-Caveat Lector-

George Orwell in 2001: Speaking from the grave

By Norman Solomon

http://www.sfbg.com/MediaBeat/176.html

I dreamed I saw George Orwell last night. Alive as you or me.

He'd been watching the news, and he was quite irate. "All this
doublespeak about war crimes is appalling," he said. "That chap
Milosevic � I see the U.S. government wants him tried for war crimes."

"Yes," I replied. "All the pundits agree."

"But meanwhile the news coverage of the Israeli prime minister's visit
to the White House failed to suggest that he, also, would be suitable
for prosecution as a war criminal. After all, evidence clearly
implicates Ariel Sharon in the massacres of hundreds of Palestinian
people inside the Sabra and Shatila refugee camps in Lebanon in 1982.
Why aren't the media commentators demanding that he stand in the dock at
The Hague?"

"Well, the U.S. government is closely allied with Israel, so ..."

Orwell cut me off. "I was asking a rhetorical question. I get it.
Believe me." His voice began to waver and fade, so only fragments were
audible. "Plenty of examples ... Turkish government ... U.S. ally ...
killing Kurds for many years ... brutally suppressing their language and
culture ... where's the press?" He coughed, then started again, faintly:
"Henry Kissinger ... wholesale murder in Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia ...
East Timor ... and remember Chile ... Any evenhanded reporting would
..."

"During the last few months," I interjected, "the journalist Christopher
Hitchens has raised quite a ruckus about Kissinger and ..."

Orwell waved a hand dismissively. "Scant comfort ... news delayed is
news denied ... sickening media manipulation ..."

"You sound way too radical for mainstream media," I exclaimed. "Yet
these days you're almost universally revered."

Orwell laughed grimly in the midst of coughing. His next words were at
full volume. "Indeed. Embraced with one hand and watered down with the
other. Now rendered as dreadfully weak tea and ..."

Then, suddenly, I woke up. The dull thud of a newspaper echoed on the
front porch. "Mr. Orwell," I murmured, "what were you saying?" But there
was no reply. Just the filtered light of dawn and the far-off sound of
Morning Edition on National Public Radio.

George Orwell died in 1950. If he had lived long enough to reach the
21st century, it's a good bet that, while treasuring the civil liberties
and other freedoms that exist in the United States, he would deplore the
deep patterns of indoctrination that undergo constant reinforcement in
our society.

"Democratic" processes of intellectual conformity and insidious
political propaganda were of great concern to Orwell. Not content to
merely point a finger from West to East in his satirical novel about
Soviet tyranny, Animal Farm, he wrote a challenging preface, which
disappeared from editions of the book for nearly 30 years.

The preface included a downbeat analysis of the conditions of public
discourse in England where "admiration for Russia happens to be
fashionable at this moment." Orwell astutely speculated that "quite
possibly that particular fashion will not last." But, he went on: "To
exchange one orthodoxy for another is not necessarily an advance. The
enemy is the gramophone mind, whether or not one agrees with the record
that is being played at the moment."

Today, Orwell's record-player metaphor is a bit outdated � we could
refer to "the CD mind" � but his statement remains acutely relevant.

Ideologies are most pernicious when they're so dominant that they aren't
even recognized as such.

What Orwell wrote in his introduction, describing the England of 1945,
is no less applicable to the United States of 2001: "In this country,
intellectual cowardice is the worst enemy a writer or journalist has to
face ... Unpopular ideas can be silenced, and inconvenient facts kept
dark, without the need for any official ban.... At any given moment
there is an orthodoxy, a body of ideas which it is assumed that all
right-thinking people will accept without question."

In December 1946, four months after U.S. publication of Animal Farm,
Orwell wrote in a letter to literary critic Dwight Macdonald: "If people
think I am defending the status quo, that is, I think, because they have
grown pessimistic and assume that there is no alternative except
dictatorship or laissez-faire capitalism." He added: "What I was trying
to say was, 'You can't have a revolution unless you make it for
yourself; there is no such thing as a benevolent dictatorship.'"

Orwell was anti-Communist. He was also a socialist who vehemently
opposed the capitalist system � a position that would disqualify him
from appearing as a regular commentator on any of America's big TV
networks in the present day.

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