Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach
I do love tracing down how numbers kind of ricochet around the web. This investigation started when I ran across a book review in the South China Morning Post of a book called “Overheated: The Human Cost of Climate Change“, by Andrew T Guzman.
Figure 1. Andrew T. Guzman, law professor and environmental activist.
I’ll pass on linking to the book, TWDR, too wrong, don’t read. The book review quotes the obviously overheated author as saying:
Guzman anchors his doom-laden case in statistics. The 10 warmest years since 1880 have all happened since 1998, he says, and cites an estimate that the annual global death toll already sparked by climate change is 300,000.
When I see an unsupported figure like an annual death toll of 300,000 from “climate change”, my urban legend detector starts like ringing like mad. Where have they been hiding the bodies? So I figured I’d go stalking the wild numbers, following their spoor to track them back to their native habitat.
To start the hunt, I had to track down the citation in the book itself. I found that Guzman’s book says:
“… climate change caused the annual loss of more than 150,000 lives (Kofi Annan, the United Nations secretary general, puts the figure at 300,000)
OK, off we go on a new track. What the heck would Kofi Annan, failed UN envoy to Syria, erstwhile Secretary General of the United Nations, and permanent subject of corruption allegations, know about deaths from climate?
And really, three hundred thousand dead from climate change EVERY YEAR?. Three million dead from climate change in a decade? Wouldn’t someone have noticed the bodies piling up? But I digress … it turns out that Kofi wasn’t really the source of the numbers after all.
It turns out that Kofi has his own pet foundation, called the Global Humanitarian Foundation. Everyone should have their own foundation, they’re very useful. The Foundation can say what you want them to say. Then you can authoritatively claim the same thing … and cite your pet foundation as the authority for your statement. Because then, it’s no longer just your personal opinion, now you’re simply and impartially reporting the facts.
Further research revealed that said foundation has put out a puffed up PDF report called “The Anatomy of a Silent Crisis”. In the Executive Summary, we once again sight the spoor of the mystery number 300,000, showing we are on the right track:
The findings of the report indicate that every year climate change leaves over 300,000 people dead, 325 million people seriously affected, and economic losses of US$125 billion.
Further down, they show the following alarming graphic:
Figure 2. Scary graphic from the “Silent Crisis” report, showing just how silent the crisis must be, since people sure noticed the tsunami, but nobody has noticed the deaths shown in red . The tsunami happened once, and they say the deaths in red been happening every year for 25 years … riiiight …
Finally, on page 9, we find the following explanation of where they get the three hundred thousand deaths number:
This estimate is derived by attributing a 40 percent proportion of the increase in the number of weather-related disasters from 1980 to current to climate change.
Now wait just one cotton-pickin’ minute right there. They are saying that the three hundred thousand is only forty percent of the increase in people killed annually by the weather since 1980?
That’s hogwash, pure smoke. Lets start with the simple fact that there hasn’t been any increase in the number of weather disasters. We’re in a fairly long lull in hurricanes, there’s no trend in cyclones or typhoons or storms or droughts or floods … even the IPCC these days says there is no evidence of any change in extreme weather events. It’s just not happening, so the whole edifice of logic they are using collapses. Other than deaths attributable to moroons building on floodplains and barrier islands and the like, there hasn’t been any significant change in the mortality rate from weather events. That alone is enough to completely falsify their claims.
Second, if 300,000 deaths is 40% of the increase in deaths, that means that they claim that the increase in deaths from bad weather since 1980, not deaths but the increase in deaths, is 750,000 people per year … that number is simply not credible. For example, one of the largest weather disasters in the last 50 years was the 1970 Bangladesh cyclone. It killed half a million and that was global news. Even the IPCC says “The average annual number of people killed by natural disasters between 1972 and 1996 was about 123,000.” No way there has been an increase of three-quarters of a million annual deaths from weather in the last quarter century, that the weather deaths jumped like that. Someone would have noticed.
