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A lesson in Newspeak
New Criterion ^ | January 2015 | Daniel Hannan

Posted on 02/01/2015 7:39:57 PM PST by ReformationFan

My twelve-year-old recently finished George Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four. When I asked her whether she had taken any lessons from the book, she airily replied, “The individual is powerless, so there’s really no point in trying.”

Alarmed, I tried to explain that the world was an altogether cheerier place than Orwell, writing in 1948, could have imagined. Unrepentant socialist as he was, he never overcame his belief that the free market was doomed. He would have been stunned by the way that seventy years of exchange and specialization have served not only to make us wealthier, but to make us more autonomous.

Instead of being watched by the state through telescreens, we carry our own screens—ones that put more information at our fingertips than an entire government department could have compiled in Orwell’s day. Big Brother has been defeated by capitalist technology.

But if, like most of his contemporaries, he was too gloomy, Orwell got one thing uncannily right. In an appendix to his dystopian novel, he discussed how an idea could be made literally unthinkable if there were no words to express it. The illustration he gave was the word “free.” In Newspeak, “free” could be used only in the sense of “this field is free from weeds” or “this dog is free from lice.” The concept of political or intellectual freedom had disappeared, because no one could put it into words.

What an eerily prescient example to have chosen. In recent years this is more or less what has happened to the word “free.” In 1948, “freedom” still had its traditional meaning of a guarantee against coercion: freedom of speech, freedom of assembly, freedom of worship. Since then, however, “freedom” has come to mean “entitlement,” as in “freedom to work,” “freedom from hunger,” “freedom from discrimination,” and so on. Thus, the notion that the state ought not to boss us around becomes harder to convey, and the politician who supports that notion is disadvantaged.

Any discussion of the relationship between government and citizen is perforce conducted in loaded terms. You can still make the case for greater liberty, but not without sounding rather mean. A glossary will give some indication of how loaded the linguistics are against conservatives.

RIGHT-WING: Baddie. Vladimir Putin, a lifelong KGB man who regrets the break-up of the USSR, is invading neighboring countries. This is a bad thing, so he must be “right-wing.” The mullahs in Iran abolished the monarchy, nationalized industry, and drove most of the middle classes into exile. But they’re also nasty, so they, too, must be “right-wing.” A crazed gunman goes into a school and . . . oh, you get the picture.

DIVERSITY: People who look different but think the same way. Diversity applies to race, sex, disability, and sexual orientation. It emphatically does not apply to opinion. Indeed, when it comes to political views, it has taken on more or less the opposite of its Oldspeak meaning.

GREED: Wanting to keep your own money.

NEED: Wanting to be given someone else’s.

COMPASSION: A politician arranging the transfer.

FAIRNESS: State-enforced equality. It absolutely doesn’t mean reciprocity, proportionate reward, or just deserts.

INVESTMENT: Government spending. Any lingering trace of the original meaning—that is, of assets producing some kind of return—was obliterated by the spending splurge that preceded the 2008 crash. The beauty of the word, from the Left’s point of view, is its flexibility. Almost any financial settlement can be described as “underinvestment,” in the sense of being a smaller settlement than someone, somewhere would ideally have liked.

DISCRIMINATION: Being unpleasant to women or black people. Literally, of course, discrimination simply means discernment. It is something we practice every time we decide between alternatives. But its political undertones have spilled over into every usage of the word, so that discrimination, in any context, becomes discreditable. A firm that discriminates in favor of properly qualified applicants, or a university that insists on good exam results, cannot wholly escape the sense that it is doing something shameful.

COMMUNITY: The state—or, more precisely, the state’s bureaucracy. The one thing it emphatically doesn’t mean is a voluntary association of individuals. When people talk of “involving the community,” they invariably want more legislation.

FAMILY VALUES: Hilarious escapade involving a conservative politician. In fact, even the phrase “conservative politician” is taking on comical connotations. Mention it in front of a hip talk-show crowd and you’re guaranteed an appreciative titter.

