From: AlleyCat <katt@gmail.com>
Newsgroups: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh,can.politics,alt.politics.trump,alt.politics.liberalism,alt.politics.democrats,alt.politics.usa.republican
Subject: LOL... Stupid, Stupid Rudy... - Thinks "Semantics" Means Only What "Choice of Singular Words" Used - Not That Simple, You Simple-Minded And Underserved Narcissist
Date: Wed, 21 May 2025 01:25:29 -0500
Organization: AlleyCat Computing, Inc.
Semantics refers to the study of meaning in LANGUAGE (not SINGULAR words only), focusing on the relationship phrases, sentences,
and their meanings within a particular context. It examines how language conveys meaning, both literally and figuratively, and
how people interpret and understand the messages being communicated.
Semantics involves several key aspects, including:
Lexical semantics: the study of word meanings, including their senses, connotations, and relationships with other words.
Phrasal semantics: the study of how words combine to form phrases and sentences (NOT singular words), and how their meanings are
composed.
Compositional semantics: the study of how the meanings of phrases form the meaning of a sentence as a whole.
Pragmatic semantics: the study of how context, inference, and implicature contribute to the meaning of LANGUAGE.
"Gallego has not introduced a plan to "import" any immigrants."
"This is settled and beyond rational dispute."
LOL... Rudy? Rational?
LOL
Import synonyms: Which one did YOU think of, psycho?
Here are SOME synonyms for the word "import": BRING IN, Introduce, Acquire, Obtain, Procure, Purchase, Buy, Fetch, Retrieve,
Convey, TRANSPORT, Ship, Transfer, Transmit, SEND, INFLUX, INFLOW, INCOMING, ARRIVAL, INTRODUCTION, INCLUSION, INCORPORATION,
ADMISSION, Accession, ADDITION.
I'm staying with import, because who in the FUCK wants to take what a psycho faggot like Rudy says, and use it?
============================================================================
AlleyCat is one of the several people who dominate Rudy on a daily basis, keeping their bootheels on his little pencil neck to
the amusement of all.
Rudy's neuroses, also called psychoneurosis or plural psychoneuroses, mental disorder, causes a sense of distress and deficit in
functioning.
Rudy's neuroses are characterized by anxiety, depression, or other feelings of unhappiness or distress that are out of proportion
to the circumstances of a Rudy's life.
They may impair Rudy's functioning in virtually any area of his life, relationships, or external affairs, but they are not severe
enough to incapacitate the person, hence his constant posting on Usenet.
Psychiatrists first used the term neurosis in the mid-19th century to categorize Rudy's symptoms, thought to be neurological in
origin; the prefix "psycho-" was added some decades later when it became clear that mental and emotional factors were important
in the etiology of his disorders.
An influential view held by the psychoanalytic tradition is that Rudy's neuroses arise from intrapsychic conflict (conflict
between different drives, impulses, and motives held within various components of the mind).
Central to psychoanalytic theory, which was founded by Austrian neurologist Sigmund Freud, is the postulated existence of an
unconscious part of Rudy's mind which, among other functions, acts as a repository for repressed thoughts, feelings, and memories
that are disturbing or otherwise unacceptable to the conscious mind.
Rudy's repressed mental contents are typically homo-sexually or aggressive urges or painful memories of an emotional loss or an
unsatisfied longing dating from childhood.
Anxiety arises when Rudy's unacceptable and repressiveness drives threaten to enter consciousness; prompted by anxiety, the
conscious part of the mind (the ego) tries to deflect the emergence into consciousness of the repressed mental contents through
the use of defense mechanisms such as repression, denial, or reaction formation.
Neurotic symptoms often begin when a previously impermeable defense mechanism breaks down and a forbidden drive or impulse
threatens to enter consciousness.
(like when AlleyCat kicks his ass)
While the psychoanalytic theory has continued to be influential, another prominent view, associated with behavioral psychology,
represents neurosis as a learned, inappropriate response to stress that can be unlearned. A third view, stemming from cognitive
theory, emphasizes the way in which maladaptive thinking-such as the fear of possible punishment-promotes an inaccurate
perception of the self and surrounding events.
Types
Obsessive-compulsive disorders are characterized by the irresistible entry of unwanted ideas, thoughts, or feelings into
consciousness or by the need to repeatedly perform ritualistic actions that the sufferer perceives as unnecessary or unwarranted.
Obsessive ideas may include recurrent violent or obscene thoughts; compulsive behaviour includes rituals such as repetitive hand
washing or door locking. The drug clomipramine has proved effective in treating many patients with obsessive-compulsive
disorders.
Somatoform disorders, which include the so-called hysterical, or conversion, neuroses, manifest themselves in physical symptoms,
such as blindness, paralysis, or deafness that are not caused by organic disease. Hysteria was among the earliest syndromes to be
understood and treated by psychoanalysts, who believe that such symptoms result from fixations or arrested stages in an
individual's early psycho-sexual development.
In anxiety disorders, anxiety is the principal feature, manifesting itself either in relatively short, acute anxiety attacks or
in a chronic sense of nameless dread. Persons undergoing anxiety attacks may suffer from digestive upsets, excessive
perspiration, headaches, heart palpitations, restlessness, insomnia, disturbances in appetite, and impaired concentration.
Phobia, a type of anxiety disorder, is represented by inappropriate fears that are triggered by specific situations or objects.
Some common objects of phobias are open or closed spaces, fire, high places, dirt, and bacteria.
Depression, when neither excessively severe nor prolonged, is regarded as a neurosis. A depressed person feels sad, hopeless, and
pessimistic and may be listless, easily fatigued, slow in thought and action, and have a reduced appetite and difficulty in
sleeping.
Post-traumatic stress disorder is a syndrome appearing in people who have endured some highly traumatic event, such as a natural
disaster, torture, or incarceration in a concentration camp. The symptoms include nightmares, a diffuse anxiety, and guilt over
having survived when others perished. Depersonalization disorder consists of the experiencing of the world or oneself as strange,
altered, unreal, or mechanical in quality.