The idea is that if you have no word for ‘rebellion’, it’s a bit hard to talk about
it or foment it - or even to imagine it. He who controls language can therefore control thought – and behaviour. Language is powerful.
‘Anti-bikie law’ as a synonym for VLAD is a disgraceful and
frightening example of linguistic legerdemain, and I will not have it in my
vocabulary.
Politicians evidently understand Orwell
only too well.
Scott Morrison, Australia’s new federal Immigration
Minister, clearly understands that by changing the name of something, you can
change the way it is perceived. Not for him Shakespeare’s wisdom:
What’s in a name? That which we call a rose, by any other name would smell as sweet. (Romeo & Juliet Act II sc.ii)
Mr
Morrison’s linguistic practice is more Orwellian. Staff in his department were
recently instructed to change the label given to asylum seekers who arrive in
Australia by boat. They are no longer ‘asylum seekers’ – they are ‘illegal
maritime arrivals’. They have been dehumanised and transmogrified. Now they
sound rather nasty and criminal, deserving of contempt, not compassion. Sneaky move, Mr Morrison - but you don't fool me with your wordplay.
Warwick McFadyen, a senior writer with the Age, put it
beautifully in this article: http://www.theage.com.au/comment/the-minister-for-debasing-the-language-20131025-2w794.html
‘Say a phrase often enough and it attains a patina of truth’, he says.
That is why I will not now and not ever call Campbell
Newman’s VLAD ‘anti-bikie law’. The media does us no favours by consistently
calling VLAD ‘anti-bikie law’. It's dishonest. It's shamelessly misrepresenting something reprehensible as something desirable, and using the general public's antipathy towards 'outlaw' bikies to get support for an oppressive law.
‘About time somebody stood up to those scumbag bikies’.
‘I’m not a bikie so I’m ok.’
‘If you’ve done nothing wrong, you have nothing to fear.’
WRONG!
The dishonest labelling and marketing of VLAD as ‘anti-bikie
law’ encourages public support for a law which actually has very little to do
with bikies and everything to do with a power-crazy government wielding a
sledgehammer, clumsily smoke-screened by the 'anti-bikie' tag – and besides, motorcyclists are a convenient target at the moment.
VLAD is
ultimately oppressive, and a potential weapon against ANY organisation that the
government doesn’t particularly like. Today, bikies; tomorrow, soccer
clubs/greenies/unionists or whoever happens to be on the Hit
List du jour.
4 comments:
Reminds me of another bit of literature that could be changed for what you are experiencing:
"First they came for the Bikies, and I did not speak out - because I wasn't a Bikie......"
http://www.ushmm.org/wlc/en/article.php?ModuleId=10007392
That's a pretty appropriate sentiment! I'm feeling pretty despondent at the moment at the way governments are stomping all over us in this so-called 'free country'.
Who says this is a 'free' country? The Australian Constitution certainly doesn't. That's part of the problem.
Without being nitpicky, this country enjoys considerable freedoms that are denied people in many other countries, and that's what I mean by a 'free country' - the freedom to vote, the freedom to criticise those in power, freedom of movement (I need no permit to travel from my town to another), freedom of association, freedom of religion etc. I suppose these are things we have come to expect in a democracy, and when these basic freedoms are eroded by power-mad politicians I'm glad that we still have the freedom to protest. A Bill of Rights of our very own, enshrined in law, might be a nice and useful thing - currently the Qld government, in its treatment of motorcyclists, is violating several of the Human Rights set out in the UN's Universal Declaration of Human Rights, particularly the presumption of innocence until proven guilty in a court of law. For shame!
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