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  1. #1
    L'Etranger Senior Member Banquo's Ghost's Avatar
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    Default Jargon-based dystopia

    Robert Fisk, a personal hero of mine in journalism, has written a pointed piece about "political correctness" language and the corruption of language by politicians to deceive.

    Good stuff.

    Spoiler Alert, click show to read: 
    Robert Fisk: This jargon disease is choking language

    In the military sex-speak of the Pentagon, Iraq would endure a 'spike' of violence

    Published: 13 January 2007


    I once received an invitation to lecture at "The University of Excellence". I forget where this particular academy was located - Jordan, I think - but I recall very clearly that the suggested subject of my talk was as incomprehensible to me as it would, no doubt, have been to any audience. Invitation rejected. Only this week I received another request, this time to join "ethics practitioners" to "share evidence-based practices on dealing with current ethical practices" around the world. What on earth does this mean? Why do people write like this?

    The word "excellence", of course, has long ago been devalued by the corporate world - its favourite expression has long been "Quality and Excellence", invariably accompanied by a "mission statement", that claim to self-importance dreamed up by Robin Cook when foreign secretary - swiftly ditched when he decided to go on selling jets to Indonesia - and thereafter by every export company and amateur newspaper in the world.

    There is something repulsive about this vocabulary, an aggressive language of superiority in which "key players" can "interact" with each other, can "impact" society, "outsource" their business - or "downsize" the number of their employees. They need "feedback" and "input". They think "outside the box" or "push the envelope". They have a "work space", not a desk. They need "personal space" - they need to be left alone - and sometimes they need "time and space", a commodity much in demand when marriages are failing.

    These lies and obfuscations are infuriating. "Downsizing" employees means firing them; "outsourcing" means hiring someone else to do your dirty work. "Feedback" means "reaction", "input" means "advice". Thinking "outside the box" means, does it not, to be "imaginative"?

    Being a "key player" is a form of self-aggrandisement - which is why I never agree to be a "key speaker", especially if this means participation in a "workshop". To me a workshop means what it says. When I was at school, the workshop was a carpentry shop wherein generations of teachers vainly tried to teach Fisk how to make a wooden chair or table that did not collapse the moment it was completed. But today, a "workshop" - though we mustn't say so - is a group of tiresome academics yakking in the secret language of anthropology or talking about "cultural sensitivity" or "core issues" or "tropes".

    Presumably these are same folk who invented the UN's own humanitarian-speak. Of the latter, my favourite is the label awarded to any desperate refugee who is prepared (for a pittance) to persuade their fellow victims to abide by the UN's wishes - to abandon their tents and return to their dangerous, war-ravaged homes. These luckless advisers are referred to by the UN as "social animators".

    It is a disease, this language, caught by one of our own New Labour ministers on the BBC last week when he talked about "environmental externalities". Presumably, this meant "the weather". Similarly, an architect I know warned his client of the effect of the "aggressive saline environment" on a house built near the sea. If this advice seems obscure, we might be "conflicted" about it - who, I ask myself, invented the false reflexive verb? - or, worse still, "stressed". In northern Iraq in 1991, I was once ordered by a humanitarian worker from the "International Rescue Committee" to leave the only room I could find in the wrecked town of Zakho because it had been booked for her fellow workers - who were very "stressed". Pour souls, I thought. They were stressed, "stressed out", trying - no doubt - to "come to terms" with their predicament, attempting to "cope".

    This is the language of therapy, in which frauds, liars and cheats are always trying to escape. Thus President Clinton's spokesman claimed after his admission of his affair with Monica Lewinsky that he was "seeking closure". Like so many mendacious politicians, Clinton felt - as Lord Blair of Kut al-Amara will no doubt feel about his bloodbath in Iraq once he leaves No 10 - the need to "move on".

    In the same way, our psycho-babble masters and mistresses - yes, there is a semantic problem there , too, isn't there? - announce after wars that it is a time for "healing", the same prescription doled out to families which are "dysfunctional", who live in a "dystopian" world. Yes, dystopian is a perfectly good word - it is the opposite of utopian - but like "perceive" and "perception" (words once much loved by Jonathan Dimbleby) - they have become fashionable because they appear enigmatic.

    Some newly popular phrases, such as "tipping point" - used about Middle East conflicts when the bad guys are about to lose - or "big picture" - when moralists have to be reminded of the greater good - are merely fashionable. Others are simply odd. I always mixed up "bonding" with "bondage" and "quality time" with a popular assortment of toffees. I used to think that "increase" was a perfectly acceptable word until I discovered that in the military sex-speak of the Pentagon, Iraq would endure a "spike" of violence until a "surge" of extra troops arrived in Baghdad.

    All this is different, of course, from the non-sexual "no-brainers" with which we now have to "cope" - "author" for "authoress", for example, "actor" for "actress" - or the fearful linguistic lengths we must go to in order to avoid offence to Londoners who speak Cockney: as well all know - though only those of us, of course, who come from the Home Counties - these people speak "Estuary" English. It's like those poor Americans in Detroit who, in fear and trepidation, avoided wishing me a happy Christmas. "Happy Holiday!" they chorused until I roared "Happy Christmas" back. In Beirut, by the way, we all wish each other "Happy Christmas" and "Happy Eid", whether our friends are Muslim or Christian. Is this really of "majorly importance", as an Irish television producer once asked a colleague of a news event?

