Topic : Evade
Curious Compound Adjective
While pursuing a story about equivocation in high office, I was told, He gave an if-by-whiskey speech. My source, asked about his curious compound adjective, said he thought it was a Florida political expression possibly borrowed from a Minnesota Congressman. That triggered a call to Richard B. Stone, now a Washington banker, but a former U.S. Senator from Florida familiar with that states political patois. He immediately recognized the phrase, meaning calculated ambivalence, and provided the following anecdote: Fuller Warren, Floridas governor in the 50s, was running for office in a year that counties were voting their local option on permitting the sale of liquor.
Asked for his position on wet-versus-dry, he would say: If by whiskey you mean the water of life that cheers mens souls, that smoothes out the tensions of the day, that gives gentle perspective to ones view of life, then put my name on the list of the fervent wets. But if by whiskey you mean the devils brew that rends families, destroys careers and ruins ones ability to work, then count me in the ranks of the dries.