Stop calling the GOP anti-woke hysteria weird. Weird is wonderful. Call it wiggy instead.
Where I live being weird is a good thing.
By Hal Brown
The author lives in a suburb of wonderfully weird Portland, Oregon.
Click above and below to enlarge the images
Here in Portland, Oregon we are proud of being weird and wonderful. Keep Portland Weird is a frequently used slogan (read about it on Wikipedia).
This is the webpage of Travel Portland:
This is from the website Boundless Roads:
Cities like Portland aren't the only promoters of weird as a positive image. For example Weird N Woke is a line of clothing which combines weird with woke in their name .
The company, founded in Lancaster, PA, offers clothing like the Liberty is Dead t-shirt. Here's their Facebook page.
Another way weird is used in a positive sense is in services. For example some of these are described here.
The first column I read this morning was this (subscription):
One word in a sentence prompted me to write a comment in the article:
But Biden’s biggest advantage has to do with the opposition — the Republican Party has gotten weird.
Here's my comment:
I live in Portland, Orgeon, which proudly proclaims (as does Denver) itself as wonderfully weird. Thus I suggest that calling the Republican Party weird is a misnomer and does weirdness a disservice. I suggest the word wiggy which includes weird in the definition: emotionally uncontrolled or weird.
At this writing seven readers there recommended my comment:
Following posting this I realized I should have included Austin as a proudly weird city.
Then I looked at Raw Story where I saw this article:
The word was used in this sentence:
As a result, “They have to win the endorsement of a crowd in an echo chamber having a conversation that the rest of the country thinks is too nasty or weird to join,” he wrote.
Headline writers often use alliterations so anti-woke weird warriors sound good. In my opinion wiggy is a better word in this context.
This is how my online dictionary defines weird and wiggy:
Weird
weird | wird | adjective suggesting something supernatural; uncanny: the weird crying of a seal. • informal very strange; bizarre: a weird coincidence | all sorts of weird and wonderful characters. • archaic connected with fate.
Wiggy:
wiggy | ˈwiɡē |
adjective (wiggier, wiggiest) informal, mainly North American emotionally uncontrolled or weird: you've been acting all wiggy.
Since both word have the soft W sound wiggy can be used in phrases with anti-woke and warrior as an alliteration. Both words can mean bizarre. Wiggy adds emotionally uncontrolled to the definition. Therefore it describes the Republican war on wokeness. Not only does weird have a positive connotation, but another reason I'd like wiggy used instead is that weird is overused and wiggy is a far less used word.
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