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James Waldby - jwpat7
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The phrase “Is what’s good for the Heinz not good for the Gorka?” appeared in an op-ed article by Charles Krauthammer, apparently printed in The Washington Post newspaper on 2 August 2012. Mark Halperin’s tweet-length comment on that article calls Krauthammer’s phrase “a sentence never before rendered in English or any other known human language”.

Halperin’s remark probably is true, but only because no previous circumstances have called for a comparison like Krauthammer’s of Gorka and T. H. Kerry. Few if any Americans will regard Halperin’s judgement of the phrase as weighty or significant, which is just as well because Halperin probably intended to be amusing rather than weighty or significant. Neither of the phrases quoted above is significant, terrible, or historic; both appear to be true, nearly indisputable, not controversial, and not of lasting interest.

The Washington Post’s online article about Gorka’s advice to major-media reporters (in Pilsudski Square in Warsaw) quotes him as saying “Kiss my [posterior]. This is a holy site for the Polish people. Show some respect.” Obviously Gorka did not really say posterior in brackets. Unfortunately the video accompanying the Post’s online article has been censored and I don't know what he actually said. Note, the referent for This in the Gorka quote probably is Pilsudski Square, not his posterior.

The phrase “Is what’s good for the Heinz not good for the Gorka?” appeared in an op-ed article by Charles Krauthammer, apparently printed in The Washington Post newspaper on 2 August 2012. Mark Halperin’s tweet-length comment on that article calls Krauthammer’s phrase “a sentence never before rendered in English or any other known human language”.

Halperin’s remark probably is true, but only because no previous circumstances have called for a comparison like Krauthammer’s of Gorka and T. H. Kerry. Few if any Americans will regard Halperin’s judgement of the phrase as weighty or significant, which is just as well because Halperin probably intended to be amusing rather than weighty or significant. Neither of the phrases quoted above is significant, terrible, or historic; both appear to be true, nearly indisputable, not controversial, and not of lasting interest.

The phrase “Is what’s good for the Heinz not good for the Gorka?” appeared in an op-ed article by Charles Krauthammer, apparently printed in The Washington Post newspaper on 2 August 2012. Mark Halperin’s tweet-length comment on that article calls Krauthammer’s phrase “a sentence never before rendered in English or any other known human language”.

Halperin’s remark probably is true, but only because no previous circumstances have called for a comparison like Krauthammer’s of Gorka and T. H. Kerry. Few if any Americans will regard Halperin’s judgement of the phrase as weighty or significant, which is just as well because Halperin probably intended to be amusing rather than weighty or significant. Neither of the phrases quoted above is significant, terrible, or historic; both appear to be true, nearly indisputable, not controversial, and not of lasting interest.

The Washington Post’s online article about Gorka’s advice to major-media reporters (in Pilsudski Square in Warsaw) quotes him as saying “Kiss my [posterior]. This is a holy site for the Polish people. Show some respect.” Obviously Gorka did not really say posterior in brackets. Unfortunately the video accompanying the Post’s online article has been censored and I don't know what he actually said. Note, the referent for This in the Gorka quote probably is Pilsudski Square, not his posterior.

Source Link
James Waldby - jwpat7
  • 66.9k
  • 11
  • 111
  • 209

The phrase “Is what’s good for the Heinz not good for the Gorka?” appeared in an op-ed article by Charles Krauthammer, apparently printed in The Washington Post newspaper on 2 August 2012. Mark Halperin’s tweet-length comment on that article calls Krauthammer’s phrase “a sentence never before rendered in English or any other known human language”.

Halperin’s remark probably is true, but only because no previous circumstances have called for a comparison like Krauthammer’s of Gorka and T. H. Kerry. Few if any Americans will regard Halperin’s judgement of the phrase as weighty or significant, which is just as well because Halperin probably intended to be amusing rather than weighty or significant. Neither of the phrases quoted above is significant, terrible, or historic; both appear to be true, nearly indisputable, not controversial, and not of lasting interest.