"Y'all" - The shitlib's catch phrase - and a sign to disregard their opinion on anything

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Well that escalated quickly.
"y'all should die"
y'all stochastic terrorism is good actually.jpg


Context: Contrapoints (the tranny) might be one of the few leftists who recognized that progressives had no argument so their culture war wins were only temporary.

I guess assassinations are their only other option.
 
y'all don't have girlfriends x2

yall dont have girlfriends.jpg


Context: Tim Pool and the panel discuss the unhealthy obsession women have with true crime and idolizing criminals and serial killers. If you point this out as being something that is bad or undesirable, then that's because Y'ALL don't have girlfriends (a claim that is completely baseless).
 
Edit: I also recognize that normal White and Black southerners use y'all as part of normal daily speech which I have no problems with.

Well that's a fine thing, as that was our word until the libtards appropriated it.

I suppose I'd feel more indignant about the hypocrisy over "cultural appropriation" if it wasn't so expected. Shitlibs practice hypocrisy like it's art.
 
Im in ky and I say the y'all with a w before the ll.
I dislike that I know exactly what sounds you're describing, despite not being in Kentucky for over a decade.
If I hear a flat yah-ll, youre a fake ass faggot and we recognize you
I dunno, mang. That "yw'all" thing from KY was grating to me even when I still lived in the South. It's like encountering someone who unironically uses "yinz". Spiritually Ohio.

OTOH, I've been around the Northeast (US and Maritime Canada) for long enough that it's mutated into "yo'll" in my speech. Still a valid contraction, but I'll only type it "y'all" if I happen to use it in text.

I have a feeling this phenomenon of liberals culturally appropriating southern speech mannerisms could probably be traced back to some specific person who was popular in their circles using it in lectures or public speaking.

Similar to how they all started using the term "black&brown bodies" in the past several years, despite none of them seeming to know it derives from Foucault. Like an ideological game of telephone.
 
I dislike that I know exactly what sounds you're describing, despite not being in Kentucky for over a decade.

I dunno, mang. That "yw'all" thing from KY was grating to me even when I still lived in the South. It's like encountering someone who unironically uses "yinz". Spiritually Ohio.

OTOH, I've been around the Northeast (US and Maritime Canada) for long enough that it's mutated into "yo'll" in my speech. Still a valid contraction, but I'll only type it "y'all" if I happen to use it in text.

I have a feeling this phenomenon of liberals culturally appropriating southern speech mannerisms could probably be traced back to some specific person who was popular in their circles using it in lectures or public speaking.

Similar to how they all started using the term "black&brown bodies" in the past several years, despite none of them seeming to know it derives from Foucault. Like an ideological game of telephone.

Im originally from the balkans and lived in Germany. I thought I spoke normal German and everyone else sounded country. I'd make the German R with the back of my tongue while everyone around me trilled like a Spaniard. 20 years later, I realize that I was the one who sounded like a country bumpkin.
 
Im originally from the balkans and lived in Germany. I thought I spoke normal German and everyone else sounded country. I'd make the German R with the back of my tongue while everyone around me trilled like a Spaniard. 20 years later, I realize that I was the one who sounded like a country bumpkin.
The german teacher we had in high school was originally from Boston.
She had apparently learned to suppress her Boston accent when speaking in english, but it turns out she taught us all to pronounce german like we were wicked retahded wid mouts fulla chowdah. Which the exchange students understandably found delightful.
 
Similar to how they all started using the term "black&brown bodies" in the past several years, despite none of them seeming to know it derives from Foucault. Like an ideological game of telephone.
Only the "bodies" part is sort of his fault. Feminists (who hated him) snatched it away with enough enthusiasm to make it their shibboleth. Then niggers mugged them and took it.

Similar story with "gaze," based on a tone-deaf translation of Foucault's regard. "Male gaze" being thought of as his idea is the gay-libertarian-philosopher equivalent of "marriage rape."

Anyway, the game of telephone part is the important thing. Leftism is a guild and a social clique—people who know each other and hate you and work against you—whose "ideology" is an oral tradition, not an error arising from "youth-endangering writings" (as the German censors say).

They don't fucking read books. They imitate each other.
 
I always had a sneaking suspicion the use of the word y'all (and other shit like taking a W or an L, God I hate those) exist in libspeak because of Twitter. That bullshit ass character limit forces people to compress words down. Since pre musk Twitter was the grand central niggercattle plantation of the censored web I think it spread through their vocabulary like a venereal disease.

We can add it to the long list of sins big tech has racked up.
 
The german teacher we had in high school was originally from Boston.
She had apparently learned to suppress her Boston accent when speaking in english, but it turns out she taught us all to pronounce german like we were wicked retahded wid mouts fulla chowdah. Which the exchange students understandably found delightful.

My brothers and I have been in the US almost three decades. One sounds like drago from rocky 4, the other sounds like Arnold Schwarzenegger. I'm the only one that sounds like I'm from here.
 
Thanks for this thread.

As I've said elsewhere in here, when we'd hear the word growing up in the 80's North we assumed it was going to be followed up with some Moon Man-tier race theory. So it's weirdly dissonant to hear the left pick it up. But then, blacks, I guess.
 
It's probably a trend where they're tryin' ta co-opt rustic lingo fer sum cottagecore aesthetic that migh' seem trendy w'tha libs. Prob' wanna hav' the cake 'n eat it too enjoyin' all tha wholesome vibes of ye ol' pioneer pragmatic meritocracy but separated from the religious cultural foundations that give it the humble southern hospitality that folks've tried so hard ta twist into sum hypocritical backhanded enclave bs that all the imitations wound up becoming. It's like the folks thing. Lotta slang cuts down on the syllables so it takes less effort to talk. More efficient. Thing is they can't really use it properly because in order to signal because they have to stress the adopted words in order to make them stand out and that breaks the flow, creating unnatural pauses like hiccups and missing the whole point of efficiency by cutting down the syllables in the first place.
It's the gay lisp 2.0
 
I work in big tech, and I noticed "y'all" took off in the broader culture around the time my boss sheepishly acknowledged to the team that he sometimes said "you guys", which, of course, is not inclusive of women. Whenever I hear it from a non-Southerner, I assume that person is too pussy to say "you guys", and too dumb to come up with a more articulate phrase.
 
I'm from Chicago and there's one clearly gay dude in my office who loves saying y'all even though I highly doubt he's from the South and I think that's what makes this trend so grating. Y'all is such a quintessentially Southern word but suffers from being genuinely a useful word in and of itself. This results in absolute faggots from northern states using it in their Midwest cosmopolitan accents to either come off as inclusive or as country.

To add to the country point, I think the influx of popularity that Southern culture is experiencing in America right now is only making this worse. It's cool to be country, it's cool to be Southern, so saying y'all is a way to co-opt some of that coolness even if you aren't Southern. I, personally, find this trendy coolness of the South to be grating because you've got suburbanites trying to turn every major city into Nashville (just Broadway) when NASHVILLE ALREADY EXISTS
 
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