The Politicization of the English Language
4/7/2016 -
Victor Davis Hanson Townhall.com
Last week, French President Francois Hollande met President Obama
in Washington to discuss joint strategies for stopping the sort of radical
Islamic terrorists who have killed dozens of innocents in Brussels, Paris and
San Bernardino in recent months. Hollande at one point explicitly referred to
the violence as "Islamist terrorism."
The White House initially deleted that phrase from the audio
translation of the official video of the Hollande-Obama meeting, only to
restore it when questioned. Did the Obama administration assume that if the
public could not hear the translation of the French president saying
"Islamist terrorism," then perhaps Hollande did not really say it --
and therefore perhaps Islamist terrorism does not really exist?
The Obama administration must be aware that in the 1930s, the
Soviet Union wiped clean all photos, recordings and films of Leon Trotsky on
orders from Josef Stalin. Trotsky was deemed politically incorrect, and
therefore his thoughts and photos simply vanished.
The Library of Congress, under pressure from Dartmouth College
students, recently banned not just the term "illegal alien" in
subject headings for literature about immigration, but "alien" as
well. Will changing the vocabulary mean that from now on, foreign nationals who
choose to enter and reside in the United States without being naturalized will
not be in violation of the law and will no longer be considered citizens of
their homeland?
Did the Library of Congress ever read the work of the Greek
historian Thucydides, who warned some 2,500 years ago that in times of social
upheaval, partisans would make words "change their ordinary meaning and
... take that which was now given them."
These latest linguistic contortions to advance ideological agendas
follow an established pattern of the Obama administration and the departments
beneath it.
Director of National Intelligence James Clapper's described
Egypt's radical Muslim Brotherhood as "largely secular." CIA Director
John Brennan has called jihad "a legitimate tenet of Islam," a mere
effort "to purify oneself."
Other administration heads have airbrushed out Islamic terrorism
by referring to it with phrases such as "man-caused disaster." The
effort to combat terrorism was called an "overseas contingency
operation," perhaps like Haitian earthquake relief.
The White House wordsmiths should reread George Orwell's 1946
essay "Politics and the English Language," which warned that
"political writing is bad writing" and "has to consist largely
of euphemism."
Obama has said the greatest threat to future generations is
"climate change," a term that metamorphosed from "global
warming." The now anachronistic term "global warming" used to
describe a planet that was supposedly heating up rather quickly. But it did not
account for the unpleasant fact that there has been negligible global temperature
change since 1998.
Rather than modifying the phrase to "suspected global
warming" or "episodic global warming," the new term
"climate change" was invented to replace it. That way, new realities
could emerge. Changes of all sorts -- historic snows, record cold, California
drought, El Nino storms -- could all be lumped together, supposedly caused by
man-made carbon emissions.
Volatile weather such as tornadoes, tsunamis and hurricanes was
sometimes rebranded as "climate chaos" -- as if Western industry and
consumer lifestyles were responsible for what used to be seen as fairly normal
occurrences.
The term "sanctuary cities" describes municipalities
that in neo-Confederate fashion deny the primacy of federal immigration law and
refuse to enforce it.
Attorney General Loretta Lynch used the term
"justice-involved youth" to describe young criminals arrested and
charged with crimes. From such terminology, one might think the offenders'
"involvement" meant that they were parole officers or young lawyers.
So what is the point of trying to change reality by making up new
names and phrases?
It's mostly politics. If Hollande had used the label
"skinheads" to describe European right-wing movements, the White
House might not have altered the video. If a half-million right-wing Cubans
were pouring illegally into Florida each year, or if 100,000 Serbs were
crossing the border from Canada, the Library of Congress might not object to
calling them "illegal aliens." Clapper and Brennan are unlikely to
claim that the Crusades were largely secular or an exercise in
self-purification.
The Obama administration probably would not describe rogue police
officers charged with crimes as "justice-involved police." If cities
with conservative mayors declined to enforce the Endangered Species Act or
federal firearms statutes, they probably would not be known as "sanctuary
cities," but rather as "nullification cities."
Orwell also wrote about a futuristic dystopia ruled by a Big
Brother government that created politicized euphemisms to reinvent reality. He
placed his novel in the year 1984, warning Westerners about what was in their
future.
We are now 32 years beyond 1984, but we are at last living
Orwell's nightmare.
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