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90 lines
6.5 KiB
Plaintext
90 lines
6.5 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 734
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Title: HPR0734: The Language Frontier Episode 4.5
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0734/hpr0734.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-08 01:40:41
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---
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Laughter is a form of communication that is the same no matter what language is being spoken.
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Hi, welcome to the language frontier.
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I've got some listener emails today and then we'll get into just how all this language stuff
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that governs our lives actually works.
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And yeah, it's been great getting some feedback.
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The listener comments have been totally diverse.
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Please keep them coming to the language frontier at Yahoo.com.
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Okay, so, dear language frontier, you put forth some intriguing ideas that I've been thinking about a lot,
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especially the idea that language defines physical reality.
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I would like to hear more examples of this and that's from Neil H.
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.
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Dear language frontier, your show is great.
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Thank you.
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And it's got some pretty bold statements.
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Some of them I agree with.
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Some of them I'm not so sure about.
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When you say that language defines physical reality,
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aren't you just saying that the way we express our perception of the world is defined by the way we are able to vocalize it?
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It doesn't seem like language defines our reality,
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but that our reality is expressed with the vocabulary and the language we happen to know.
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And that's from Robert N. in Columbia.
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Robert, thanks for the feedback.
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And I think you make a good point.
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But I think we're saying different things.
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I agree with you that the language we are born into colors the way that we express our perception of the world.
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But there is evidence that we are directly affected by language.
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And Neil, this is for you.
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One of the most powerful ways that language can be used to shape and define reality is with law or legal writing.
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Let's look at a couple of examples that demonstrate just how tricky legal definitions can be.
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This article references the case of exempt funds.
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As in social security and veterans benefits, dead collectors cannot collect out of these sources.
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They are exempt according to federal law.
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Probably because millions of people depend on them to live.
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Federal law in the United States says, quote,
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Creditors can't take social securities and veterans benefits to pay debts and quote.
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However, the practice is widespread because there is no established process for enforcing the federal prohibition
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and federal law does not state who should tell the recipients of social security and veterans money about this exemption.
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This illustrates two main points of the nature of the language of law.
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One, language can be used to bury information and backlog and overwhelm what could,
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and oftentimes should be a simple process and two, the power of definitions or wording work around.
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It says here that many recipients don't know their funds or exempt on the social security administration.
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The administration's website, it doesn't say that these funds are exempt.
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Basically, the only way for these senior citizens to know about the exemption is by seeking legal aid.
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The banks say it is not their job to tell recipients about the exempt status of their social security checks.
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Or check whether an account contains cash from these exempt sources and the dead collectors say it's not their job.
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To find out if they account they are issuing a garnishing order against contains money from social security or veterans benefits.
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So it's up to the oldsters and the disabled people to find out for themselves.
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But where is this information written down? It's actually in the state codes.
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But how many people know where to go? Look for that. Look it up. Read about it.
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Let's look even closer at how language in the form of paperwork can be used as a tool to achieve a goal, namely to collect money.
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Interestingly enough, even though this money is legally exempt from the outset, seniors and the disabled are made to file paperwork proving that their benefit is exempt.
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I'm not sure of the difficulty in identifying social security payments is just that. According to this article in the Wall Street Journal,
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the banks see the deposit on this computer screen as automated, credit, US treasury, sock, sack. That seems fairly intuitive.
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What some debt collectors do, according to legal aid offices, is automatically deny exemption claims and just drag out the process.
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Repeatedly filing garnishment orders to the banks who often go ahead and freeze these seniors accounts and subsequently collect fees for doing it.
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As far as definitions go, banks are able to take funds out of the social security and disability checks too, but they do it in a much more word-based and therefore direct way.
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Banks say the federal ban on taking social security benefits to repay debts does not apply to them because they aren't really collecting debts.
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Banks cite the doctrine of set off, which says banks can collect money that customers owe them by taking it directly out of the customer's account.
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This is supposed to work to expedite things like a routine fee or a monthly charge, but banks apply it broadly to other money customers owe them.
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Banks argue that when they take cash out of a customer's account, including cash from social security checks, they aren't collecting a debt, just setting off what's owed them.
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Banks will cite the deposit agreements they have with their customers that say the bank can use money in customer's accounts to set off debts to the bank.
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As whether the bank believes its set off right makes it legal to seize from these exempt funds, this particular bank said in a statement,
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in cases when we offset accounts for dealing with loans, we as a matter of policy exclude exempt funds.
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They say that, but then they do what they say they aren't going to do.
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A Georgia State college law professor said of this quote,
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It's an abuse of the right to set off to use it to take money from social security funds.
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Banks are flouting in federal policy and, quote, and they're flouting it with language.
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In another case,
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they will only have bank of America.
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Of a pending California lawsuit brought on behalf of retired and disabled social security benefits recipients against Bank of America,
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B of A said in a statement,
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quote,
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It isn't collecting debts, but balancing accounts out of new deposits and, quote,
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My point is, this is all language.
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Language and this broad interpretation of language allows banks and collectors to illegally seize money.
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Powerful stuff language.
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Thank you for listening to Haftler Public Radio.
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HPR is sponsored by Carol.net, so head on over to C-A-R-O dot N-E-T for all of her students.
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Thank you very much.
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Thank you.
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