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Thank you for this summary! I laughed out loud at the image of McCarthy's speech, "listening to a cover band playing yesterday’s hits."

Jeffries's alliterative alphabetical list of contrasts was clear and clever (and, no doubt, SO irritating to the other party) - he really seemed to enjoy what he was doing, too.

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He is a beyond fantastic speaker, and a more than promising leader.

Additionally, he made the other guy wait even longer for an already phyrric victory, making it his big moment instead. Total unabashed boss move, of the type Republicans use at every opportunity, and Democrats way too rarely indulge in.

The alphabet gimmick was great because you can tell what is happening pretty quickly, and you know just how long it's gonna be. Sweet sweet xeniality. More, please.

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Xenial was a new word for me, but I will now be slipping it into conversations whenever needed!

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EXCELLENT use of ye olde lexicon! Xenial is certainly not part of the vocabulary of anyone that I know.

Jeffries is a shining example of the benefits of PUBLIC eduction: Midwood High School (Brooklyn), Binghamton University (part of the State University of New York system - and *ahem* my alma mater... for whatever that adds to the conversation). And then, Georgetown and NYU Law - not public, but the foundation was there in taxpayer-supported education. Such a contrast to any number of other legislators.

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Yes Binghamton University - about 30 minutes away from where I live, too.

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And to DeSatan ...

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I was wondering what he was going to do with X. I pretty much knew that Xmas wasn't going to cut it.

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For a hot second all I could think of was Xanax. Which, to be fair, would be applicable considering the situation.

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Xanax would have been hilarious! To save other readers of these comments the trouble, here’s Merriam-Webster’s definition of Jeffries’ deftly chosen “xenial”:

xenial: [adjective] of, relating to, or constituting hospitality or relations between host and guest and especially among the ancient Greeks between persons of different cities.

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Thanks for that definition. Really appreciate not having to look it up!

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In making sense of Merriam-Webster's reference to "different cities," it may be useful to recall that ancient Greece was never a unified country. The main political unit was the city-state, which in the corrugated topography of the Aegean and points inland meant a city and the farmland that surrounded and fed it, typically bounded by mountains and/or ocean. Think of Lauren Boebert's hometown of Rifle, Colorado as its own sovereign state, and you have something of the right idea. Whether a Greek felt xenial toward a citizen of a different city-state generally reflected the two city-states' status as either (a) allied against a third city-state, at least for the moment, or (b) related as mother and far-flung colonial daughter.

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Too funny!

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Laugh-out-loud funny!

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True! 😆 Lol

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Xenial new to me too. Looked it up. Love it.

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It's Gallagher in Irish.

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It makes the word xenophobia much more understandable, right?

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Actually, that worked in reverse for me. His opposing it to xenophobic made it’s meaning so much clearer 🙂

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I looked it up - the Urban Dictionary's definition might give you pause

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Hmmm... yeah, I get your point... however, given his love of word play, I assume (and defend!) that Jeffries meant the original definition.

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Yes, of course!!!!!!

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If I looked up the meaning of words in the Urban dictionary before using them I might have a vocabulary of a few hundred words

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HA!

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Urban Dictionary is one of the sites that shows up pretty close to the top - not my go-to for definitions- I was reading all of them & struck by the UD slant on xenial - I can’t believe I’m bothering to make this comment- HRC’s letter was such a good one- NOT about this!!

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I can’t help but find this all hilarious. I mean, Jeffries has done all of us a HUGE favor by introducing a word most of us (and by “us,” I mean the country) have never heard/read before, with the added “value” (please note the reference to VAT, Value Added Tax!) of a different meaning brought to us by slang. English is indeed a living language.

Sorry, not sorry for all the fun. We will, I fear, need more innocent and maybe useless entertainment over the next couple of years.

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I would have expected "xenophilic", naïf that I am; alas, words ending in -philia seem even more subject to having had fetishist readings imposed on them.

