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Friday, February 24th, 2012 03:19 pm
Can someone give me a link to a post about why "derp" is abelist? There's a discussion on my twitter list, and there's no way I can summarise it in 140 characters.

(nb I am also pretty sleepy, so don't feel up to explaining it here either. If you're interested, I'm sure someone else will post a link eventually)
Friday, February 24th, 2012 04:56 pm (UTC)
I'll be tracking to see if you get that link, cause for the longest time I've been wondering if I was the only one who knew/remembered/or realized that it's a mocking sound made towards the mentally disabled about their speech patterns/ability or inability to speak, and I've been twitchy about it for ages. But couldn't find anything about its origins (it or the hd version)
Sunday, February 26th, 2012 03:13 am (UTC)
The origins are from a movie made by the creators of South Park. Look on Know Your Meme. The original documented occurrence had nothing to do with people with intellectual disabilities. It has arguably evolved, however, at least in some folks' usage.
Monday, February 27th, 2012 01:47 am (UTC)
That seems like it starts to take on one of those weird lines of language-shifts-and-meanings-change ambiguity. (Like how very, very few people think of phrases like "whirling dervish" as being racist, because very, very few people know of any meaning to "dervish" other than "thing that whirls".)

My experience with derp is mostly from a particular gaming community (EVE Online), and it doesn't even vaguely match stuff towards the inability to speak of the mentally disabled, because something has to hit at least about 800 words before being categorised as "derping", and is generally to do with people chestbeating their own alliance or rationalising losing a battle. Of course, losing a battle could happen because you derped it, or because your tactical discussions were all herp derp, so then you accidentally the whole fleet. (The missing verb there was intentional. "Accidentally the whole [thing]" is an EVE thing too.)

I don't know, though - EVE has quite a few of its own jargon quirks, some of which have escaped into the gaming wild, but some of which haven't, and it's kind of its own special snowflake of language use.