|
The media
anesthetizes our minds
War As
Freedom, And Fraud As Fact
By Greg Felton
| “Things like…
the Russian purges and deportations, the dropping of
the atom bombs on Japan, can indeed be defended, but
only by arguments which are too brutal for most
people to face, and which do not square with the
professed aims of the political parties… Political
language—and with variations this is true of all
political parties, from Conservatives to
Anarchists—is designed to make lies sound truthful
and murder respectable, and to give an appearance of
solidity to pure wind.” George Orwell,
from Politics and the English Language, 1946 |
09/28/07 "ICH" -- - -In his famous novel 1984, George Orwell
introduces us to “Newspeak,” the pseudo-language by which the Ingsoc (English Socialist) government of Oceania, led by Big
Brother, sabotages independent thought and imposes a repressive
conformity on the public.
“The purpose of Newspeak,” wrote Orwell, “was to make all other
modes of thought impossible. It was intended that when Newspeak
had been adopted once and for all, and Oldspeak [standard
English] forgotten, a heretical thought… would be literally
unthinkable.”
For example, in Newspeak, “liberty and equality,” are reduced to
“crimethink”; “free” only has the sense of “without” as in “free
from” something; “dissent” is “thoughtcrime.” Syme, a senior
editor of the 11th edition of the Newspeak Dictionary proudly
describes the purpose behind this linguistic destruction: “The
whole climate of thought will be different. In fact there will
be no thought, as we understand it now. Orthodoxy means not
thinking—not needing to think. Orthodoxy is unconsciousness.”
When Orwell wrote 1984 the year was 1948, and Ingsoc was
understood to be a metaphor for the communist régime of
Stalinist Russia, but the origins of Newspeak can be found in an
essay Orwell wrote two years earlier called Politics and the
English Language, in which Orwell calls for wholesale language
reform to rid the language of the generica, clichés, pretentious
diction and other forms of lexical dross that obfuscate meaning
and inhibit honest speech:
“All issues are political issues, and politics itself is a mass
of lies, evasions, folly, hatred, and schizophrenia. When the
general atmosphere is bad, language must suffer.…But if thought
corrupts language, language can also corrupt thought. A bad
usage can spread by tradition and imitation even among people
who should and do know better.”
One would expect people in the media to know better, but the
vast majority are in the thought-corruption business and either
too lazy or intimidated to use language honestly. It doesn’t
take much imagination to see that “lies, evasions, folly,
hatred, and schizophrenia” typify the language of “Big Bush.”
Although the debasement of English obviously did not start with
Bush and his zionist junta, the last five years of endless war
against Arabs and the pending unprovoked attack on Iran have
given added import to Orwell’s warnings about the abuse of
political language and how it serves as a thought-control
mechanism.
Here are some of the more egregious, loaded terms in our modern
political argot that, as Orwell would say, anesthetize our minds
and inhibit critical thought:
Anti-Semitism
This all-purpose epithet of opprobrium is designed to conflate
Israel with World Jewry, thereby implying that to attack one
means to attack the other. In truth, the term is meaningless, as
I wrote in an earlier essay: “Strictly speaking, ‘semitic’ is a
linguistic term denoting a family of Afro-Asiatic languages, of
which we have today Arabic, Hebrew, Maltese, and the South
Arabic languages of northern Ethiopia. Ancient semitic languages
included Akkadian, Canaanite, Amorite, Ugaritic, Phoenician,
Punic, Aramaic, as well as ancient Hebrew and Syriac.”
The unique association of Jews with Semites serves to reinforce
the cult of Jewish victimhood and shut down condemnation of
Israel.
Faith-based
This expression dates to the Reagan era and is a euphemism for
“Christian.” Because religion has both positive and negative
connotations and is often an instrument of repression, radical
Christians cannot openly advocate their religion against the
secular law or other religions. Also, the U.S. officially has no
religion, and the separation of church and state is integral to
U.S. democracy.
But “faith” affords the illusion of inclusiveness and absolute
virtue. Even science has a faith component, albeit a rational
one. Thus, expressions like “faith-based schools,” and
“faith-based entertainment” covertly and innocuously serve the
agenda of anti-democratic Christian religious exclusivity.
Holocaust denier
To question is not to deny, yet anyone who doubts any part of
the received zionist version of what happened to Europe’s Jews
is immediately deemed to have committed crimethink. Nowhere is
the brainwashing intent of political language more overt than in
this nonsense expression. The Lobby demands unconscious
acceptance of its orthodoxy, and its use of this and other
biased expressions is clearly designed to make a heretical
(independent) thought unthinkable.
