moonbat

English

Etymology

From moon + bat, first used in the 1940s by the science-fiction writer Robert Heinlein[1], then used in the term “barking moonbat” coined in 1999 by Perry de Havilland of “The Libertarian Samizdata”, a right-libertarian weblog. This originally referred to both left-wing and right-wing crazy people.[2] Sometimes wrongly claimed to be a corruption of Monbiot (from George Monbiot, British environmentalist and Guardian columnist).[3]

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈmuːnˌbæt/

Noun

moonbat (plural moonbats)

  1. (informal, derogatory) A liberal (someone with a left-wing ideology).
    Synonyms: leftard (derogatory), libtard (derogatory)
    Coordinate term: wing nut
    • 2005, Malkin, Michele, Unhinged: Exposing Liberals Gone Wild, Washington, DC: Regnery, →ISBN, page 108:
      So, what do moonbat professors do when they're not attacking military recruiters, the Bush administration, cameramen, and College Republicans?
    • 2006 May 11, Boehlert, Eric, Lapdogs: How the Press Lay Down for the Bush White House, New York: Free Press, →ISBN, page 216:
      As nervous Bush supporters watched the president's approval rating slide, they unleashed their wrath on Sheehan, labeling the mourning mom a “crazy,” “anti-Semite,” “left-wing moonbat,” “crackpot” whose behavior bordered on “treasonous” and who was nothing more than a “hysterical noncombatant.”
    • 2009 October 13, Eubanks, Steve, Downforce, New York: Harper, →ISBN, page 255:
      Your job is to separate the media from the moonbats before some industrious cub reporter starts looking into our land deal.
    • For more examples of usage of this term, see Citations:moonbat.

Derived terms

Further reading

References

  1. Robert A. Heinlein (1947-04-26), “Space Jockey”, in The Saturday Evening Post
  2. Wingnut in the Word Detective
  3. "barking moonbat" in the Samizdata glossary
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.