Reader question: "There's an English saying for‘推诿’, ‘passing the buck'or‘passing the puck'?"
My comments:
The buck is not to be mistaken with the puck.
The puck is the ice hockey puck, a round disk made of rubber serving as hockey's game "ball". Players pass the puck to each other on an ice rink till someone is in a scoring position and shoots for goal.
Passing the puck around is good. It may lead to an assist, the final pass that helps a teammate to score.
Passing the buck, on the other hand, is no assist to no one. If you pass the buck, you’re shirking your responsibilities and you are shifting the blame to others. That, in the long run, helps none, not even your self.
Passing the buck came from the card game. In poker, players take turns to deal the next hand. A marker, known as the buck, is placed in front of the dealer till he moves the marker to the next dealer, thus shifting the chore to the other player. In some stories, the marker used in the game of poker in the early days in America is said to be a knife with a handle made of buck’s horn, hence the term.
This, from a story on phrase origins from www.phrases.org.uk:
Poker became very popular in America during the second half of the 19th century. Players were highly suspicious of cheating or any form of bias and there's considerable folklore depicting gunslingers in shoot-outs based on accusations of dirty dealing. In order to avoid unfairness the deal changed hands during sessions. The person who was next in line to deal would be given a marker. This was often a knife, and knives often had handles made of buck's horn – hence the marker becoming known as a buck. When the dealer’s turn was done he 'passed the buck'.
Anyways, over time, passing the buck became synonymous with shirking one's responsibility, especially in dealing with irksome problems.
Buck passing is the forte of career bureaucrats. For them it's understandable (at least I, who's an understanding person, find it understandable) because, one, their pay is relatively fixed (doing more doesn't earn more, so what’s the point of doing all the jobs by yourself); two, red tape increases their sense of self-importance (if someone wants a stamp stamped and it normally takes two minutes to handle if you as the bureaucrat handles it in as many minutes, what does that make you out to be? Well, it suggests you the bureaucrat are a mere rubber stamping machine at the mercy and service of one and all that may need such service. I don't see anything wrong with that, but by lording over clients a bit, by saying so-and-so is responsible for it but he's out of town, by telling clients to come in again next week helps increase the value of the bureaucrat. Besides, by being difficult, the bureaucrat increases the chances of an anxious client in the hopes of speeding up the process handing in a tribute, either token or substantial).
Former US President Harry Truman, on the other hand, had a sign on his desk reading "The Buck Stops Here", meaning it's up to him and he won't shirk the responsibility. Nor would he dawdle. Truman took over the White House in April, 1945 and shortly after the United States dropped the bombs on Japan. Where China is concerned, Truman also launched the Korean War (1950-53), so you could say that in his time, Truman had some difficult decisions to make. "The Bucks Stops Here" motto must have helped him.
For a politician, or any random one from the populace for that matter, Truman's was an exceptional motto, and Truman was often commended for it.
To the vast majority of the public, passing the buck remains the easy way out, whether in dealing with office duties or running one's private lives. And they usually end up having all sorts of problems in their lives so we might as well quit the subject right here (lest further examination should sound like rubbing salt into their injuries).
In short, don't pass the buck, because your life is basically and fundamentally up to you. It's alright. Let the buck stop here.
"But other lousy people are always...," I hear you say.
Never mind other people. It's up to you.
"But other lousy people are always..." Yes, I know. Other people are what they are. Still, it's still up to you. Don't bother what other people do. Don't you realize running your life according to what other people do is allowing them to run your show for you? Don't give that power to other people. Keep that power to yourself.
For a change, I'll provide no examples today. I believe we each can find examples in our own lives for passing the buck.
And, hopefully, learn from the consequences thereof.
Have a good weekend. And come in next week, as any buck-passing bureaucrat might say. Only joking.
国内英语资讯:Chinese and African media houses vow to deepen cooperation
国内英语资讯:Chinas Discovery ROV collects samples in western Pacific Ocean
源自希腊神话的英语说法
那些高大上的品酒要点,真的有科学依据吗?
小李子将主演达芬奇传记电影
英大学申请人数大幅下降 多所名牌高校或降线招生
美国谴责七名“叙利亚白头盔”成员被杀害
吃辣者的福音 辣椒竟能减肥!
国际英语资讯:Sierra Leone President declares 7-day national mourning for mudslide victims
其实这些食物十分有益健康
体坛英语资讯:Never stop trying, Usain Bolt tells younger generation
国际英语资讯:Greece asks EU help to tackle forest fires
国内英语资讯:China-U.S. trade war leads nowhere: FM
国际英语资讯:Japans Abe sends ritual offering to notorious Yasukuni Shrine on anniversary of Japans s
国际英语资讯:Palestinian PM, Hamas delegation discuss ways of ending division
还记得蓝色葡萄酒吗?现在厂家把彩虹颜色都集齐了(组图)
国际英语资讯:U.S. remains open to dialogue with DPRK: top diplomat
国际英语资讯:Both sides to be blamed for Charlottesville violence: Trump
国际英语资讯:Scores feared killed in NE Nigerias market attack: local sources
BBC资讯直播有“亮点” 工作人员幕后看色情片
国际英语资讯:7 IS militants killed in clashes in Iraqs Diyala
国内英语资讯:Pakistani president meets Chinese vice premier on deepening Pakistan-China friendship
国内英语资讯:Chinas strong growth paves way for accelerating needed reforms: IMF
国际英语资讯:News Analysis: Charlottesville mayhem underscores growing U.S. white supremacy movement
Grow Up 成长之路
国内英语资讯:China insists on peaceful solution to nuclear issue on Korean Peninsula: FM
国内英语资讯:China tells ROK to stop THAAD deployment
辞职时如何给自己留退路
为孩子设计的菜单:餐馆将孩子的牢骚话译成菜名
体坛英语资讯:Yang Jiayu wins Chinas second gold, Felix wins 11th world title