...Here we go with the 3.50's.
Did you actually read it? If you did, you would see he literally breaks down everything that is happening and why.
Do you not see it?
Quoting: Anonymous Coward 78298045 What language is he using?
If he could translate that into common every English, he might get through to more people.
Most Americans don't speak spooklish, pentagonase, or whatever that is.
Quoting: Anonymous Coward 79077615 Meanwhile, Swedes can read it just fine!
It's just a very condensed form of communication, packing A LOT of information in very little text. It's a bit unsettling at first because you can't skim read it, you need to read slowly and with active focus on decoding every line. But once you get used to it you start to appreciate this style of communication.
Advantages of Q's terse style:
1. There's no useless fluff, no "babbling", no appeals to emotion. This focuses your attention on
the essential information being communicated.
2. When information is more densely packed, you can hold more of it in your working memory. This makes you able to see connections and associations that would be hidden from your view if they were buried in a lot of text. Presenting data in this way raises the reader's effective IQ!
3. Writing this way is a way of showing respect for
the intelligence of the reader, in sharp contrast to the manipulative way the media talks down to you and fills your head with easy-to-swallow nuggets of trash data. Q doesn't dumb things down to appeal to the slow witted or mentally lazy. It's actually rather refreshing to be spoken to this way for a change! Q expects the reader to be sharp, and that forces you sit up straight and pay attention.
I wouldn't call it "spooklish" or "pentagonese", I'd call it "very disciplined military style English".