I AM DEFINITELY NOT "OVER IT" WITH THE MISUSE OF "OVER IT"
The expression "over it" means "recovered from it," as in an illness, or a cause of emotional distress; it signifies that one is no longer bothered by such.
So why, just recently, are the "sheeple" beginning to use it precisely wrongly??? Suddenly, they're using it instead as if it meant "fed up with it": i.e. more bothered by it than ever??? This implies the exact opposite of the actual meaning!
It reminds me of an older, similar contradiction, one that has been around since at least the 1970s: people saying, "I could care less" when they clearly mean "I couldn't care less." The former means that it would be possible for me to care less than I do, therefore I must care at least somewhat. The latter means that I could not possibly care less than I do, therefore I truly do not care. And the latter message is what the speaker actually intends; it is his point.
Now, it is one thing to misuse an expression; it is quite another to completely reverse one's meaning in the process. Let's all try a bit harder, shall we? Before mindlessly latching-on to a new fad expression, let's just ask ourselves whether the meaning conveyed is genuinely the meaning that we wish to express.
Here's a lovely example from an expert:
I'm over it!
GENTLE READER: Are you?! Miss Manners has her doubts.