So just what is Kofi Annan’s pet foundation using as their authority for the 40% claim and the other numbers? Further reading brings us to this one (emphasis mine):
The 40 percent proportion is based on an analysis of data provided by Munich Re on the past trend of weather-related disasters, as compared to geophysical (i.e. non climate change related) disasters over time.5 It compares well to a 2009 scientific estimate of the attribution of climate change to droughts.11 It is assumed that the 40 percent increase due to climate change based on frequency of disasters can be applied as an approximation for the number of people seriously affected and deaths.
Munich Re??? They got their numbers from Munich Re? They’re trusting a dang insurance company? That’s what we find way down at the bottom of the edifice of bogus claims? An insurance company that makes more money if people are very, very afraid.
Everyone knows that fear sells insurance. Munich Re is one of the larger reinsurance companies in the world. For years it has been very active in climate alarmism, a wise business decision from its perspective. It can look like it cares about CO2, garner all kinds of green street cred, while selling more insurance by frightening people about climate. Win-win.
Nor should this be a surprise to any student of climate. Munich Re been running this same scam for years. I guess you have to be either Kofi Annan or deliberately obtuse to claim authority regarding climate, but not to have read any of the many articles pointing out that fear sells insurance and that Munich Re has been heavily into spreading climate fear for decades, and has made a tidy profit while doing so.
To summarize:
• Munich Re pulled some hugely improbable climate death numbers out of their corporate fundamental orifice, numbers that are clearly designed to help them sell insurance. They have no relationship to reality.
• These bogus numbers were then swallowed hook, line and sinker, and regurgitated in a report issued by Kofi Annan’s pet foundation.
• The report was then quoted by Kofi Annan.
• Kofi Annan was then quoted by Guzman
• Guzman was then quoted by the South China Morning Post.
And there we have the impeccable pedigree and provenance of the claim of 300,000 dead from climate change every year … garbage top to bottom.
Not the anthropogenic global warming supporters’ finest moment … and despite that, the damn 300,000 number will probably rattle around the internet for the next decade, and the book seems to be getting good reviews.
Go figure. They say a lie goes once around the web while the truth is lacing up its work boots … and even when falsified, the lie doesn’t stop circulating. But hey, better to light a candle than to complain about the darkness, so consider this my candle.
w.
Thanks, Willis – good stuff.
Just FYI, you’ve stumbled across something that’s been going on in the background – an attempt (ex post facto) to turn AGW into the biggest insurance scam in history. (They didn’t “create” AGW, but they’re trying to ride it.)
I realized this by accident more than five years back. I had been asked to write some rather anodyne pieces (for online publication) on what you find when you apply statistical analyses to temperature data (it’s interesting what happens when you start to group data in the proper statistical way – by standard deviation). I found myself under a sudden, vitriolic, and downright-threatening attack by some lunatic who did the whole nine yards – including screaming that I was an “anti-science zealot.”
That was interesting, being an engineering Ph.D. and being called that. When a few of us looked into the identity of the assailant, it turns out that he’s activist environmental lawyer who had worked in the insurance industry.
Just think about how AGW can be a godsend (?!) for the insurance industry – you can both raise premiums due to “increased projected risk” (and pocket the excessive profits (!?) when they don’t happen), *and* you can offload the payment of claims to other third parties as being culpable (as opposed to having to pay claims due to a force majeure, such as a major storm).
A couple of examples alone make this clear. Post-Katrina, a lawsuit was filed in the Gulf Coast region, trying to assign the Katrina damages to various producers of hydrocarbon fuels; I don’t know if the suit is still going on, but it surprisingly wasn’t thrown out immediately. And in Australia, property insurers have already raised premiums on coastal properties based solely on alleged “AGW” risks. Those are just two examples.
(BTW, one thing I learned from the ravings of my semi-deranged assailant is that the AGW-insurance folks seem to look to Prof. Emanuel of MIT as their guru. He’s now known to not be a disinterested party. I’ll stop there.)
Reblogged this on gottadobetterthanthis and commented:
Today, 17 February, is Willis’ birthday. I am choosing to write a bit about him. Today is also Gary Bohanan’s birthday. (They don’t know each other to my knowledge.) Gary was born the year before Willis. These two men have many years and are wise in my experience, and both have one characteristic that I admire. Both are as open and honest in their person as anyone I’ve ever known anything about, and both are totally committed to honesty and truth. To me, that is as high praise as I can raise, and I thank them both for enriching my life.
