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Alexander Haig was a hero to millions of Americans. He was an army general who would serve three U.S. presidents in such posts as Secretary of State and White House Chief of Staff. Haig was a veteran of the Korean War and Vietnam War, and he had a slew of medals across his chest. But he was also a notoriously bad communicator.
Haig would use words like this:
“The theological isolation of a functional objective.” “The rigid theological functional areas of preoccupation.” “The rapid hemorrhaging of international terrorism.” “When we find ourselves in a dialectic fashion at one end of the spectrum.”
“Some disconnect on the airwaves.”
With that last one, he actually took a verb – ‘disconnect’ – and turned it into a noun. Haig was a man who used words to try and impress, as opposed to try and express. There is a world of difference. He was so bad that when I was teaching a college course in writing I put him at one end of my communications continuum and Winston Churchill at the other. The latter, of course, was the master.
Too often, whether we’re speaking or writing, we forgot our audience. Instead, we speak or write for ourselves, and unless you’re alone in a room, that isn’t such a good idea. When we write, we must always remember the reader. Put the reader front and centre. Put the reader on a pedestal. Think of the reader as your ultimate goal, the mind you want to win over.
Mr. Churchill certainly did. In World War II, he even put the English language into battle. And won. |