this post was submitted on 01 Nov 2024
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A Boring Dystopia

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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."

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[–] TheFonz@lemmy.world -2 points 1 week ago (1 children)

I'm curious, are you a native English speaker? In colloquial English the term "branded" is almost never referred to the second point in the Webster dictionary. The term originates from a particular context and the etymology derives from germanic "to burn". I'm not doing the semantic bullshit game that already happened in this thread. No one uses "brand" colloquially for printed form. I suspect you know this.

[–] Dasus@lemmy.world 0 points 1 week ago (1 children)

In colloquial English the term "branded" is almost never referred to the second point in the Webster dictionary

Oh fuck right off. It has a way stronger connotation in colloquial English to be any other definition except an actual burning hot iron.

IF we were having this conversation 150 years ago, it would be different.

We're not.

https://www.playphrase.me/#/search?q=Branded

What sort of a percentage of those is referring to an actual brand and isn't from a piece of media depicting something before 1900's?

How about here?

https://edition.cnn.com/search?q=Branded&from=0&size=10&page=1&sort=relevance&types=article&section=

Here?

https://apnews.com/article/wawa-tumbler-recall-metal-straw-injuries-0225d1ec580c880d3f1aef199e6580ca

https://apnews.com/search?q=%22branded%22&s=0

https://apnews.com/search?q=%22branded+people%22&s=0

Searching for "branded people" and the first story to come up is

No one uses "brand" colloquially for printed form. I suspect you know this.

Not a native speaker, are ya?

Not to mention which, you still haven't addressed the fact that demanding such linguistic prescription is wrong in general, not to mention in journalistic practice where standards are different.

See you're trying to challenge linguistics when you have an understanding that's probably from your lessons at whatever public school, because the teachers at those tend to be extremely prescriptive. Something which modern linguistics definitely wouldn't agree with to that extent at least, and definitely not in the context of headlines, and definitely not in the context of this specific word, which actually has this definition as well.

(Also, you're avoiding admitting Israel is committing crimes against humanity. Probably because you're a filtht little genocide denier.)