When Israel re-arrested Palestinian men in the occupied West Bank town of Dura, the detainees faced familiar treatment.

They were blindfolded, handcuffed, insulted and kept in inhumane conditions. More unusual was that each man had a number written on his forehead.

Osama Shaheen, who was released in August after 10 months of administrative detention, told Middle East Eye that soldiers brutally stormed his house, smashing his furniture.

“The soldiers turned us from names into numbers, and every detainee had a number that they used to provoke him during his arrest and call him by number instead of name. To them, we are just numbers.”

  • Dasus@lemmy.world
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    25 days ago

    You keep deferring whenever your childish garbage is shown to be moronic.

    This in such a weird hill to die on.

    Isn’t it just? Had you actually read the article I linked in the first place, your asinine ego wouldn’t be in your way to admit how wrong you are. But you’re not interested in actual linguistics. You don’t care about it and you’re not versed in it, which is apparent from you pushing views that high-schoolers might have, because you’ve just never read anything about linguistics beyond your lessons on that level. I’ve said it several times. Applying such a prescriptive criteria to journalistic headlines is beyond inane. Literally a 12-year old in my country would be expected to understand what I’ve been repeating to you several times now. So you’ve definitely not stepped a foot anywhere near a university anytime in your life.

    You’re stomping your foot, crying “NO, ‘BRAND’ ONLY HAS ONE SINGLE MEANING. ONE SINGLE ONE. THAT’S HOW LANGUAGE WORKS. WAA-WAA!”*.

    You desperately need your exaggerated bullshit to be right, but since you’ve exaggerated and generalised, it’s obviously not, which makes you ashamed, which makes you even more convicted to die on this hill on that you don’t understand the first thing about.

    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linguistic_prescription

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linguistic_description

    https://spcollege.libguides.com/c.php?g=254319&p=1695321

    https://newslit.org/educators/resources/seven-standards-quality-journalism/

    https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0378216608002798

    Cry all you want, but the journalist has done nothing wrong, and unlike you claim, people in this thread definitely aren’t assuming “physical mutilation” when they read “brand”. You can cry and cry and cry all day, it won’t make your sixth grade approach to philology any better, kiddo. :D

    I recommend you stick to some safe bubble or echo chamber from now on.

    • TheFonz@lemmy.world
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      25 days ago

      All right Noam Chomsky. I think you shit your diaper again. Maybe you should call your caretaker to come change it. Your expertise on linguistics is on par with Joe Rogan. No one here is talking about linguistic purity dumbass. As native English speakers were just pointing out how the expression is used colloquially, which I know is a difficult concept for you to grasp.

      I have no interest in moronic strawmen about linguistic purity since you are unable to hold more than one thought in your head at the same time without having to call someone a filthy little genocide denier

      Go back to Tumblr or something.

      • Dasus@lemmy.world
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        25 days ago

        No one here is talking about linguistic purity dumbass.

        Everyone in the comments are assuming the literal and first dictionary definition of branding by physical mutilation.

        You’re saying everyone in the comments is interpreting this headline as prescriptively as you pretend it is meant. Us using the same bar of prescriptiveness for your statement means you mean literally every single person is interpreting it as literal physical branding using a hot iron.

        That’s a ridiculous statement, and just me disagreeing with you would make it incorrect, and several other people have tried explaining this to you. You refuse to admit that there’s such a thing as descriptive language or that “branding” can be used descriptively even if it lacked a meaning of a printed mark, which it does not.

        “Moronic strawmen about linguistic purity”

        You’re the one making that moronic strawman though. You’re denying the existence of descriptive language. This is what I meant earlier. You don’t even understand what that word means, so you don’t understand you’re doing it, which makes this rather hilarious, as your linguistic understanding is on the level of a 16-year old.

        You’re trying to say the article is essentially propaganda against Israel. It’s not. To say Israel is branding people in this context is well within linguistic and journalistic standards, despite you not understanding what those standards are, even when half a dozen people are trying to explain them to you.

        https://books.google.com/ngrams/graph?content=branded%2C+branding&year_start=1800&year_end=2022&corpus=en&smoothing=3

        See the usage going down steadily throughout the 1900’s, until there’s a marked uptick in the 80’s, when the word resurfaced with a new context, that is currently the most colloquially used (brand as in trademark). That usage has lead to a semantic shift of the word, making it lose it’s connotation of “physical mutilation with a hot iron” as you can see from for example the playphrase.me link despite you pretending that all of the examples I used referred to objects instead of people. Is Candyman an object or a person, hmm? What about “I”? “They”? Hell, even the clip from a show that’s depicting a scene in the wild west, where there was actual branding, the quote isn’t referring to “branding” via a hot iron, but in the sense that it is most commonly used. Here in the headline of our article it just happens to overlap with making a physical mark on the people, which also fits the definition of “brand”.

