We think in language.
Language significantly affects the content of our thoughts. Thus,
reshaping popular
language provides a powerful tool to "win the hearts and minds" of
the public. Political conservatives figured this out
decades ago, but no one has employed language to influence public opinion
more intentionally or cleverly than the Bush
administration.
The largely successful practice
of naming things what they are not in order to garner public support remains
generally unquestioned by major media. The newsrooms pick up
the new terms as fast as The Heritage Institute, the
American Enterprise Institute and the Bush administration can spin
them out -- as if black has always been white, as if
fish have always been able to fly. Surveys show, incidentally,
that the Heritage and American Enterprise institutes are
the most-often-cited think tanks in the American media.
This lexicon includes old
and new examples of this political mind-bending art. The newer the
terms are, the more
clever they are -- and the more Orwellian. That's a credit to
the creativeness of current conservative strategists and
wordsmiths. Journalists and editors -- particularly those in
the broadcast media -- need to notice how they are being
used to create new language. The general public should be mindful
that these terms are being created with our minds in
mind, and to think about how and why the new language is being used.
Democratic Party leaders need to wake up and pay
attention. They need not mimic the canniness, but they certainly
need to speak out and call it what it is: sinister.
Here is a sampling:
Anti-American describes someone
who suggests perhaps the United States is losing popularity, trust and
allies
around the world as a consequence of its own words and deeds.
Big government describes
any public program intended to benefit the poor and disenfranchised or
to protect
consumers, workers or the environment. This term does not apply
to government snooping into your private affairs
("Patriot Act") or to war spending regardless of the amount.
It does, however, apply to public-interest regulation; hence,
"deregulation."
Celebrity, a derogatory term,
describes an entertainer who speaks out on behalf of a progressive cause.
This term
is not applied to Arnold Schwarzenegger, Ronald Reagan and Charlton
Heston or to Playboy Playmates (TM) who promote
the Iraq war on Fox News.
Civil service reform means "flexibility" to replace civil service protection with cronyism and patronage.
Class warfare lets you know
what Democrats are up to when they call attention to the social and economic
consequences of administration policies.
Clear Skies Act, perhaps
the most Orwellian of all these ingenious terms, describes the administration's
intention
to increase pollution discharges from older power and industrial plants.
Coalition of the willing
describes the United States, Britain and a handful of their client states
-- not to be confused
with the rest of the world.
Conservative describes what was once regarded as right-wing extremist. See also "moderate."
Death tax describes what has been called the estate or inheritance tax since 1916.
Deregulation describes the
results of corporate commandeering of public-interest regulatory agencies,
such as
Federal Communications Commission measures to allow increasing concentration
of broadcast media ownership by fewer
and larger corporations. It stems from the notion that what's
good for big business is good for you and that faceless
profiteers have your concerns at heart more than public servants.
Double taxation of dividends
justifies a scheme to exempt the wealthiest from paying taxes on their
income from
investments in corporations that pay minimal, if any, taxes because
of myriad revenue-code loopholes.
Edit describes what the White
House does to reports from the Environmental Protection Agency (deleting
a
scientific summary of global warming research) and from intelligence
agencies (exaggerating claims regarding weapons
of mass destruction).
Family Time Flexibility,
the name given to House Resolution 1119, which will authorize employers
to require
compulsory overtime for hourly employees regardless of the employee's
family situation, with payment in compensation
time (not wages), regardless of the employee's economic situation.
Freedom of the press rationalizes
deregulation of major media use of publicly owned airwaves. This
is about as
brilliant as wordsmithery can get, don't you think?
Freedom fighter is an obsolete
term. For 70 years, Chechnyans were freedom fighters. Now they
are terrorists --
an example of the alignment (and language) shifts in the New World
Order.
Free trade has come to mean
"Let's gut labor laws and environmental protection in order to maximize
profits of
international corporations." It accompanies the notion that having
more and cheaper stuff to buy will enhance your
quality of life, presuming you still have a job. Most "free trade"
schemes promote the transfer of sovereignty from
states and nations to unelected arbiters in organizations such as the
World Trade Organization and North American Free
Trade Agreement. Obviously, these are not your grandfather's
conservatives!
Liberal media bias promotes
a fiction created to mask the fact that the news media are being acquired
by
increasingly larger conglomerates that have either rightist agendas
or no taste for news (instead preferring
marketing-driven news departments). This concept also engenders
the absurd notion that CNN is a liberal alternative to
MSNBC and Fox.
Moderate is used to describe what once was called conservative.
No Child Left Behind names
a scheme established to justify transferring public money to private (including
"faith-based") schools.
Partial-birth abortion -- a political concept, not a medical one -- describes late-term abortion.
Patriot, as cynically used
by the president and attorney general, describes someone who does not employ
critical-thinking skills learned in school. The No Child Left
Behind program -- incidentally or not -- will transfer increased
school resources from curricula that inculcate thinking to testing-preparation
curricula, thereby educating more
patriots.
Peacekeeping force describes
what would be called "occupation force" by any other nation or at any other
time in
world history.
Political correctness ridicules
the idea that people ought to treat one another with decency and respect.
The
cleverness of this sarcastic phrase is that it does not apply to this
politically correct conservative lexicon. If one
watches the national dialogue closely, unilateral international aggression
is more "politically correct" than programs for
the poor.
Privatization justifies the
notion that corporations are more likely to serve the public interest than
publicly owned
utilities, schools and prisons.
Right to life means prohibition of abortion for any reason, including saving the life of the mother.
States' rights apply only
when there is a Democratic majority in Congress. Today, the phrase
is conveniently
dropped from conservative lexicon as the Bush administration exerts
increasing control over local libraries, local school
boards, medical marijuana, and holocaust survivors' insurance in California
and assisted suicide in Oregon.
Support the troops--a brilliant
concept, suggests that if you question foreign policy or war policy, you
have the
deaths of our finest young men and women in uniform on your hands.
Objective: to stifle public dissent.
Tax and spend, ignoring the
successful deficit reduction of the previous administration, describes
what Democrats
do. Borrow and spend, a Republican strategy currently being exercised
at unparalleled heights, is politically correct and
unworthy of critique. As we said before, these are not your grandfather's
conservatives.
Tax rebate facilitates the
largest vote-buying scheme in history, whereby all taxpayers and their
children and their
children's children, regardless of political persuasion, pay for an
increased federal deficit in order to fund checks
from the Bush administration to taxpayers.
Un-American describes people
critical of administration policy. This collected lexicon, for instance,
is un-American.
So are the Dixie Chicks.
Vouchers, expected to be
issued as a result of No Child Left Behind testing, will authorize the
transfer of your tax
dollars to private (often "faith-based") schools.
War on terrorism justifies
pretty much anything, such as opening the Alaskan National Wildlife Refuge
to oil
exploitation. Opposing any such measure means you are "un-American."
If you have reasons, you're "anti-American."
Please keep these terms in
mind as you turn on the evening news. Keep a notepad handy.
Collect your own. It's
fun!
Tito Titus is a Seattle artist
and retired environmental hearings officer.
Georgie Bright Kunkel and
Daniel S. Perry assisted him in preparing this lexicon.
A.J.Burton