— THE CASE FOR DESCRIPTION —
The Standard Is What People Actually Say.
Every American speaks American. The question for the standard is not which speakers to correct, but which patterns to record. The Mencken camp argues that authority follows usage, not the other way around.
The English have a Royal Academy. The French have an Académie. The Italians have the Accademia della Crusca. None of them, in three hundred years of effort, has succeeded in making any speaker say anything they were not already inclined to say. Standardization by decree has the same record in language that prohibition has in drink.
What standardization can do — what it has always done in practice — is record the patterns that have already won. Webster's 1828 dictionary did not invent American spelling. It documented the spellings that American printers were already using and, by collecting them in one place, gave them a center. That is the Mencken camp's working model.
Authority follows usage. Where it does not, it follows nothing.
The work is therefore observational. We collect the corpus — the speeches, the songs, the broadcasts, the comment threads, the text messages, the courtroom transcripts. We tabulate the forms. We publish what we find. The standard is a description of what American speakers, taken as a whole, actually do.
The Webster camp will object that this gives no guidance to learners. We answer that the most useful guidance for a learner is the guidance that reflects what they will actually encounter in the wild. A standard that pretends grammar exists only in schoolbook form is teaching half the language.
This is the Mencken project. It is no more and no less than recording the speech of a continent and asking the Academy to certify what we have found.