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White House now streaming State of the Union live over the Internet

by James
Tuesday, February 24th, 2009
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Up until tonight, if you wanted to watch a State of the Union (typically just called a ‘Presidential Address’ during the President’s first term), you had to do it via television. If you got your TV over the air, this meant selecting among the NBC/ABC/CBS affiliates in your area, with their respective commentators. If you got your TV over cable, this meant selecting among CNN/MSNBC/Fox News, each of which adds tons of spin (CNN mostly spins about its own importance, while MSNBC and Fox News color things with a biased, politicized brush).

Tonight, for the first time, you can watch the President’s address directly from http://www.whitehouse.gov/ . Now, the only spin will be that coming from the President’s mouth. Love him or hate him, won’t it be nice to praise (or spit fire at) him directly, without the filter of some overexcited, hyperanalytic commentator?

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Harvard’s Steven Pinker Off-key on Oath of Office

by James
Thursday, January 22nd, 2009
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Essays should have consistent theses with relevant anecdotes, right?

Steven Pinker wrote an article in the New York Times yesterday about Chief Justice Roberts’s flub of Obama’s Oath of Office. Essentially, Chief Justice Roberts misspoke, saying “solemnly swear that I will execute the office of president to the United States faithfully” instead of “solemnly swear that I will faithfully execute the office of president of the United States” as specified in the Constitution.

Pinker, a noted Harvard professor and the chair of the American Heritage Dictionary usage panel, used this to lead into a discussion of split infinitives. His points are generally correct (or, rather, I agree with him). Distilled, his argument is that splitting infinitives has never been a grammatical problem in English, despite what some law journals may claim. While infinitives cannot be split in Latin (literally, you cannot split them, since they consist not of two words but of one), splitting them in English is easy, and allowed.

Both of these topics are interesting. However, what is odd is that he connects the two based on Roberts’s transposition of faithfully; Pinker infers that this was because Roberts wanted to move the “adverb ‘faithfully’ away from the verb.” That’s all well and good, but the Constitution’s version doesn’t split any infinitives! The adverb ‘faithfully’ in the predicate “… will faithfully execute” does not split an infinitive, but instead separates the auxiliary verb ‘will’ from the main verb ‘execute’. So he wanted to avoid a split auxiliary verb? OK, but if the split auxiliary verb is contentious, why not discuss that, instead of the much better-known disagreements over split infinitives?

In other words, Pinker wrote an interesting review of split infinitives that was incompletely relevant to the prompt at hand: the issue of a split auxiliary verb, which was hardly contentious.

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