"gaffe-prone" (with or without hyphen), as in
"Gaffe-prone Pope Benedict XVI will be tested on delicate trip to divided island of Cyprus. Pope Benedict XVI, often under fire for political missteps on foreign trips, is heading into a potential diplomatic storm when he visits Cyprus this week, a pilgrimage to a divided island that could anger Turkey and the rest of the Muslim world.
The article helps by helpfully giving examples which we will analyse to produce a working definition:
1) Regensburg address = gaffe *.
At that time Benedict said that God, in order to be the actual real God, had to be logically consistent: rational. Therefore, a being who claimed to be God but contradicted himself, couldn't really be God. This "logically consistent" idea is a concept that Mainstreamians don't have, a trait they share with Muslims, who also have difficulty with "irony," (see posts labeled "The Laws of Rational Thought" on the sidebar). So, when Muslims reacted with violence to Benedict's admonition that they should not be violent, Mainstreamians said it was Benedict's fault, because he had produced this "gaffe".
2) Condoms make the problem of AIDS worse = gaffe.
On the plane on the way to Africa last year, Benedict made everyone in
It sounds confusing at first, but try to see it from the point of view of Mainstreamian thought. In Mainstreamian thought, it is not sexual contact with infected persons that spreads sexually transmitted diseases. It is something they call "unsafe sex", which means sex without a condom. Therefore, you aren't allowed to say that it is a bad thing to give Africa (and other uncomfortable places with bad air conditioning) container vessels full of condoms and to tell them to be like the
Remember, sex does not spread AIDS; unsafe sex spreads AIDS. Saying it is a good idea to only ever have sex with someone you are already married to, is Bad.
It makes people have sex without condoms, which is what gives you AIDS.
From these helpful examples, we can deduce that in Mainstreamian, the word "gaffe" means "When the pope says something true that we don't like".
Hope this helps.
* Also referred to as a "political misstep," in case anyone were still foggy on "gaffe".
Don't forget, that if you can't find a proper person to put your own personal view, espcially as deadline approaches, you must always use the euphemism: "A spokesman said that..." or "sources close to the **** said that ..." or "There are rumours circulating that..."
ReplyDeleteWorks every time. Go on, try it. Whip up a story you'd like the Pope to approve. By lunchtime it'll be round the world.
e.g. "Pope insists Novus Ordo to be replaced by Old Mass."
I so wish I had a blog. I'd be unstoppable.
Oddly enough, I'm not particularly concerned with the sensitivities of the Turks at the moment.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.newschannel5.com/Global/story.asp?S=12587539