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A.P.C.S.W.J.
The Alliance for the Preservation
of the Correct Spelling of the Word
"Judgment"
"A Consortium of Scholars and the Morally Good"
Part of the Periodic Diversions Network
Our
mission:
To preserve the current and correct
spelling of "judgment" and shield it from attack by those wishing to change its
spelling to "judgement."
The facts:
"Judgment" has stood the test of history, bravely resisting the nefarious "e" that some have tried to insert into its wholesome midriff. But in recent years, an insurgency has developed that offends not only the integrity of this humble word, but the sensibility of the English language itself. This insurgency consists of uninformed individuals, bad spellers, stupid people, and [is rumored to contain] Communists, social outcasts, Vegetarians, and Californians.
Those who wish to spell "judgment" as "judgement" seek not just to divide the word with their detestable letter "e." It goes much deeper than that: Indeed, those depraved souls seek to divide the world itself, driving a wedge between the fibrous moral virtues upon which it now teeters so precariously.
English professors resoundingly agree.
Judgment: one of the fifty
most commonly misspelled words.
The enemies:
The miscreants of Hollywood have been notorious in their misspellings of "judgment." Take actor William Baldwin's recent letter to The New York Times, in which he criticized--what else--the paper's misuse of words.
| "Not only is Sean [Penn] not 'Bruce, Julia, Harrison and the two Toms' but he is the anti-Tom. He is the poster child for those actors who fought corporate commercial studio interests to protect the creative process. Don't get me wrong -- this is certainly no judgement of big studio stars." |
The sly infusion of the misspelled "judgement" into our language has thus far not been limited to obscure revolutionaries alone. Webster's Dictionary now lists the definition for "judgment" as:
|
judg-ment |
To be sure, the wicked influence of
our enemies has gone straight to the top; the very institutional laws of our
language have been infiltrated. As John Dean would remind us, there is a cancer
on the English language, and it's growing.
What you can do:
Won't you please join with us, purveyors of all that is good and right? You may help the cause so dear to all of us in two important ways.
First, sign our petition:
"We, the undersigned, agree with the A.P.C.S.W.J. that the word "judgment" should be spelled without an 'e.' We recognize the attack on our virtues the insertion of this vitriolic letter represents, and we reject this affront to our moral and grammatical sensibilities. We will never spell judgment as 'judgement,' and we will adamantly refuse to acknowledge this word as spelled incorrectly when we encounter it as such."
Maintained by Ulmo "Duke" Stanton <duke@periodicdiversions.com>
Technical Editors: Karly Imus, Daniel Crisman.