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Exsanguating? Well, don’t try it at home

Author: Jon Snow|Posted: 11:45 am on 05/03/09

Category: Snowblog | Tags:

I return from my “hostile environment” course with the word exsanguate ringing in my ears. It’s not a word I knew. But you cannot deal with battlefield scenarios without coming across the appalling prospect of an arterial bleed.

Pumping red, the stuff exsanguates from the body, and the only response, if it is in the leg, is to cut off the flow either by applying massive pressure on the critical blood flow point in the groin or, if it is in the arm, under the bicep. Alternatively a tourniquet is the last-ditch chance to save life.

There were 12 of us on the refresher course: five from ITN, four from Sky and three others. Inevitably the most recent terror attack was uppermost in our deliberations – the attack on the Sri Lankan cricket team in Pakistan.

You can emerge from a course like this convinced the world is in a bloodier state than at any time in history. Certainly the cascade of political violence in Pakistan is some of the worst outside the Indo-Pak war since partition from India.

And yet I think I’m right in saying that this is only the second attack on an international sporting event since the Munich Olympics in 1972 – not that that makes it any better.

My friend from Sky challenged me to find a use for exsanguate in yesterday’s news. Could I have got the word into last night’s headlines. I wondered whether Harriet Harman’s leadership chances were exsanguating as a result of wounds inflicted by Fred Goodwin’s knighthood controversy (he got it for banking and not, as Ms Harman had suggested in the Commons, for charitable works) and the government’s evident difficulty in putting him on trial over his pension.

In truth, the use of words is a pivotal element of the television news trade. Some of us fear it is being eroded by the sheer multiplicity of tasks a television journalist now performs – shooting, editing, graphic design, super-captions.

Is it any wonder that no-one is experimenting with exsanguate. I guess I should issue a health warning: don’t try it at home.

 

Commentsoldest first

  1. At 12:14 pm on March 5, 2009 Dafyd wrote:

    Wait, “exsanguate” or “exsanguinate”? Your blog suggests the former, the picture (and the OED) suggests the latter.

  2. At 12:33 pm on March 5, 2009 Ray Turner wrote:

    So the global banking system has been exsanguating money.

    Global meltdown.
    Global exsanguate

    Which is more appropriate ?

  3. At 8:24 pm on March 5, 2009 Elise Elderkin wrote:

    I thought it was “exsanguinate”, and upon googling it had my suspicions confirmed. However, when I googled “exsanguate”, I found some rather random references, a number of which concerned vampires.

    So with whom were you doing this refresher course, and whose parts were being refreshed?

  4. At 1:20 pm on March 9, 2009 John Ford wrote:

    Why are the bankers in the frame when to my mind it should be the estate agents worldwide? They are the ones who have consistently persuaded people that house prices have risen for decades, when the truth is that they have overvalued property for decades.

    John

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