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I think there's nuance between loving strangers (xenophilic) and welcoming them (xenial). In any case, am grateful for the vocabulary stretching: one of my Literature professors at Binghamton admonished us (in the late 1960s) that our generation only used 10% of the English language... he might still have been teaching when Jeffries was a student at BU. I immediately thought of that erudite gentleman when I heard this speech - it's such a delight to hear intelligent, clever (in the best sense) and joyful use of language.

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Logophiles of the world, unite! And let's hope that neither "logophile" nor "bibliophile" ever are fetishized.

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If more Democratic candidates had campaigned the way Hakeem Jeffries spoke Saturday morning, perhaps there still might be a Democratic House. But assuredly, there will be in 2024, as the Republicans return to their MAGA ('Make America Gullible Again') pitch, devoted to demolition of government, rather than its successful operation for the benefit of the country.

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Let's make it so.

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I think he did enjoy it! And isn’t that when we are at our best? When working for something or someone we love, it doesn’t feel like work? He is working for all of us. That love is reciprocated, it births determination, perseverance, and creativity. The qualities of leadership most needed to sustain a historic effort to defeat these anti democratic factions and forces.

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Ted,

I think we have a Democrat we can all coaelesce behind for President now.

However, I am am OK with Biden running again. At first, I thought he was too old.

However, I saw his speech on the border yesterday or day before and, you know what, it was one of the best speeches I have EVER seen.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BUVsaoigOZw

Sounds a bit like he is getting over being sick, but, a blockbuster speech.

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Jeffries broke the spell of their spectacle. Calling them out the way he did, in mocking them, he weaponized the truth to combat their lies. We can expect QOP spectacle after spectacle the next two years. Nancy chose wisely. While it’s serious, Dem leadership should have fun countering their nonsense.

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Thanks for sharing this link. Every time I listen to President Biden, I like him even more for his honesty, his very human delivery, and his humor. So what if he has a stutter that sometimes gets in the way? His heart and his head are in the right place.

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For those who don't want to spend 25 minutes listening to the President--who spoke very well, by the way--here's the transcript of his speech.

https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/speeches-remarks/2023/01/05/remarks-by-president-biden-on-border-security-and-enforcement/

And although there was much to like in his speech, IMO there were several things conspicuously missing.

He did not propose a national, mandatory E-Verify. That's something which could stanch illegal immigration, and stop visa overstayers. If they can't get jobs, they won't come. Such a law--which came within about 25 votes of passing in the House in '17, but didn't make it because TFG and Speaker Paul Ryan did not support it--should include severe penalties for CEOs of companies that hire unauthorized immigrants. And pushing for E-Verify would have made a favorable impression on a lot of GOP voters.

He also did not propose to cap immigration at a low number (The late Barbara Jordan, Black Dem from Texas, who made her name on the Watergate Committee, ran a commission on immigration reform in which she would have capped it at around half a million).

Immigration is now the driver of US population growth. We need to cap it for environmental reasons (climate change is greatly reducing the US' carrying capacity), to stanch the spread of sprawl, and to prevent the stagnation of workers' wages, which mass immigration has caused for the last 40 years, and indeed, throughout most of US history.

See: Back of the Hiring Line: A 200-Year History of Immigration Surges, Employer Bias, and Depression of Black Wealth.

Nonetheless, there was a lot to like in his speech, and he spoke well. Biden is probably going to be the best rated president since Roosevelt. As for age, Pelosi, the best House Speaker ever, did her best in her 80s.

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Good suggestions for Congress as well. I agree about Biden

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E-Verify…Look what happened in Florida. DeSantis initially campaigned on preventing employers from hiring undoc immigrants. Surpise…big biz pushback!

Law quietly passed requiring public employers to use E-Verify…because these immigrants are all applying for gov jobs. Not. Did I mention former Fl Senate Prez and now Ag Commisioner made his millions egg farming…Somthimg tells me he may also have invested in our lucrative tourism industry.

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I'm not sure what you're getting at. But big biz definitely likes cheap, easily exploitable labor, and unauthorized immigrants definitely fall into that category. And when they get hired, American and legal immigrant workers suffer fewer jobs available, and lower wages if they get jobs.

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Great speech! IMHO, and I vote!