Hostile entity
This most recent and addition to our political lexicon refers to
the new denotation of the Gaza Strip under the elected Hamas
government. “Hostile” merely reflects Israel’s bias, so this
expression is intellectually corrupt. One cannot say that Israel
is a hostile entity (toward Palestine) because that would imply
that Palestine has legitimate grievances against Israel. Once
stigmatized as hostile, any large scale violence against the
Gaza Strip can be made to appear justifiable.
Incitement
Though this term’s meaning is not contorted, its use is highly
selective. It is used selectively to demonize critical speech,
as in the expression, “Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has
been charged with incitement.” The point is that Ahmadinejad has
pointed out the criminality of Israel’s persecution of
Palestinians, and underscored the illegitimacy of the state’s
founding, and for this he must be punished. Such comments are
deemed to be “incitement” against Jews, even though he said no
such thing. (see Anti-Semitism above.)
Right to exist
This expression has no standing in international law and, like
anti-Semitism, is a contrivance to skew our minds toward
sympathy for Israel. Nevertheless, it plays effectively on our
innate sense of fairness and understanding to make Palestinians
appear to be implacably hostile. One never speaks of Palestine’s
right to exist, or Syria’s, or Iran’s, or Iraq’s. Like “free” in
Newspeak, it has only one use.
Terrorist
This term no longer has any objective meaning. It no longer
refers to people or groups who use violence to bring about
political change. It now is used to label any person, group or
government that opposes U.S. and Israeli conduct in the Middle
East. The idea that “terrorists” could be resistance fighters or
people trying to defend themselves is not admitted. Because one
cannot defend a terrorist, the term precludes rational debate.
Therefore, the word is invariably preceded by “Muslim,” Islamic”
or “Arab” to ensure that the orthodox, zionist connotation comes
across.
Moreover, this term has given rise to the nonsensical epithet “Islamofascism,”
based on the fatuous assertion that Arab regimes are akin to
Nazi Germany. From here, the term war on terrorism is repeatedly
invoked to justify repression and mass murder against
Isramerica’s enemies.
What Orwell wrote in Politics regarding the state of English is
directly applicable to the above-mentioned examples:
“All these expressions consist largely of euphemism,
question-begging and sheer cloudy vagueness. Such phraseology is
needed if one wants to name things without calling up mental
pictures of them.
“Things like… the Russian purges and deportations, the dropping
of the atom bombs on Japan, can indeed be defended, but only by
arguments which are too brutal for most people to face, and
which do not square with the professed aims of the political
parties… Political language—and with variations this is true of
all political parties, from Conservatives to Anarchists—is
designed to make lies sound truthful and murder respectable, and
to give an appearance of solidity to pure wind.”
For “pure wind” we have the allegations of Saddam Hussein
possessing weapons of mass destruction, or Iran planning a
nuclear strike on Israel.
Question begging? How about “war on terrorism?” Who is a
terrorist and how can terrorism (a physical non-entity) be the
object of military policy? Yet, the term is parroted Pavlov-like
by our media with the effect of preventing such a question from
being asked.
For cloudy vagueness we have “al-Qa‘ida”—a supposed group of
radical Sunni Arab militants that has never been proven to
exist.
There is some good news, though. Like the Brotherhood in 1984,
there are those who resist “Big Bush’s” totalitarian excesses
and linguistic perversions but they are punished for committing
a modern thoughtcrime.
• Former president Jimmy Carter has been vilified for his book
Palestine—Peace not Apartheid, and after Harvard University
invited him to speak, many of the university’s backers withdrew
funding.
• Professors John Mearsheimer and Stephen Walt have been
vilified for writing The Israel Lobby, and have had speaking
engagements cancelled.
• Professor Norman Finkelstein is denied tenure at DePaul
University after a smear campaign orchestrated by Alan
Dershowitz.
Orwell, for all of his criticism, was optimistic that the
language was not beyond hope. If each of us refused to give in
to worn-out expressions and generica, he says we could reform
English: “The fight against bad English is not frivolous and is
not the exclusive concern of professional writers.”
True, but already the Big Bush pro-Israel propaganda machine is
pushing the nation to “war” with Iran, as if Iran posed a
threat, which it doesn’t. How many Americans, I wonder, are
preparing to buy the lie and chant “Long Live Big Bush!”
Greg Felton, Author, The Host and The Parasite— How Israel's
Fifth Column Consumed America is a detailed study of Israel’s
use of the U.S. economy, government and military to terrorize
the Muslim world and destroy the American republic.
For signed orders in North America, send C$35 + $5 S&H to Greg
Felton Suite 406 104-1015 Columbia St. New Westminster B.C.,
Canada V3M 6V3
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