Things that went out of style due to negative connotations (ex: the Hitler 'stache)

I hesitate to say it was a “style” but it was not unknown for people to get electro-shock treatment for some nervous disorders. But after McGovern’s running-mate Missouri Senator Thomas Eagleton was piloried for it and forced to drop out of the race, I am told that the proceedure is virtually non-esistent.

*Mild side note here, Eagleton died just a couple of weeks ago *(depending how long this thread lasts)

I have news for y’all: lobotomy and electroshock therapy haven’t gone anywhere. They’ve just got new names:

Electroconvulsive Therapy.

Bilateral Cingulotomy

Nah, it looks like Dolph’s name was just Dolph

Not sure what you were thinking of there, but it wasn’t Nimrod. He only gets mentioned in the Bible as being a mighty hunter, and as the founder of Babel. It doesn’t explicitly say he commissioned the tower, but the association is there.

Maybe you were thinking of Lot’s daughters (who, after their city was destroyed, got their father drunk and slept with him because they thought they were the last people left on earth).

A Bilateral Cingulotomy is hardly the same thing as a Transorbital Lobotomy.

The U.S. Army got rid of olive drab wool uniforms in the 1950s after a decade of WW2 veterans wearing Wool, O.D., as civilian work clothes. For a few years after the war it apparently wasn’t unusual for an entire gang of day laborers to show up in pieces of old uniforms. Thus were born the fatigues and the dark green dress uniform.

Torchlight parades seem to have gone out of style after the Nazis. What a shame, because how neat are they?

You might be wearing shoes named for one the company’s founders, Adolph “ADI” DASchler. I may have misspelled Adi’s last name.

When crooked lobbyist Jack Abramoff was on trial, he was often photographed on the courthouse steps in a natty overcoat and a black fedora. Many reporters talked about how Jack was decked out like a mob boss. Very few men wore fedoras at the time, anyway, but I wondered if fedora sales were affected a little by Jack’s snappy lid. I’m still wearing mine.

“Cult” use to be a perfectly respectable word. But now it’s usually used in a derogatory sense.

They continued to be a feature in big election campaigns in Chicago for quite a time thereafter. The most famous is probably the one on November 4th 1960 when Mayor Daley led John F. Kennedy and a huge crowd - the Machine claimed that a million people were present - of Democrat supporters from the Loop out to the Chicago Stadium for a rally, but there was one for Carter as late as 1976.
The usual explanation in this instance is that they were finally killed off by the dominance of TV electioneering.

Not true

Dolph Lundgren, perhaps?

No. Dolph Lundgren - Wikipedia

Fascinating.

I think you’re referring to the Nazi salute, but the swastika was used on the patches of the 45th Infantry Division

I guess this guy never got the word. :wink:

Allright, Drudge. You know everyone here hates you so just get off the board. :wink:

Well, I don’t know whether they were ever in style, but in Germany you can’t wear Lonsdale clothing anymore since neo-Nazis decided to wear them (for the NSDA in the middle of the name). Als to Adolf, I don’t think there are a lot of younger people named that way - here is a site where you can see when it went out of fashion

How about the word “discriminate?”

Its original meaning is positive, meaning to discern truly the qualities of someone or something and to favor that which is highest in quality.

Then it was narrowed to mean only “irrational racial bias” which is truly a failure to discriminate sensibly.

Now the word has a bad connotration, so you’ll seldom see an advertisement appealing to “the discriminating shopper.”

Similarly, Burberry has fallen out of fashion in the UK due to its association with chavs. Cider has also suffered a similar fate, of sorts.