XENOPHOBIA: Opposition to the European Union. By a curious inversion, you demonstrate your broadmindedness by continuing to support the Brussels racket, however illiberal or undemocratic it becomes, but condemn yourself as a bigot if you value the independence of other countries. Xenophobia (or “Europhobia”) has nothing to do with whether you feel comfortable with other cultures. Neil Kinnock, a former European Commissioner, has helpfully explained that skeptics don’t stop being xenophobes “just because they happen to speak fluent Catalan or whatever.” The only way to escape the charge is to proclaim your support for the Brussels institutions.

PROFIT: Wickedness. Always a bad thing, but the severity of the term varies according to context. When talking about a supermarket, it simply means greed (q.v.) and exploitation. When discussing trains or hospitals, it means homicidal tendencies, and is thus used as an antonym to safety—which, of course, means more regulation.

POVERTY: Inequality. Poverty is officially defined in the U.K. as having an income less than 60 percent of the mean. A few people get rich and, even if you’re better off in absolute terms, you’re suddenly “poor.” Funnily enough, the recent recession, which saw incomes drop at every level, caused a fall in “poverty” by this definition, but Lefties were more upset than ever. There really is no pleasing some people.

DOGMATIC: Believing in free markets, as in “the Republicans have a dogmatic attachment to the private sector.” Here is another example of a word taking on the converse of its previous meaning. Being dogmatic used to mean believing in something against the evidence. Yet free enterprise is counterintuitive: You would think that a planned economy would be much more efficient than one where people were left to do their own thing higgledy-piggledy. Nonetheless, it’s hard to avoid the conclusion that the market works in practice. The truth, as Matt Ridley has put it, is that privatization is not a dogma but a pragma.

PREJUDICE: Hating other people. In its literal sense, prejudice simply means pre-judging a new situation on the basis of past experience. If you see an expensively dressed man, your prejudice tells you that he is likely to be well off. If a politician rings your doorbell, your prejudice tells you that he is probably after your vote. As Edmund Burke argued in his Reflections, life would become intolerable if we had to think everything through from first principles. But the anathematization of the word also touches its original meaning. If your common sense tells you that longer sentences would cut crime, or that there is a limit to how much immigration a country can absorb, it’s because you are prejudiced.

PUBLIC: Owned by the state. The original sense of “open to the public” has been almost entirely lost. The gradual elision of the older meaning into the newer has huge political implications. The idea that “public transport” should be operated by private contractors naturally strikes people as anomalous. Ditto “public health” and “public education.” Britain’s public schools were originally so called to distinguish them from private tutors. Yet that sense has become so archaic that they are now often referred to in print as “public (i.e. private) schools.”

TAX CUTS: Squalid public services. For some reason, talk of tax cuts makes us think not of our tax returns but of our local amenities. It’s not so much that we believe that there is a direct link between spending and performance; it’s just that the phrase “tax cuts” automatically conjures up a series of images in our minds: leaky school roofs, bodies lying on trolleys in corridors, and pin-striped Tory spivs selling off school playing fields to their friends in the City (q.v. “profit”).

FREE SPEECH: Support for racists. We have been told so often that “free speech can never be used as an excuse for racism” that the two things have become conflated in our minds. Arguing for the first automatically opens you to the accusation of supporting the second. If you think that I exaggerate, cast your mind back to the case of the pensioner in Liverpool who was charged with “racially aggravated criminal damage” after scrawling “Free speech for England” on a condemned wall.

CONSERVATIVE: Neanderthal. Like “right-wing” (q.v.), but with the added bonus that it can be applied to both sides in the same conflict. Islamist “conservatives” want to impose headscarves while Western “conservatives” want to ban them. Hardline Israeli settlers and hardline Hamas terrorists are both “conservatives.” And so on.

In such a climate, it is difficult for a “right-wing” party which favors “tax cuts” and “profit” and the rest to make its case. People’s ears are not primed to appreciate the cadences of the conservative message. The very words we use condemn us as heartless blimps before we’ve started setting out our arguments.