After the summer of 2012, Willis posted very sparsely at WattsUpWithThat until after the first of this year. I noticed. I suspect I was not alone. I missed his insights regarding facts and life.
Now that Willis has found time to write the stories so many of us here at WUWT encouraged him to write, I notice a few naysayers. What’s up with that? I for one thank Willis for his writing and his insights. Time is not free, nor unlimited, and I appreciate the effort expended and given to us.
Another attribute Gary B. has with Willis is intelligence and insight. There is too little of it in the world today; I think it worth acclaim when it shows up. The time to read something Willis wrote is always worthwhile and invariably enriching. Didn’t Galileo say (approximately), “I have never met a man so ignorant that I couldn’t learn something from him”? I apply that to what I read, and with Willis, even if what he wrote has nothing to do with what I thought when I started, I still find a wealth of useful information and insight that I can apply, hopeful to be a better person, and hopefully to pass forward in helping someone else.
With regard to running a blog, I am trying, as can be seen by the fact I reblogged this post to mine. I have only one objective in my blog, and that is to record whatever I think worth recording, for whatever reason. I would post a lot more if I reprioritized my time, but with my crew, well, I’ll keep the family as top priority as well as I am able.
Anthony has a different objective, but not by a lot. Mostly, Anthony’s posting decisions have proven to be worthwhile for millions of online viewers. That is an accomplishment! Anthony has consistently made decisions that millions of readers have approved of, and proven by the page views.
Anthony has chosen to include Willis as an author, moderator, and driver of WUWT, and it seems obvious to me that this was another of Anthony’s wise decisions with regard to WUWT. I am glad of it, and I thank him and Willis for it. I also note that Willis has never chosen to try to set up his own blog (that I have discovered). I see that also as a wise decision, but mostly, it is Willis’ decision. He can, and should, do as he pleases. I applaud his decisions as I have seen them. While I hold Willis with exceptional esteem, I view the other contributors here at WUWT as worthy of my time, and I thank Anthony for hosting them—all of them. The only complaint I ever have pass through my mind related to WUWT is the fact that I seldom have the time to take it all in! I am glad of the cornucopia of styles, subjects, perspectives, and information at WUWT, and I make it a point to visit as often as practical.
For this particular post of Willis’, well, it is another example of Willis’ razor-sharp insight, showing readily how easy it is for people to lie, and how easy it is falsify a lie, at least if you put forth the effort and do a little research. Thanks for the data point, Willis, and happy birthday.
Willis, as others have pointed out, that 300k figure doesn’t come from Munich Re but from WHO’s “Global Burden of Disease” report, that calculates a 4% increase of the current annual death toll in the poorest areas of the planet, primarily due to the increase in average temperatures and its consequences on infectious illnesses.
The point here in my opinion is not the number per se, but the two little details which are usually not left unmentioned: that is “increase” and “4%”. This means that 96% of the deaths caused by infectious diseases in the poorest countries have nothing to with climate change, but – surprise!- with poverty. Now, since GDP and CO2 emissions are highly correlated, it turns out that any increase in CO2 emissions (leaving aside possible catastrophic consequences of climate change, which have nothing to do with the 300k figure) is extremely likely to vastly REDUCE the death toll of infectious diseases. Which should be obvious from the start to any rational person.
Willis,
You missed a bit of fun in regards to the original graphic which indicates that the annual average number of deaths between 2004 and 2008 of the Indian Ocean tsunami was 225,000 people. This suggests that the 2004 tsunami killed a total of 1,125,000 people between 2004 and 2008.
According to the GLOBOCAN, cancer fact sheet, there were 458,000 deaths attributed to breast cancer in 2008 which suggests a decreasing trend based on the graphic, which is good news (unless of course these deaths are now being attributed to GW/CC/EW).
Interesting, a while back I tried to track down the source for the number of dead due to the 2003 Russian heatwave, and ended up at Munich Re. Munich Re did explain the process for calculating the number, comparison of death rates for Moscow and surroundings before and during the heatwave, but not the raw figures. When I looked it seemed I could never access the Russian web-site that held the raw figures.
