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Humor: Our motto's better than your motto

"Not so fast" ("Alki," more or less) has a nice ring to it, fitting for our dispassionate state and these hard times. Other states' sayings are "not so swift."

Humor: Our motto's better than your motto

by

Steve Clifford

"Not so fast" ("Alki," more or less) has a nice ring to it, fitting for our dispassionate state and these hard times. Other states' sayings are "not so swift."

I seldom boast about Washington state, but we do have the best motto. Our state motto is 'ꀜAlki,'ꀝ from Chinook jargon meaning, roughly, 'ꀜHold on,'ꀝ or 'ꀜNot so fast.'ꀝ

'ꀜAlki'ꀝ may also be translated as 'ꀜby and by.'ꀝ During the Eisenhower years, a group of legislative prudes, all of whom had served as hall monitors in junior high school, attempted to introduce the odious mistranslation, 'ꀜhope for the future.'ꀝ Speakers of Chinook jargon quickly exposed this fraud with the withering comment, 'ꀜMan kloshe kopa yaka lepush pe klale kopa yaka tumtum,'ꀝ which is loosely translated as 'ꀜwhite man speaks with forked tongue.'ꀝ

'ꀜNot so fast'ꀝ is an appropriate motto for a skeptical, dispassionate, and detached state.  'ꀜNot so fast'ꀝ is a far better response to almost any phenomenon than other state mottos. Consider how well it works in response to a typical headline, 'ꀜGovernor to Call Special Legislative Session.'ꀝ How much better it is, for instance, than:

Most state mottos sound like slogans of failed student council candidates.  The South is still fighting the Civil War:

Many mottos appear to have been chosen off flip charts at a Vision and Values Workshop facilitated by a highly compensated consultant:

Some celebrate the irony that prison inmates stamp their state'ꀙs slogan on license plates:

The Midwest boasts of its banality:

A few appear to relish a local joke that the rest of us don'ꀙt get:

I worry that other states may compete with Washington'ꀙs 'ꀜNot so fast'ꀝ by adopting more contemporary mottos:

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