Leftists grasped all this long ago. Gramsci, Derrida, and others deliberately set out to affect a semantic shift that would thwart their opponents. It happened to their languages, and now it is happening to ours. Until we can reclaim our vocabulary, we will always be playing with a handicap.


TOPICS: Books/Literature; History; Miscellaneous; Society
KEYWORDS: 1984; newspeak; orwellian; vocabulary
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1 posted on 02/01/2015 7:39:57 PM PST by ReformationFan
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To: ReformationFan

Good article. When one controls the vocabulary and definitions, one controls the debate.


2 posted on 02/01/2015 7:40:44 PM PST by ReformationFan
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To: ReformationFan

I stopped screaming that about 10 years ago because nobody seemed to agree with me


3 posted on 02/01/2015 7:46:36 PM PST by knarf (I say things that are true ... I have no proof ... but, they're true)
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To: ReformationFan
Danniel Hannon has his head on straight. Thanks for posting.
4 posted on 02/01/2015 7:50:50 PM PST by Fungi (Evolution is piece by piece over billions of years. At what point did a precursor become a human?)
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To: ReformationFan

ping


5 posted on 02/01/2015 8:06:33 PM PST by gattaca (Republicans believe every day is July 4, democrats believe every day is April 15. Ronald Reagan)
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To: ReformationFan

“Alarmed, I tried to explain that the world was an altogether cheerier place than Orwell, writing in 1948, could have imagined.”

Really? I think it’s worse.


6 posted on 02/01/2015 8:16:24 PM PST by kaehurowing
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To: ReformationFan

He who controls the Language controls the Argument.


7 posted on 02/01/2015 8:23:05 PM PST by Kickass Conservative (If you think the Mulatto Marxist is bad, just wait until the Menopausal Marxist shows up.)
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To: Kickass Conservative

In times of universal deceit telling the truth is a revolutionary act.

See this. You’ll enjoy it.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YYQKDqjCEBQ


8 posted on 02/01/2015 8:27:10 PM PST by bicyclerepair (Ft. Lauderdale FL (zombie land). TERM LIMITS ... TERM LIMITS)
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To: ReformationFan

Twelve is far too young to properly understand 1984. All it can possibly do is create exactly the kind of despair in a child he observed in his daughter.


9 posted on 02/01/2015 8:40:39 PM PST by Talisker (One who commands, must obey.)
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To: Talisker
I read Animal Farm at about 16 yo.

I "got" it just fine.

I didn't have some leftist kook telling me what to believe.

Pretty stupid person who didn't understand it.

10 posted on 02/01/2015 8:53:09 PM PST by boop (I never use the words democrats and republicans. I use liberals and Americans.)
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To: boop

16 is not 12 - there are far more than four years difference in maturity at those ages than perhaps any other.

And “understanding.”

And effect.


11 posted on 02/01/2015 9:02:15 PM PST by Talisker (One who commands, must obey.)
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To: bicyclerepair

That was AWESOME!


12 posted on 02/01/2015 9:21:01 PM PST by Don W (When blacks riot, neighborhoods and cities burn. When whites riot, nations and continents burn.)
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To: Talisker; boop
16 is not 12 - there are far more than four years difference in maturity at those ages than perhaps any other.

I think it fair to say that a 12 year old may not have the mental framework to have much empathy for the portent of that novel. Even so, as she matures, those concepts from the novel will lead to an "understanding".

I read 1984. I know that I didn't understand it then, like I do now.

Truly, though, whether she did or didn't have the 'ability' or 'experience' to comprehend the political aspects of the novel is not really that critical to the premise of the article.

13 posted on 02/01/2015 9:31:07 PM PST by UCANSEE2 (Lost my tagline on Flight MH370. Sorry for the inconvenience.)
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To: UCANSEE2
Truly, though, whether she did or didn't have the 'ability' or 'experience' to comprehend the political aspects of the novel is not really that critical to the premise of the article.