Willis,
And another thing, in 2003, 14,802 mostly elderly people died when a heat wave hit France and thousands of vulnerable people were left to fend for themselves. This was big NEWS with allegations made at GW/CC/EW. Since then there have not been any similar stories except for the misguided few who link earthquakes and tsunamis to GW/CC/EW. One would think that there would have to be given the 300,000 annual deaths being bandied about.
And regarding the disease deaths being attributed to GW/CC/EW, does this include the subsequent deaths resulting from the breakdown in infrastructures after the 2004 tsunami?
Willis –
I note that “The average annual number of people killed by natural disasters between 1972 and 1996 was about 123,000” which you quote from IPCC TAR WG2 Chapter 9.5, is not sourced there. Even that figure seemed high to me for weather-related events — perhaps it included earthquakes or other non-climatic categories? So I went to the International Disaster Database and did some research. For 1972-1996, the total disaster death toll comes to about 2.5 million by their reckoning, or 100,000 per year. The top contributors are:
Drought 675K
“Complex disasters” 610 K
Earthquake 490K
Storm 257K
Flood 139K
Epidemic 112K
Transport accident 95K
So that clearly the 100K per year already includes non-climate events.
[The “Complex disasters” is for N. Korea, 1995, and appears to be the flood & subsequent famine. Wikipedia: “The major issues created by the flood were not only the destruction of crop lands and harvests, but also the loss of emergency grain reserves, as much of it was stored underground.” The majority of the death toll was from famine, not flood, and it may well have exceeded 1 million and perhaps 2. I’d attribute the majority to the government and not to Nature, but I accept that this is not likely to be agreed by all. So leave the figure as stated.]
Including their categories for Complex Disasters, Drought, Storm, Flood, Extreme temperature, and Wildfire, I get a total of 1.7 million deaths over the period 1972-1996, or about 68K per year. Excluding the Complex Disaster category, 43K per year. Not 123K per year.
Nothing like inflating 123K/year to an increase of 750K/year, though.
Sean says: @ur momisugly February 17, 2013 at 1:59 am
….. I suspect the human toll of “green” policies worldwide, particularly amount the world’s most impoverished, would dwarf Kofi Annan’s 300K figure.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
You beat me to it. The famine deaths are very hard to get a handle on since there were a number of factors and even the number of deaths are hard to track down.
“We Made a Devil’s Bargain”: Fmr. President Clinton Apologizes for Trade Policies that Destroyed Haitian Rice Farming
How Goldman Sachs Created the Food Crisis
Fuel Povery deaths are a bit easier
Climate Change Challenge dot ORG:
24,650 people over 65 died in 2005/2006. During that period 2.5 million households were in fuel poverty. There is a danger that with fuel poverty levels rising to 5.5 million in 2007 this figure could seriously increase especially if there is a Flu epidemic such as the one in 1999/2000 where there were approximately 59,000 excess winter deaths.
The Independent:
UK Feb 2012: Some 7,800 people die during winter because they can’t afford to heat their homes properly, says fuel poverty expert Professor Christine Liddell of the University of Ulster. That works out at 65 deaths a day.
The Register
… WWF – endorsed by no less a body than the European Space Agency – has stated that economic growth should be abandoned, that citizens of the world’s wealthy nations should prepare for poverty and that all the human race’s energy should be produced as renewable electricity within 38 years from now.
The Mirror
UK – As energy prices go through the roof, shocking figures reveal one in four families has been plunged into fuel poverty.
