I wouldn't have connected spastic to CP without explicit help.
On the flip side, I had no idea so few knew.
When it was tossed around in high school, everyone knew. So it's not as distant as "moron" for me. More like "retard." Worse, perhaps.
A thread to discuss naming threads, board policy, new thread suggestions, and anything else that has to do with board administration and maintenance. Guaranteed to include lively debate and polls. Natter discouraged, but not deleted.
Current Stompy Feet: ita, Jon B, DXMachina, P.M. Marcontell, Liese S., amych
I wouldn't have connected spastic to CP without explicit help.
On the flip side, I had no idea so few knew.
When it was tossed around in high school, everyone knew. So it's not as distant as "moron" for me. More like "retard." Worse, perhaps.
On the flip side, I had no idea so few knew.
Having had this discussion on LJ in the last six or so months, I think I can safely say it's a US/UK difference. (A UK friend brought it up, and the split in comments was pretty locale specific, with EN-US speakers not seeing anything wrong with the word, or its use in Buffy S3, and EN-UK speakers agreeing that the casual use of it was somewhat jarring.)
Spastic wasn't/isn't in common use here for description of a particular disability, where I gather it was/is in the UK. So spaz here doesn't/didn't (the tense order shift here is intentional) carry the same sort of baggage.
It was pejorative in my grade school and meant something like retard.
Yeah, we had a "school for spastics" down the street when I was a little kid in Scotland. Thems were less-enlightened times, to be sure.
On the other paw, "Summers, you drive like a spaz!" is canon and OTQs being robbed of their rightful place like Spaz! is thread culture in Quotables.
I like Spaz as a quote thread title.
Sorry, this is nattery, but I had to share that I'm watching one of the special features on a Stargate DVD (leave me alone; can't sleep), and Amanda Tapping just referred to herself and Teryl LastName as spazzy. This is not a pro or con argument - it just made me giggle 'cuz of this discussion.
t /natter
I'm pro spaz. Though not a professional spaz. That's Jon's job.
Spastic, while certainly descriptive of sudden, usually involuntary, muscle movement, has never really been used as a common medical term to describe people with cerebal palsey in North America. So while you might say that someone exhibits spastic movement, you wouldn't say that they were a Spastic. Calling someone a Spaz is sort of gentle derogatory (if such a thing can be gentle) like calling them Nerd.
That's Jon's job.
Hey! I represent that remark!
(pro-spaz)
Go Spaz. choose Spaz.