile] prog.livejournal.com 2006-05-26 04:31 pm (UTC)(link)
I dunno about "wuss". I'd buy that etymology, but I'd also think that it's joined words like "sissy" and "dork" as being a mild insult that technically has a literal referent, but has through wide use become divorced from it and grown a meaning all its own.

[identity profile] ex-colorwhe.livejournal.com 2006-05-26 04:55 pm (UTC)(link)
yeah, to me that makes it all the worse...

[identity profile] ex-colorwhe.livejournal.com 2006-05-26 05:04 pm (UTC)(link)
in fact i am completely offended by sissy.

[identity profile] prog.livejournal.com 2006-05-26 05:33 pm (UTC)(link)
You're not the first. I still think of it in this category as it's one of those words I heard for years and years before learning what it "really" meant, as an adult, from someone who took great exception to it (calling the first speaker a homophobe, confusing him and launching a flamewar).

(Hm. I almost said "launched drama" but this was in on a messageboard in the late 1990s, before drama was invented. Or anyway drama was called "flamewars" back then. I think they are exactly the same. Speaking of language.)