Remember Cursive?
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"The first gun that was fired at Fort Sumter sounded the death-knell of slavery. They who fired it were the greatest practical abolitionists this nation has produced." ~BG D. UllmanComment
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If this is so last year, then that's news to the GOP rep from Wisconsin.
Before the AOC meme I thought it was just run-of-the-mill legislative idiocy but I now learn it's political idiocy too.
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To be clear we're speaking handed-ness, not political orientation.Comment
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"Penmanship" in my day. Yes, it would help the kiddies to learn how to read. On the other hand leftists don't like that because the kids might start to get ideas.Comment
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"The first gun that was fired at Fort Sumter sounded the death-knell of slavery. They who fired it were the greatest practical abolitionists this nation has produced." ~BG D. UllmanComment
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It is a bit like learning how to clear a jam on a manual typewriter. I like the old Remingtons myself. But, the Mac is better. Standard handwriting in a pre-industrial world had utility for business, etc. So it was taught. Now business doesn't use handwriting ... or typewriters. So handwriting is not taught ... and clearing a jammed typewriter is left up to the end user to figure out. Understandable. Have to figure that various dictation programs will lead to less need for keyboarding skills. Again, understandable. Sincerely. bruce." Unlike most conservatives, libs have no problem exploiting dead children and dancing on their graves."Comment
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There you go--have the computer transcribe the spoken words to a cursive font. Problem solved!It is a bit like learning how to clear a jam on a manual typewriter. I like the old Remingtons myself. But, the Mac is better. Standard handwriting in a pre-industrial world had utility for business, etc. So it was taught. Now business doesn't use handwriting ... or typewriters. So handwriting is not taught ... and clearing a jammed typewriter is left up to the end user to figure out. Understandable. Have to figure that various dictation programs will lead to less need for keyboarding skills. Again, understandable. Sincerely. bruce.
I get the discomfort with the idea that people cannot read founding documents in the original if they are in cursive, but there are typeset word-for-word transcriptions available. And to some extent the real problem is already upon us, that the meaning of words shifts with time and people cannot agree on what the document means. A topical example would be from Article 1, Section 2:
Can it be any plainer than that? The rules of impeachment are what the House says they are. And yet all of this hand-wringing about the current proceedings being unconstitutional. Could be that the people who want to be able to read the Constitution in original cursive still need others to interpret it for them. It's a problem likely to get worse.The House of Representatives shall chuse their Speaker and other Officers; and shall have the sole Power of Impeachment.
Once upon a time, long before it became a noun, the word "plastic" was an adjective.
In his masterpiece, The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, Eduard Gibbon used the word "insensibly" a lot. It's not a word in common use today, as today we would say "automatically", as in something done without anyone having to give it any thought. A very different word, from a very different origin, to convey the same essential idea.Comment
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It's a gift!
But again this whole read-cursive-so-you-can-decipher-the-founding-docs idea has been going for 5-6 years or more but completely escaped my attention until yesterday. I should watch Fox more? I was content for it to be just another conservative spasm against Common Core.
And since it's my thread I approve a drift into the idea that reading the Constitution in cursive appears to provide no benefit whatsoever towards actual understanding of both the spirit and literal meaning of the document.Comment

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