The data from the following report, Fuel Poverty in Great Britain, Germany, Denmark and Spain – relation to grid charging and renewable energy, is probably OK, the conclusions are not. It is the typical CYA document. The factors conspicuous by their absence are:
1. The higher rate of inflation in the UK and Spain link
For the USA it was 1.74 % in December 2012, the UK was 2.73 % and Spain was 3.00%. Euro Area Inflation Rate Down to 2.0 Percent in January 2013
2. Export of jobs due to high energy costs.
EU Unemployment Rate Hits Historic High… the euro zone hit a record high of 11.8 percent in November, [for spain and Greece it is over 25%] ..Unemployment for workers under 25 is now closer to 60 percent than 50 percent in Spain and Greece…
3. Loss of value of old age pensions. Pensions attack: institutionalised looting: …changed the basis on which pensions are calculated, by moving from the Retail Prices Index to the Consumer Prices Index, an EU model that ignores key British economic indicators such as mortgage payments… the fact that it gives them an easy way to devalue pensions. The net result is to reduce the value of pensions by around 1 per cent a year and to cut pensions benefits by £84 billion over the next 15 years. This will contribute to a poverty-ridden elderly working class….
PRUDENTIAL:EU ruling ‘will devalue pensions’
The funny thing is, there is no lack of real threats we could spend our money fighting–where few would object. For example, who here would complain about spending a few odd billion on improving our knowledge about all the debris floating in space and figuring out how to deflect the big ones?
Thank you Willis.
Obama has given the alarmist their 2nd wind, they are in full battle cry. The EU has just announced the slow death nail for Europe’s economy by stating a full 20% of the EU budget will be pissed away on Green energy projects. Governments around the western world are in full suicide mode while the citizens are losing faith in the face of ever increasing food, energy and living cost on top of BS and lies. Incomes for most people are on a slide. Unemployment is rampant in the west. The next few years are going to be very interesting times and the progressives don’t give a dam about the cliff they are driving us towards!
Speaking of Northern higher latitudes; a lot of tourists from those areas spend time in sub-tropical
climates like Hawaii, Mexico, Florida, Bahamas, Caribbean, Seychelles etc. It is not much of a pivot to include all these vacationers in the millions of climate emigrants. Beefing up the cause while causing more air pollution. Sort of a win win by lose lose scenario.Anything for the cause.
Expect more corpses showing up in your area soon. 100 million by 2030 if we don’t act now. 🙁
“Climate Change Deaths Could Total 100 Million By 2030 If World Fails To Act”
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/09/26/climate-change-deaths_n_1915365.html?utm_hp_ref=green
kencoffman says: “For example”
The take-away from this past week’s cosmic visitors might be that it is almost impossible to see the one aimed directly at you, and the others don’t matter. As for “a few odd billion,” well, why not? The UN can ask its members with excess cash to fund this. The USA will have to set this one out, however.
“Where have they been hiding the bodies?”…..
Exactly. Where are the refugees? This same crap gets repeated on BBC Radio Scotland occasionally, regularly (I listen to it on the way to work and sometimes I shout back loudly at the radio). They have some Greeny Weeny on, citing BS figures like these. Climate refugees – give me a break! I can’t remember exactly, but I think the guy they had on this time said X number of people had already died as a result of climate change. Like Willis said: show me the bodies. Prime time radio from the state broadcaster. Go figure.
As Willis has shown, the only environmental bit about the 300,000 deaths per year is in the recycling somebody else’s garbage.
In a similar spirit of recycling, I have updated an posting I made in August 2009 looking at the issue – 300,000+ per annum dead due to Climate Change?. This includes a number of references, for more of the backstory, along with the earlier claimed 141,000 deaths a year claimed in 2002 by the World Health Organisation.
Hey Willis, regarding your “terms of art,” usage expert Bill Walsh called them “time-honored rhetorical figures.” Here’s his amusing passage on the topic:
They may very well be correct about the amount of lives that were/will be lost from climate change; due to the amount of poverty that climate change policies cause.
So (one time) mortal enemies Big Green and Big (Insurance) Business team up. Naturally it follows that this new collaboration will have to target a new, common enemy – and that would be the common populous.
Re Bill_W, Feb 17, 6.43:
One of your sources seems to be suggesting that malaria is a ‘tropical’ disease. Well, it is but only in the sense that, one could say that humans are a tropical species. Some humans live in the tropics and some malaria cases occur there. However neither humans nor malaria require a tropical climate. Both require fresh water for survival; malaria is transmitted by mosquitoes which require standing fresh water to reproduce; to transmit the disease the mosquitoes also have to be carrying the malaria parasite. Such an environment can and does occur in any climatic zone except those where water is permanently frozen or absent through aridity. The incidence of the disease is unaffected by local or global warming or cooling. So figures for deaths, illness or losses related to climate change should omit malaria.