        You don’t understand linguistic or journalistic standards. You’re wrong in your childish assertions, but you’ll never be able to accept that.

          • Dasus@lemmy.world
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            25 days ago

            Of course not literally everyone is taking that interpretation.

            Oh so you don’t believe in the prescriptive view you’re so passionately arguing for, and instead use descriptive language, like a normal person, just like I’ve been arguing the headline is doing as well? Quelle surprise.

            There is no “half a dozen people explaining this”. There is you and one other user or so. There’s plenty of people holding my position in the comments here.

            Of course not literally half a dozen people. Why on Earth would you think I meant literally what I wrote? It’s not like you do, either, so why are you applying this linguistic standard to me (and the headline) while ignoring it whenever something you say conflict with it? Is it perhaps because you don’t even recognise the thing I’m talking about, because your understanding of linguistics is on the level of a highschooler?

            Listen pal, I grew up speaking English.

            I’ll bet a lot of money I’ve been speaking English longer than you and have a better understanding of it, buddy. (Because I’m not really guessing anything, it’s all evident from the thread.)

            no need to bring up journalistic integrity

            Integrity? No no. We’re talking about how biased headlines are, aren’t we? Not why they’re biased, but whether they are or not. Having trouble keeping up?

            You still won’t acknowledge that “branding” hasn’t had the connotation “burning hot iron” as it’s strongest connotation since the early 1900’s, which I’ve been saying for several times now. I’ve also shown you clear examples of “branding” being used to refer to people. Why do you keep ignoring half the shit that’s said to you? (This is a rhetorical question. I know why. Because I’m right in your understanding of philology, but you can’t just go “lol I was faking knowing about this shit, my bad”.)

            Everyone in the comments are assuming the literal and first dictionary definition of branding by physical mutilation.

            This is literally what I challenged, but you just keep moving your goalposts instead of admitting how silly (and wrong) it was to say such a thing.

            • TheFonz@lemmy.world
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              25 days ago

              I’m not ignoring anything. A couple cherry picked examples don’t make your point. You also conflate ‘product branding’ with the way it’s invoked when talking about people. Of course this is not exclusive and can be taken also as metaphorical. Plenty of others in this thread have pointed out this ambiguity. Just that fact should raise some flags to you.

              “filthy little genocide denier”. Truly living up to the lemmy meme here haha. I love it.

              • Dasus@lemmy.world
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                25 days ago

                They’re literally random, so that kinda conflicts with the whole “cherry-picked”, don’t you think?

                Then there’s the Ngram viewer, which has literally millions of books in it. Then there’s the fact that no-one uses language in the prescriptive way you’ve demanded that the headline was written & interpreted it.

                Almost as if you’ve deluded yourself the whole time into thinking that “everyone in the comments are assuming the literal and first dictionary definition of branding by physical mutilation”.

                You said that. You can’t take it back, so you’re trying to justify it with “well obviously that’s not what I literally meant” while arguing that a news headline is to be interpreted not just literally, but in a singular way, and a singular way you’ve chosen, that you say everyone understands it in that context (despite literally no-one in the whole fucking thread having interpreted it like that). Then when people prove to you that first off language isn’t used as prescriptively as that (ie you made an argument concerning linguistic purity, not understanding how silly it is), and secondly that “brand” actually has printed in the definition, you kicked well off and now you’re just having a tantrum.

                Everyone in the comments are assuming the literal and first dictionary definition of branding by physical mutilation.

                Do you take these words you said back?

                  • Dasus@lemmy.world
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                    25 days ago

                    A couple cherry picked examples are still just a couple examples. In order to have a random pool you need a much larger sample lol.

                    Still moving the goalposts. You just literally can not admit to being wrong. Must be hard, living like that. And it makes for an absolutely disgusting personality.

                    I didn’t cherrypick anything. None of the examples that organically come up from that site which has millions of clips through searching for the terms are cherrypicked. It’s literally the opposite of cherrypicking. :D Unlike your “oh but there’s another guy also trying to discredit this article criticising Israel and that has upvotes”, so it must mean that my asinine interpretation was correct".

                    People like you asserting that “everyone is interpreting it in this way I just made up that doesn’t conform to colloqual English, linguistic descriptivism or journalistic standards” doesn’t mean that it’s happening. I can find a bunch of Flat Earthers. Does that make the Earth flat? You too know you’ve been disingenuous in your rhetoric, but you just won’t be able to admit it.

                    You said:

                    ###Everyone in the comments are assuming the literal and first dictionary definition of branding by physical mutilation.

                    Which was wrong. And now you’re desperately using the view of descriptivists while defending your argument about the article allegedly being written by someone who’s a linguistic prescriptivist. (Have you still even bothered to read up on those to the point that you’d finally understand what the terms mean?)