    I fear it is. For we are not using words any more. We are utilising them, speaking for effect rather than meaning, for escape. We are becoming - as The New Yorker now describes children who don't care if they watch films on the cinema screen or on their mobile phones - "platform agnostic". What, Polonius asked his lord, was he reading? "Words, words, words," Hamlet replied. If only...
    "If there is a sin against life, it consists not so much in despairing as in hoping for another life and in eluding the implacable grandeur of this one."
    Albert Camus "Noces"

  2. #2
    Second-hand chariot salesman Senior Member macsen rufus's Avatar
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    Default Re: Jargon-based dystopia

    Thanks for sharing with the group, BG. I've in-trayed the content, and think it's a ball we can run with once we've got our ducks in a row
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  3. #3
    Clan Clan InsaneApache's Avatar
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    Default Re: Jargon-based dystopia

    Or we could shake the tree, run it up the flagpole and indulge in some blue sky thinking.
    There are times I wish they’d just ban everything- baccy and beer, burgers and bangers, and all the rest- once and for all. Instead, they creep forward one apparently tiny step at a time. It’s like being executed with a bacon slicer.

    “Politics is the art of looking for trouble, finding it whether it exists or not, diagnosing it incorrectly, and applying the wrong remedy.”

    To learn who rules over you, simply find out who you are not allowed to criticise.

    "The purpose of a university education for Left / Liberals is to attain all the politically correct attitudes towards minorties, and the financial means to live as far away from them as possible."

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    Master of Few Words Senior Member KukriKhan's Avatar
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    Default Re: Jargon-based dystopia

    In summary, when all is said and done, the bottom line, at the end of the day, are the results of our out of the box thinking.
    Last edited by KukriKhan; 01-13-2007 at 19:02.
    Be well. Do good. Keep in touch.

  5. #5
    L'Etranger Senior Member Banquo's Ghost's Avatar
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    Default Re: Jargon-based dystopia



    I hate you all with a passion you can barely imagine.

    "If there is a sin against life, it consists not so much in despairing as in hoping for another life and in eluding the implacable grandeur of this one."
    Albert Camus "Noces"

  6. #6
    Clan Clan InsaneApache's Avatar
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    Default Re: Jargon-based dystopia

    I sense a negative input from BG maybe we should enpower him to re-channel his negativity towards the end game.




    EDIT:oops...a memory malfuction caused the operator to omit a selection of letters.
    Last edited by InsaneApache; 01-13-2007 at 20:11.
    There are times I wish they’d just ban everything- baccy and beer, burgers and bangers, and all the rest- once and for all. Instead, they creep forward one apparently tiny step at a time. It’s like being executed with a bacon slicer.

    “Politics is the art of looking for trouble, finding it whether it exists or not, diagnosing it incorrectly, and applying the wrong remedy.”

    To learn who rules over you, simply find out who you are not allowed to criticise.

    "The purpose of a university education for Left / Liberals is to attain all the politically correct attitudes towards minorties, and the financial means to live as far away from them as possible."

  7. #7

    Default Re: Jargon-based dystopia

    Quote Originally Posted by Banquo's Ghost


    I hate you all with a passion you can barely imagine.

    You mean you have developed unequivocal feelings of discomfort towards us of such intensity that we might find challenging to envision ?
    Therapy helps, but screaming obscenities is cheaper.

  8. #8

    Default Re: Jargon-based dystopia

    Yes. The author seems opposed to people using big words.

    Some of his examples were rather weak in that they were easily understandable with a basic command of the english language.

  9. #9
    Yesdachi swallowed by Jaguar! Member yesdachi's Avatar
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    Default Re: Jargon-based dystopia

    All throughout recorded history we have communicated with more words than we really need to (the bible is a great example of old text with extra words), when it comes out of the mouth of a Shakespeare we love it but when it belches from a politician we hate it. We could probably cut the crap out of everything we write or say but it is not going to be taken as well as fluffy buzz talk.
    Peace in Europe will never stay, because I play Medieval II Total War every day. ~YesDachi

  10. #10
    Nobody Important Member Somebody Else's Avatar
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    Default Re: Jargon-based dystopia

    There is a difference between being flowery and over-using jargon. Use of metaphor or simile that evokes some kind of feeling, or better help the understanding of the various layers of meaning behind a phrase is one thing. Using contrived phrases to demonstrate an affiliation to some particular paradigm.
    Don't have any aspirations - they're doomed to fail.

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  11. #11
    Kanto Kanrei Member Marshal Murat's Avatar
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    Default Re: Jargon-based dystopia

    Ockham's razor

    I'm just saying right now that Jihad is a word that has been turned inside out. While it can mean a religious war, it can be better translated as 'quest' rather than 'holy war'.
    "Nietzsche is dead" - God

    "I agree, although I support China I support anyone discovering things for Science and humanity." - lenin96

    Re: Pursuit of happiness
    Have you just been dumped?

    I ask because it's usually something like that which causes outbursts like this, needless to say I dissagree completely.

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