Jimbo @ur momisugly 6:26 am:
The crimes against humanity performed in the cause of “tackling Climate Change” are of a piece with the incredible fuss being made here in the UK and the EU over the horsemeat scandal and the apparent lack of any action being taken to bring criminal charges against those responsible for the disgraceful neglect of thousands of NHS patients.
The world is completely skewed in its priorities.
Willis:
Great piece of detective work! It reminds me of the evaluation of IPCC AR 4 fake references that were not peers reviewed sources. The evaluation and comments here got me to thinking who are the major benefactors of the hype about AGW? Besides Al Gore, there are many who perceive that they will benefit if global warming is caused by man’s effect on the atmosphere. The key for all the benefactors is to spread the unfounded idea that the populace has reason to fear the effects of adding CO2 to the atmosphere. Without fear of a warming climate, a 0.3 degree Celsius increase in the average temperature of planet would not seem worrisome particularly since the planet has been warming since the 1880’s and that it was warm enough at one time for the Vikings to inhabit and farm Greenland.
If you were part of any of the institutions below, would you speak up against international and federal governmental claims, including the president, that global warming is a very serious problem and that the effects on climate are catastrophic? Fear mongering is far more effective for getting a populace and aligned groups to demand that something be done before it is too late than by announcing that the average temperature will increase by 0.3 0C by 2020. Fear strengthens group think! Here is my general list of benefactors from fear. I bet you can add to it.
1. The federal government agencies and regulators
2. The democratic party and its elected politicians
3. The mainstream press and media industries
4. The home and business insurance industries
5. The alternate energy industries
6. The biofuels industries
7. The automotive industry, especially GM and Toyota
8. The Institutions of high learning with significant research activities
9. The film industry
10. The natural gas industry
11. The major farms and farming industries
12. The United Nations
13. The public utilities
14. The weather predicting institutions
15. The Carbon traders and investors
16. The investment and banking industries
17. Energy and climate research institutions
18. Professional research societies and organizations
19. Progressive and environmental political institutions
20. Environmental public relations institutions
21. Unfriendly nations and associated political organizations
22. Environmental political action committees
As a result each and all of them have become advocates for controlling CO2 emissions to prevent a catastrophic climate change on the planet whether is true or not. It doesn’t really matter politically. They all believe that they will benefit financially too. Why else would we need a carbon tax but to share the wealth with all these benefactors?
If these institutions and organizations are the proponents for the fear of climate change, who are the antagonists?
1. The mainstream energy industries, coal, nuclear, natural gas(?) and oil
2. The middleclass taxpayers
3. Small companies
As a result there is no real opposition to the fear of catastrophic climate change. The mainstream energy industries have no credibility because they are the primary cause of the fear of CO2 and are competitors. The other two groups have no power with which to fight back. Who is left to defend them? There are a few conservative media sources, a few conservative political groups and a few conservative internet BLOGS that have been attempting to shine light on the truth but who live precariously knowing that by federal fiat they could be silenced.
Willis it is mandatory that we each, along with you, light a little candle because there isn’t anyone else to light up a truth for ourselves and for our children and friends to see. More importantly we need to move our candles out into the areas of darkness where we all live.
Brent Walker says:
February 17, 2013 at 1:56 am
Munich Re also provided people to the IPCC to help with the statistics and modelling.
——————————————
Sad and true.
IPCC nominates lead authors for the next assessment reportTwo Munich Re employees are among the experts nominated to be lead authors for the IPCC’s next assessment report, due to be completed in 2014. Dr. Eberhard Faust and four other scientists will be lead authors of the chapter on the economic impacts of climate change. Dr. Sandra Schuster, together with five other scientists, will be lead author of the chapter on impacts in Australasia. The lead authors and coordinating lead authors are responsible for different chapters in the IPCC’s assessment report, which is subject to peer reviews to ensure scientific quality standards are maintained. Nominated authors (individuals, not institutions) are chosen on account of their specialist knowledge.
