Difference between revisions of "Slow-in-the-minds"
(→Usage) |
|||
Line 13: | Line 13: | ||
In the [[mailbag]], Chris clarifies that he finds these types (especially those with [[duck|deformities]]) creepy, and likens them to zombies.<ref>[[Mailbag_5#In which Chris speaks ill of the handicapped|Mailbag 5]]</ref><ref>[[Mailbag_11#Elevators are important for the handicapped, so they don't want any phobias|Mailbag 11]]</ref> He applies this bigotry to his fellow Autistics, speaking cruelly about the various speech and physical problems that are thrust upon these innocent individuals, whereas he (as a self-proclaimed "[[Chris and his Ego|high functioning]]"[[ autistic]]) is [[Aspergers (CWCipedia article)|pure and clean]]. He barely seems to comprehend them as humans. | In the [[mailbag]], Chris clarifies that he finds these types (especially those with [[duck|deformities]]) creepy, and likens them to zombies.<ref>[[Mailbag_5#In which Chris speaks ill of the handicapped|Mailbag 5]]</ref><ref>[[Mailbag_11#Elevators are important for the handicapped, so they don't want any phobias|Mailbag 11]]</ref> He applies this bigotry to his fellow Autistics, speaking cruelly about the various speech and physical problems that are thrust upon these innocent individuals, whereas he (as a self-proclaimed "[[Chris and his Ego|high functioning]]"[[ autistic]]) is [[Aspergers (CWCipedia article)|pure and clean]]. He barely seems to comprehend them as humans. | ||
==References== | |||
<references /> | |||
{{stub}} | {{stub}} |
Revision as of 05:51, 7 February 2010
"Slow-in-the-minds" and "slow minded" are CWC-isms that refers to mentally retarded, crazy, and/or generally stupid people. (Other than Chris himself, of course.) The term first seen in Chris's school project A Week With Christian Chandler.
Usage
“ | And finally, after a hard "odd" day, he rides home on a bus, but unfortunately, it had a few "slow-in-the-minds" on it. | ” |
A Week With Christian Chandler, page 7 |
“ | These busses are full of nutty "slow-in-the-minds." | ” |
A Week With Christian Chandler, page 6 |
Apparently Chris uses this term to refer to mentally retarded or mentally ill kids who ride the short bus home, but not all "slow-in-the-minds" ride the special bus, so the term might also refer to the mentally retarded, the simply dumb, and perhaps bullies. Chris obviously fails to realize that ALL teenagers in high-school act dumb, but not because they are retarded, but because they are having fun. Chris is probably jealous that other people, and not him, can have fun. One might surmise that it refers to anybody Chris thinks is dumber than him.
"Slow-in-the-minds" hits a fine trifecta of points: One, it shows Chris's arrogance, seeing as how it applies to so many classes of people, all of whom he considers "slower" than him; two, it shows Chris's lip-service attention to fitting in to society, since it's a piss-poor euphemism on its own and even worse when used in a school project; and third, it had a delicious irony in Chris decrying students who are "slow in the mind" even though Chris himself is of dubious mental stability.
In the mailbag, Chris clarifies that he finds these types (especially those with deformities) creepy, and likens them to zombies.[1][2] He applies this bigotry to his fellow Autistics, speaking cruelly about the various speech and physical problems that are thrust upon these innocent individuals, whereas he (as a self-proclaimed "high functioning"autistic) is pure and clean. He barely seems to comprehend them as humans.
References