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Ruth, your 'SO irritating to other party' observation never occurred to me, I ignored it. I read down another 50 comments until it sunk in. Jeffries was giving the GOP a good slap across the face to let them know he will not be punked. THAT may end up being the most significant event of the evening, long term.

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The speech that is being quoted and discussed is his, not McCarthy’s. It was a victory for sure.

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I can imagine it is. I admit, I didn't listen to McCarthy's. He pretty much just makes me cringe and after last week I've seen and heard all I want to from that guy and his damn Freedom Caucus who appear to be just loud, noisy, bags of hot air.

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Yeah. Except it'll never penetrate the thick skulls of the MAGASSes. Only time will dilute their delusions. Can't wait til they get to become preoccupied with the upcoming UAP report.

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Thanks, Ellie! I believe that Jeffries' ABC's (in schooling seditious extremists hard) will be put to music by many generations to come. This is our new anthem for cult-following- extremists to ponder as they choose the dark or the light from now on. And on which good Americans can find solace and re-build our strength and power to overcome our battered, but still, standing stars and stripes. Our country will be usurped by the Mephistolic souls of seditious traitors no more. Do not give them excess in platforms---just move ahead with the changes we need and stop listening to their immature squabbling, narcissistic din. Keep our eyes on the positive prizes which Jeffries so eloquently elucidates in the most simplistic, melody of goals of our imperfect but potentially Great Nation and Experiment of living together in One Boat. He kept it simple so any American can understand the choices and actions they must make.

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So true, as wonderful as it was to hear Jeffries say it, I kept hearing it Lin Manuel Miranda’s voice - the power of music will give that speech a life of its own!

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Me, too, SAT12!

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This version of Jeffries's ABC's uses the word "xennial" instead of "xenial" (which is presumably the word in his speech) - according to Merriam-Webster "xennial is a word that refers to people who were born on the cusp between Generation X and the millennials". The Urban Dictionary definition of "xenial" is disturbing, and clearly not what Jeffries meant.

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I was thinking he meant “xenial” as in hospitality — see: https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/xenial

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He probably meant genial, but needed an word starting with x.

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Out of curiousity (I love word origins), I looked up both words. I think Jeffries chose Xenial (the spelling that appears in the house transcript) quite deliberately, as others have pointed out- as a direct opposite to Xenophobia. Genial has a different kind of meaning, one that applies simply to general demeanor. Xenial specifically refers to welcoming strangers. I found it fascinating. As others have noted, it illuminated the meaning of xenophobia for me. Both have been around for centuries, tracable to ancient Greek.

I generally don't pay much attention to the UD, but in this case it does includes the original meaning of xenial as used by Jeffries. The rest of UD's entries beginning in Xen are street slang of recent origin, UD's specialty. There is a lot of roll-over in UD, which is why it it is of limited value in understanding English words.

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Ellie,

Many thanks. I have blown it up and sent it on to about 40 people (some who will not read it, probably, since, their goal is fascism, nasty and hate).

But, I sent it. It is truly spectacular.

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I made a screen shot of that when I first saw it yesterday, brought it into Photoshop Elements, and added Jeffries' name and the date at the bottom, and then shared it on Flickr, Facebook and Post.

https://www.flickr.com/photos/mimbrava/52615187390/

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This is great! Thank you!

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Ellie, is this graphic available elsewhere? I canceled my Twitter account. Thanks!

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Go to my Flickr page, Ellen—https://www.flickr.com/photos/mimbrava/52615187390/. If it won't let you download it, see if you can do a screenshot. My Photoshop'd version shows Jeffries' name and the date he spoke those words.

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Thank you!

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Thank you, Mim!

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A--Z. Brilliant. I felt hopeful, energized. This is a speech for the ages. Thank you Hakeem Jeffries

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I totally missed that it was in alphabetic order. I had to go back snd look at it again!

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It took me until G to finally catch on.

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I was also amused by McCarthy’s vaporous rhetoric being summarized and Jeffries’ suitably and amply quoted.

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I enjoyed that laugh too.

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Yes the contrast was astounding!

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