Eberhard Faust, a geoecologist, has worked in Munich Re’s Geo Risks Research since 2004. Sandra Schuster is a meteorologist who has been working in the field of natural hazard risk research at Munich Re, Sydney, since 2006
Pandering for profit!
Well it’s awfully late, and I was surprised at your responding to something I almost didn’t do because it was off topic, but:
Understood and agreed. Words mean whatever the current usage is. If a word, phrase, clause, whatever is understood properly by the intended audience it is correctly used. As I said, it was a pedantic quibble. Some examples:
“fulsome”: originally fully, then oily, extravagant, and insincere; now going back to the original meaning. I’m rarely sure immediately which way it is being used.
“awful”: originally full of awe; now horrid.
“directly”: originally immediately, now in a short while.
“I could care less”: literally meaning I care somewhat; used ironically as “I could NOT care less.” I still wince at this, as people do not use ironic inflection.
“no love lost between them”: In Shakespeare and literally meaning very loving; usually used with the opposite meaning. This still causes me a start.
“with (between [any preposition] [name] and I”: I hate this “error of pretentious ignorance.” This once was a dumb blond, Marilyn Monroe in character, joke. The rule, still taught in elementary schools, is, “Pronouns used as objects must be in objective case.”
A few years ago I read a history of Scotland; written by an Englishman naturally. The author used political liberal in its original sense, meaning small government, with limited powers, granting full personal freedom.
I am well over sixty, and have witnessed the increasing lack of precision and conciseness in American English, under the influence, I believe, of political propaganda and commercial advertising. It has become more emotionally warm and fuzzy, and less and less able to express things exactly without wordiness, which in itself makes it less understandable. For example if I say Sergeant York’s exploits are legendary. I must now include more words to insure people do not think I mean as mythical as Hercules’. I want Kipling’s “straight flung words and few.” I was taught, “sense before style”, and “If a word, phrase, clause, sentence, etc. is not necessary, it is necessary to omit it.”
Were our elementary education system “up to snuff”,”urban legend” would have almost immediately become “urban myth”. I believe the Brits actually do say this. At least I have heard and read it so used by them. Most people do not seem to care about the meaning and usage of words, leading to endless, sometimes intentional I believe, confusion.
Naturally I understand a story, prose or poetry, fact or especially fiction, is usually intended to produce emotional responses as well as pass factual information. I also understand writing and speaking in the manner most effective to the author’s or speaker’s intentions and the audience’s understanding.
Another matter, of importance to me at any rate, is the cross generational misunderstanding produced. Much of Shakespeare’s humor, scatology, and near pornography is understandable only through study. This is a loss, as they have little impact when they must be puzzled out. When English has been altered to the current level of understanding of Chaucer, it will be an ever greater loss.
As to “swim up river”; would I be a skeptic on CAGW if that bothered me? Would you be if it bothered you?
Robert A. Taylor says:
February 18, 2013 at 1:23 am
First, thanks kindly for the lovely examples. I particularly liked “no love lost between them” to mean they gave all their love to each other, fascinating.
Second, what I meant by “swim upriver” is that there are certain things you might be able to affect in the way of grammar and usage. But “urban legend” is now a catch-phrase, a shorthand description, and the idea of protesting against it, well, to me that’s like protesting against the moon or something, it’s just a fact.
Finally, you say:
In American English, you’d say “someone told me about Bigfoot, but I thought it was just a legend.” My Merriam-Websters dictionary says for legend, very first definition, “a story coming down from the past: esp : one popularly regarded as historical, but not verifiable”. In other words … Bigfoot.
So how on earth is a story handed down from one person to another about spiders living in a woman’s hairdo not a “legend”, in particular one of the urban variety? It’s regarded as historical, it’s not verifiable, it’s a story coming down from the past, why is it not an urban legend?
Now, I can understand the urge for pedantry. But that story about the spiders has been passed down orally since I first heard it as a kid, it’s claimed to be historical, it’s not verifiable, and my dictionary is blinking LEGEND LEGEND LEGEND in big letters … what am I missing? This seems to be more hairsplitting than pedantry.
All the best, and I do like your passion for the language.
w.