I would agree with that in principle except for the fact that, in practice, the media have not used any term other than "Remain" for the Remain camp. Grexit is indeed a term that has been used to describe the possibility of a Greek exit from the EU. It is also true that, in general, all things Greek in connection with Grexit have been presented in our MSM as being something of a basket case. Therefore, any term that is derived from that initial term is also bound to bring with it, in the minds of some voters, some of that negative baggage and our MSM orchestrators will know this well enough.UndercoverElephant wrote:Don't agree. It's just short-hand, like "Grexit". It's not negative in anyway.Little John wrote:Right, enough with the ******* "Brexit". This is a term deliberately coined and promoted by the Remain camp's propaganda machine, otherwise known as the MSM. It has been coined in order to trivialise and diminish the Leave campaign. We don't see "Bremain" being used as a term to describe the Remain campaign so we should not be seeing "Brexit" being used for the Leave campaign.
Contrast with "Dawkinsian" - a term intentionally invented to sound like "Dickensian", and not in a good way.
Now, I know all of the above will sound like paranoid nitpicking over words, but consider the fact that the UK government insisted that the Scottish referendum question required a YES or NO answer on the ballot. It has been clearly shown in psychological research that if you ask people a question, both on a ballot as much as anywhere else, that requires a YES or NO answer, about 10% of people will answer YES simply because they find it extremely hard to say NO. In other words, merely requiring a YES for your campaign on a ballot sheet, as opposed to a NO, gives you an automatic defacto 10% voting advantage.
Words matter and politicians know this. Language is thought. Control the language and you control the things people are capable of thinking.