I always wanted to be a procrastinator, but just never got around to it.
Chaucer, the great English writer of the Middle English period, used not only double negatives, but even a triple negative on occasion and none of them being mathematically correct. How come he was able to get away with it? In its purist sense, English is a language of emphasis. We use adverbs to intensify our verbs (I was extremely angry) and we use double negatives to intensify our negatives. There is something that is clear and direct in saying, "I don't need no lip outta you" and one thing is sure, nobody ever mistakes this for its mathematical equivalent.
So, should we be allowed to use triple negatives? Well, in areas of life where they are appropriate, it's powerful and invigorating to use them. The correct response to "I don't need no lip outta you":
"And you ain't gonna get none, neither." You have one-upped him with a triple negative.
Remember, arguing with a lawyer is like mud wrestling with a pig: after a while, you realize that the pig actually enjoys it. Oink!
Cavfancier wrote, "Once in a while I pay wardens to let me sleep in prison. It's a lot like marriage, but more social. There are some great chess players there."
I recall when I was with a group of chess enthusiasts, we checked into a hotel right smack in the middle of the heartland, and met in the lobby where we were discussing our recent victories in chess tournaments.
The hotel manager came out of the office, and asked us to disperse. When we refused he called the cops. When we asked, what the charge was. He said, he couldn't stand chess nuts boasting in an open foyer.
That's when I met Cav. Ouch!