Sunday, 10 April 2022
Inherited from a totalitarian past
The life of reason is a heritage and exists only through tradition. Half of it is an art, an adjustment to an alien reality, which only a long experience can teach: and even the other half, the inward inspiration and ideal of reason, must be also a common inheritance in the race, if people are to work together or so much as to understand one another.
George Santayana - Winds Of Doctrine Studies in Contemporary Opinion (1913)
Language is part of our heritage – obviously. Political language is too, it doesn’t disappear as political systems evolve. Political language evolves too, but in a connected age it did not necessarily evolve from our democratic heritage. It’s a problem we don’t discuss in the public arena, the political underbelly, the question of where our current political language came from, how it evolved from evils of the past to blight our political lives today.
Today we see what are effectively evolved totalitarian language games from the era of Lenin, Stalin and Mao, from the era of the Little Red Book, the Cultural Revolution, the Great Leap Forward, from Baader-Meinhof and the madness of jackboot politics. However vile, those political language games didn’t die when the main characters died or even when their regimes died.
Now we are left wondering how corrupt the roots of our current political language games are and if they could evolve into something even worse. Unfortunately there is something morally corrupt about democratic politics to begin with. It does not attract many honest, tough-minded and professionally competent people. Almost none we might say without being unduly cynical.
We see political moral corruption all the time, but the pressure not to see it is enormously powerful, enormously wealthy and if challenged, increasingly vindictive. Play our language games they insist – we refuse to recognise any other. Very much like waving the Little Red Book.
Take climate change for example, one of the more obvious issues when we mull over the corruption of democratic political language. There is something disgusting about adults playing political language games with children. Lying to them about their climate because this is how the game is played at the highest level. Doubt or deviation are punished socially, professionally and politically.
Political language games have corrupted the language of altruism and charity, the language of progress, science, technology, economics, social life, family life and even human biology. Political language has almost become too corrupt to conduct civilised political discourse across political divides, a form of corruption clearly and unambiguously inherited from a totalitarian past.
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5 comments:
The control of political discourse was Orwell's nightmare; if they get rid of the words, they take from us the means of thinking about alternatives.
Can they do this, though, in the age of the internet? We have access to the gene pool of ideas. The powers that be may not like him, but John Stuart Mill is as alive now as he has ever been. And so is every political satirist.
Political satire? You must be some kind of right wing extremist . . .
Polite discourse is out, polarised discourse is in.
I don't believe there is a single cause for this or a single solution. This is a revolutionary statement in itself. People want simple solutions, hopefully implemented by The Powers That Be, so that they can get on with their lives - but what we are experiencing at the moment is many different Single Issue Fanatics competing with each other to win influence, your vote, your attention, your politics, your money (discretionary or not). The competition is fierce and getting fiercer driving the polarisation of discourse.
There is not one single thing we can do about it, but there are many things we can nudge along over the years to reverse the polarisation.
A selection of ideas to support:
Do not use social media for debate.
Be prepared to call Single Issue Fanatics unbalanced, and shun them.
Support defunding the BBC.
Do not join in with the adulation for the very average NHS.
Ignore the witterings of the staff at schools who educate your child/grandchild.
Spoil your ballot if there are no sensible candidates in an election.
Avoid the main stream media and their adverts.
Support the Bonfire of the QUANGOs.
Do not support a politicised charity.
Do not engage with conspiracy theorists (you will only strengthen their beliefs).
Buy only what you need, not status symbols.
Be suspicious of anyone who claims to be an 'expert'.
Be easy with tolerance and courtesy, be miserly with your respect.
Live your life your way.
All of this gets easier as you get older - you are either wiser, or perhaps fed up and not going to take it any more.
Sam - yes, and the gene pool of ideas could be working away without us being directly aware of an evolving future which would give us reasons to be optimistic.
DJ - that's a sound list and yes, it does get easier as you get older. Some of that seems to be the 'seen it all before' effect. It's why we should value our traditions and our culture as aids to help us avoid the mistakes of the past without having to make them over and over again.
Jannie - we are all right wing extremists if we aren't right on woke.
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