Funny, it seemed to me like the premise of the article was to justify the answer he gave to his daughter. In any event, I was simply commenting on what I believe to be her immaturity to properly comprehend the book at her age. I have no doubt she could write a book report and get an "A," but that's not what I'm talking about. My point was the very effect it had on her that so horrified her father. To me, her age made that effect inevitable.

14 posted on 02/01/2015 9:48:54 PM PST by Talisker (One who commands, must obey.)
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To: ReformationFan

Orwell, Bradbury and others were quite prescient regarding what govt’s would do with technology to oppress, control, and rule. They missed foreseeing in some ways what the free market side would give us - smart phones, internet everywhere, video gaming, etc. However, I never forgot Bradbury’s interactive TV walls, and we’re essentially there. Or the smart home in “There Will Come Soft Rains” - seemed fantastic in the 70’s but now - it’s here.

So what’s left of the free market provides bread and circuses, endless silly entertainment, while the damned totalitarians are robbing us blind of everything that truly matters using the same technology. And then there is cyber warfare - a whole ‘nuther beast threatening us all continually as we’ve become utterly dependent on our technology. Those old sci-fi guys weren’t too far off the mark. Strange times indeed.


15 posted on 02/01/2015 9:49:45 PM PST by bluejean (The lunatics are running the asylum)
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To: ReformationFan

Bookmark


16 posted on 02/01/2015 10:02:52 PM PST by aquila48
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To: ReformationFan

Income used to be wages. (the Derivation of interest/dividends can Be taxed)
Vehicle used to be an automobile. (Vehicle transports something and can be taxed and regulated — no right to travel)


17 posted on 02/01/2015 10:23:09 PM PST by kvanbrunt2 (civil law: commanding what is right and prohibiting what is wrong Blackstone Commentaries I p44)
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To: Talisker
Talisker, I meant no offense.

My point is that sure, a 16 year old can grasp more concepts than a 12 year old.

I read Catcher in the Rye when I was 13, because I saw it on an episode of "Lou Grant" and Rossi complained about censorship.

Talk about making me WANT to read a book.

Lots of things went over my head. In particular, just how kooky liberal that TV show was.

I read it in HS later and really "got" it.

I enjoyed it at 13 as a read. But with guidance from a relatively unbiased teacher, I picked up on the symbolism.

18 posted on 02/01/2015 10:35:46 PM PST by boop (I never use the words democrats and republicans. I use liberals and Americans.)
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To: ReformationFan
Good article. When one controls the vocabulary and definitions, one controls the debate.

Excellent article!
A short handbook on how to reply to any and all attacks.
Reject the premise. Ridicule the redefinition, counterattack the newspeak, and the clear oxymorons of nonsense with which the "progressive" Newspeakers manipulate the feeble-minded and the uninformed.

To that end, the glossary provided is the mirror with which to confront the vampire; the silver bullets with which to face the beast.

No longer will we be responding to nonsense, but relentlessly attacking the nonsense itself.

I certainly intend to use it that way. A stand alone reference.

19 posted on 02/01/2015 11:26:05 PM PST by publius911 (Formerly Publius6961)
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To: publius911
There is not a single Speech, prepared for Barack Hussein Obama that is not riddled with many of the "redefinitions" by the Newspeak Dictionary.
Only one common and critical entry is missing :

"It's the Right thing to do!"

While it should be obvious that the true meaning depends on the character and agenda of the speaker, it doesn't matter if the speaker is...


Uneducated.
Ignorant.
Dogmatic.
Mentally unbalanced.
Presumptuous.
Condescending.
Fanatic.
A zealot.
Or plain batshit crazy.

The acceptance of the premise and definition is entirely and conclusively under the complete control of the reader or listener.

It is thus meaningless, as an intended statement of fact. ,

20 posted on 02/02/2015 12:07:34 AM PST by publius911 (Formerly Publius6961)
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