Searching for meaning behind popular cliche
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FLO MARTIN
This Sunday, Kenton Beshore, lead pastor at Mariners Church,
described the typical Orange County mentality as “large and in
charge.” This expression was new to my 62-year-old ears. Hmmm, I
thought, “large and in charge,” let’s Google that on the Web.
The first search result visited piqued my interest:
“Today fat women are taking back their power and discovering they
can be as sexy as the next thin woman can,” wrote Sarah T. Sherman, a
Tablet Newspaper reporter. “Venus Clothing [in Seattle, Washington]
is helping to bring awareness to fat women that they can be large and
in charge.”
As a rather voluptuous woman, I could definitely relate.
The next site, Excalibur Films, described pornographic activity.
No thanks.
In a weblog -- also known simply as a “blog,” Adam writes about,
“the Hitachi Deskstar 7K400 computer with a 400 gigabyte hard drive
that’s large and in charge.” His mind-boggling comment: “You’d have
to burn about 585 CDs just to back up all that data.”
The Village Voice, a New York newsletter features a music
columnist, Eric Weisbard. The column’s title: “Large and in Charge.”
David Anderson, webmaster of the Towson University, Lutheran
Campus Ministry web site describes himself as “large and in charge.”
An outdoor hiking- backpacking online newsletter offers: “Large
and in charge -- because of its immense bulk, the giant sequoia is
the world’s largest tree.”
An Amazon.com online review of Jim Davis’ first Garfield cartoon
book titled, “Garfield: large and in charge from the very beginning.”
Tennessee Bankers’ Association online newsletter said, “TBA
conducted training workshops for bankers last year based on the theme
‘Living Large and In Charge.’”
The Big Daddy boxer shorts brand name: large and in charge.
Ski Press World described a group of skiers as “large and in
charge.”
Tech TV, a technical website wrote: “Calling HP’s new Pavilion
zd7000 a notebook is a stretch. [With] more desktop replacement, it’s
less than portable. It does, however, pack in features to please the
most demanding performance fanatics. Tonight on Tech Live, see why
you might consider replacing your desktop PC with this
large-and-in-charge laptop.”
A San Diego restaurant guide said: “This is a place where you
don’t have to deal with trendy Italian prices. Bountiful dinners come
with big salads, and the pizzas are large and in charge.”
At the Ever Train a Dog? Web site I found, “... Au contraire, he
wants the leader to put him back in his place and thus reassure him
that his pack has a good leader who is large and in charge.”
Now we’re getting somewhere. I was beginning to relate. A good
leader, eh? A presidential leader, maybe?
Seth Sandronsky writes in CommonDreams.org, “the outsourcing of
federal jobs to the private sector would encourage employers to take
advantage of this trend [outsourcing]. Expect lower wages for the
outsourced federal jobs. And less job protection than currently
exists for federal employees, a great deal for employers. No doubt
they think that they’re now large and in charge after the Nov. 5
elections.”
This last excerpt really hit a nerve. Our lawmakers in Washington,
D.C., believe that their actions are solely for the good of the
nation. Outsourcing, no way. The new Medicare Bill, not. The Patriot
Act, scary.
I have been fingerprinted three, yes, three times this past month.
First, during the process of refinancing my home; second, for
renewing my driver’s license; and third, for screening as a chaperone
on a school field trip. This is ridiculous.
Apparently, the powers that be will do whatever it takes to stay
in power. They want to stay large and in charge.
* FLO MARTIN is a retired high school teacher, lectures part-time
at Cal State Fullerton in the Foreign Language Education program and
supervises student teachers in their classrooms.
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