There are a few downsides to the advent of spring. It's an election year and the political nonsense has commenced. The latest are various online and in the mail "news letters" that combine happy sounding stories - nuns installing solar panels! - with political pitches.
It is of course a con. And that got me thinking of all the ways the prefix "con" fits our current political environment. I mean this of course in a bipartisan sense. I'll listen to anyone's sincerely held, reasoned out political philosophy. Might not agree with it but will respect it. OK, let's go:
Conspiracy - the etymology of this one is interesting. It means to "breathe together". The implication is of connivers whispering to each other at such close range they are breathing each other's air. In the age of AI assistance there might be no breathing involved at all....
Connive - This one is curious. Like everything on this list it comes from Latin, in this case conivere, meaning to wink at in a sort of knowing way. Somehow the word derives from nicitare, to wink. This word seems to exist in English only in the sense of nictitating membrane, an extra eyelid seen in a few mammals, but more often birds.....and a lot of reptiles. Lizard people. I knew it.
Considerate - A derivation of consider, from considerare, "to look closely at, to observe". This one is rather fun, it literally means star gazing. Sidereal being a surviving but seldom used word to refer to distant stars. I don't think there are many astronomers working in political campaigns these days. But of course astronomy and astrology were once the same thing and there are still plenty of hacks and pollsters trying to read tea leaves and entrails.
Confuse and Confound - two words with similar meanings and etymology. The basic concept is to take different things, mix them together and fuse them into one mass that makes it impossible to tell what went into it in the first place. Nuns, solar panels and a Senator's re-election campaign just have not been stirred very well. Sorta like simplistic recipe concocted by unskilled cooks.
Concocted - I had not known until starting this chain of "cons" that this is from concoctare, meaning to cook. The sense of it being a process lacking transparency and probably honesty survives in the sense of "cooking the books".
This list could go on and on. Doing things together - "con" - is a basic human function and thus incorporated into all languages. One does wonder if the more cynical spin on many of these words is a modern thing or if ever has it been thus. I can't say with Confidence. That word of course means "to have a common faith", Fides being the Latin for same. Such faith has so often been abused by those looking to directly make a buck or to slither into office to do so. Confidence men. And Women, this being the 21st century. Shortened to Con Men because so few remember the Latin substructure of our language as it has become increasingly Contorted to mean any darn thing that is Convenient.
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