![Snowflake borders for word](https://kumkoniak.com/77.jpg)
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It was also used as a slang term for cocaine. In the 1970s snowflake was a disparaging term for a white man or for a black man who was seen as acting white. It's not the first time snowflake has veered from the natural world to the world of slang. Palahniuk's denial of the individual's snowflake status struck a chord. The imagery before negation is lovely we are each unique snowflakes, each worth treasuring because each is uniquely beautiful.
![snowflake borders for word snowflake borders for word](https://www.printablecuttablecreatables.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/BF021FB-Winter-Snowflakes-Borders-Free-SVG-Cut-Files-Clipart-preview-650x650.png)
It's the stuff of self-help books and inspirational posters and elementary school assurances. Palahniuk was hardly the first person to use the metaphor. We are all part of the same compost heap." We are the all-singing, all-dancing crap of the world. You are the same decaying organic matter as everything else. You are not the beautiful or unique snowflake. In the 1999 movie adaptation the lines go like this:
![snowflake borders for word snowflake borders for word](http://clipart-library.com/img/1780484.jpg)
You are the same decaying organic matter as everyone, and we are all part of the same compost pile." "You are not a beautiful and unique snowflake. That use very likely has its genesis in Chuck Palahniuk's 1996 cult-favorite book Fight Club, in which a member of the anti-consumerist Project Mayhem tells the other members: There were glimmers of this use in the decade and a half that preceded that election, but the meaning at first was a bit softer, referring mostly to millennials who were allegedly too convinced of their own status as special and unique people to be able (or bothered) to handle the normal trials and travails of regular adult life. And the snowball fight has continued since. elections it was lobbed especially fiercely by those on the right side of the political spectrum at those on the left. It's developed a new and decidedly less pleasant use as a disparaging term for a person who is seen as overly sensitive and fragile. In recent times, though, the word has been causing a ruckus. Those words fell out of use while snowflake settled into the lexicon with its hushed and lovely literal meaning. In Missouri in the early 1860s, a 'snowflake' was a person who was opposed to the abolition of slavery-the implication of the name being that such people valued white people over black people.
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