Geekonics is just a Beginning
by John Woestendiek
Philadelphia Inquirer
Wed., January 8, 1997
NEWS BULLETIN: Saying it will improve the education of children
who have grown up immersed in computer lingo, the school board in
San Jose, California, has officially designated computer English,
or "Geekonics," as a second language.
The historic vote on Geekonics - a combination of the word
"geek" and the word "phonics" - came just weeks after the Oakland
school board recognized black English, or Ebonics, as a distinct
language.
"This entirely reconfigures our parameters," Milton "Floppy"
Macintosh, chairman of Geekonics Unlimited, said after the school
board became the first in the nation to recognize Geekonics.
"No longer are we preformatted for failure," Macintosh said
during a celebration that saw many Geekonics backers come
dangerously close to smiling. "Today, we are rebooting,
implementing a program to process the data we need to interface
with all units of humanity."
Controversial and widely misunderstood, the Geekonics movement
was spawned in California's Silicon Valley, where many children
have grown up in households headed by computer technicians,
programmers, engineers and scientists who have lost ability to
speak plain English and have inadvertently passed on their
high-tech vernacular to their children.
Helping the Transition
While schools will not teach the language, increased teacher
awareness of Geekonics, proponents say, will help children make the
transition to standard English. Those students, in turn, could
possibly help their parents learn to speak in a manner that would
lead listeners to believe that they have actual blood coursing
through their veins.
"Bit by bit, byte by byte, with the proper system development,
with nonpreemptive multitasking, I see no reason why we can't
download the data we need to modulate our oral output," Macintosh
said.
The designation of Ebonics and Geekonics as languages reflects
a growing awareness of our nation's lingual diversity, experts say.
Other groups pushing for their own languages and/or
vernaculars to be declared official viewed the Geekonics vote as a
step in the right direction.
"This is just, like, OK, you know, the most totally kewl
thing, like, ever," said Jennifer Notat-Albright, chairwoman of the
Committee for the Advancement of Valleyonics, headquartered in
Southern California. "I mean, like, you know?" she added.
They're happy in Dixie
"Yeee-hah," said Buford "Kudzu" Davis, president of the
Dixionics Coalition. "Y'all gotta know I'm as happy as a tick on
a sleeping bloodhound about this."
Spokesmen for several subchapters of Dixionics - including
Alabonics, Tennesonics and Louisionics - also said they approved of
the decision.
Bill Flack, public information officer for the Blue Ribbon
Task Force on Bureaucratonics said that his organization would not
comment on the San Jose vote until it convened a summit meeting,
studied the impact, assessed the feasibility, finalized a report
and drafted a comprehensive action plan, which, once it clears the
appropriate subcommittees and is voted on, will be made public to
those who submit the proper information-request forms.
Proponents of Ebonics heartily endorsed the designation of
Geekonics as an official language.
"I ain't got no problem wif it," said Earl E. Byrd, president
of the Ebonics Institute. "You ever try talkin' wif wunna dem
computer dudes? Don't matter if it be a white computer dude or a
black computer dude; it's like you be talkin' to a robot - RAM,
DOS, undelete, MegaHertZ. Ain't nobody understands. But dey keep
talkin' anyway. 'Sup wif dat?"
Those involved in the lingual diversity movement believe that
only by enacting many different English languages, in addition to
all the foreign ones practiced here, can we all end up happily
speaking the same boring one, becoming a nation that is both
unified in its diversity, and diversified in its unity.
Others say that makes no sense at all. In any language.