User:Antiblather

 anti (n.) 

the word-forming element anti- (q.v.) used by itself, short for various nouns beginning in anti-, from 1788, originally in reference to the anti-federalists in U.S. politics (in the 1830s, of the U.S. Anti-Masonic political party); as an adjective, from 1857.

 blather (v.) 

1520s, blether, Scottish, probably from a Scandinavian source such as Old Norse blaðra "mutter, wag the tongue," perhaps of imitative origin, or from Proto-Germanic *blodram "something inflated" (the source of bladder). Related: Blathered; blathering.

 blather (n.) 

"nonsense, foolish talk," 1787, blether, from blather (v.).

A personal quest for plain, easily understandable communications. Spoken or written, the "I'm sooo much smarter than you", pompous, nouveau'ish, buzzwords used in the corporate boardrooms, and in media has got to stop.