CDC's "Germstoppers" campaign uses low-brow
language to teach complex hand washing skills
(satire)
Friday, August 04, 2006 by: Mike Adams
The Centers for Disease Control (CDC) in the United States has a
new program called "Germstoppers." This program consists -- in part
-- of a full-page brochure that various institutions -- such as
health clinics and hospitals -- can paste in their windows. The
"Germstoppers" brochure attempts to educate Americans on how to
practice basic sanitation and personal hygiene. What's amusing
about this program, however, is how it has become necessary to
water down the use of vocabulary in order to make the brochure
understandable by your average American citizen.
For example, one of the concepts that the CDC wishes to get
across in this brochure is that people should wash their
hands with great frequency. Apparently, the word "frequency" is
a little too complex for the average American citizen, and thus,
the CDC chose to replace the word "frequency" with the two-word
phrase, "A lot."
Now, the brochure says, "Wash your hands a lot," which sounds
like something a middle-school teenager might say -- but not
something that should come from the Centers
for Disease Control. Why not just replace the word "frequency"
with the word "tons," because that seems to be a more common word
with the undereducated American public? "Wash your hands tons!"
Happy birthday to me!
Next, the brochure attempts to tell people that they should wash
their hands for a period of time equal to approximately 60 seconds.
But apparently, the term "60 seconds" is a little too technical for
the American public. So, it has been translated into a completely
absurd tidbit that says, "Wash your hands for as long as it takes
to sing the Happy Birthday song to yourself to twice." Apparently,
Americans cannot understand the concept of 60 seconds -- presumably
because it contains a number.
The CDC believes that Americans are perfectly capable of singing
"Happy Birthday to You" two times in a row without being confused.
That may be true, but think about how ridiculous it is to be
standing around singing happy birthday to yourself while washing
your hands. Interestingly, the brochure does not indicate whether
you should sing happy birthday out loud or silently in your own
head. It also does not predict whether American citizens might get
confused singing the song in their own heads, where they might
easily forget whether they were on verse one or verse two.
Are Americans really that stupid?
I don't know about you, but when I see public education messages
like this -- using third-grade vocabulary -- it really makes me
wonder about the intelligence of the American public. Presumably,
the Centers for Disease Control made an intelligent choice and
carefully selected these words and concepts because it believes
they would help communicate important information that the CDC is
trying to share with the American public.
I don't fault the CDC for producing this brochure, and it
may in fact have done a great job in reaching people at the level
they are capable of comprehending. What shocks me is that the
average American IQ has slipped so low that we can't even use words
beyond a third-grade level to say anything to the public anymore.
It's as if we're trying to educate a bunch of first-graders, except
they're not first-graders -- they're the adult population
representing the average American citizen.
NewsTarget has many readers across Europe, Australia, Asia,
South America
and other countries. They must think that this is some kind of
satire piece, but I assure you it is not. This is exactly what the
brochure from the CDC says -- I'm not making this up. But still,
you must be thinking to yourself, "How could the American public be
so uneducated as to require such simplistic terminology?" Many of
you from other countries are probably reading this using English
you learned as a second, third or fourth language -- and your
vocabulary far exceeds that of the average American, who only knows
one language and hasn't even mastered that one. But again, I assure
you this is the state of reality here in the United
States.
Let's not even talk about understanding numbers, mathematics or
issues like world history -- that's beyond the scope of what the
public could possibly comprehend. It's a shame, really, to look
around in the United States and see how far we have fallen. We were
once the most abundant, prosperous and well-educated nation in the
world. Today, we have become the laughing stock of the world. We
are overfed, overmedicated and undereducated. But as long as we all
remember how to sing the Happy Birthday song, we can at least rid
our hands of deadly germs, according to the CDC.
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Other ways to use the birthday song
If singing the Happy Birthday song is now a unit of time, why
not apply it to other areas of daily living?
Daily exercise: Jog in place for as long as it takes you to sing
the Happy Birthday song eighteen times.
Baking a cake: Leave the cake in the oven for as long as it
takes you to sing the Happy Birthday song one hundred times (or
until you smell smoke).
Driving instructions: Head North on Interstate 10 for as long as
it takes you to sing the Happy Birthday song fifty-nine times. Then
take the next exit.
Olympic Games: The gold medalist completed the 400 meter dash in
the time it takes to sing the Happy Birthday song 2.7 times!
Just don't get caught singing the Happy Birthday song to
yourself on any day other than your actual birthday (even then...).
Otherwise, you'll just look like a complete idiot. And if you catch
someone singing Happy Birthday out loud while they wash their
hands, kindly remind them that the washing still works if the
birthday song is silent. In fact, tell them it works
better if it's silent!
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