Animal Farm
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What is Orwellian to you?
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CL
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Dec 03, 2014 06:02AM

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Perhaps the argument is not fully spelled-out, but it is certainly followed. I've lost count ..."
Really, because I really haven't found many at all. Where do you see them typically? And I'm happy to defy that expectation myself, especially since no one can make me conform to it.

I think you mean Orwell there, Otter.

As I mentioned, there are too many occurrences to keep track of. Any writing produced by people who haven't read a standard style guide is subject to this: blogs, technical writing, opinion pieces, etc.
For an example of the sort of ignorance that accompanies this usage, see this Stack Exchange question.

These are the kinds of states Orwell wro..."
Wow. Talking about me being political and look what the cat dragged in. You are correct in one aspect, speech without criticism is meaningless. However, that freedom cuts both ways and BOTH sides get to have their opinion whether you like or not. I notice that you criticize the Right for their views, but not the Left for their views. I guess it doesn't deserve criticism if you agree with them no matter how nasty the dialogue as long as it puts forth an agenda you agree with.
If you can't defend the rights of others to have their say, then you can't believe in free speech. It is only through the staunch defense for those opinions that you detest can you protect free speech. A perfect example is the ACLU defending the NSPA right to march its Nazi flag through a Jewish neighborhood in Illinois.
claiming PCness is censorship ignores the central fact that no one is being deprived of their right to say anything. Calling a person sexist, racist, homophobic, or elitist for saying something sexist, racist, homophobic or elitist isn't censorship. It's criticism..."
Except when it is an attack to censure the person in question. The very idea of these types of charges is to shut down the conversation and BOTH political sides engage in this very act and yes, it can deprive free speech when it is used in this way. It is like being called Anti-American because you agree/disagree with a particular policy of some politician that some other group doesn't like. It is a way to try and shame you into silence or drown out your voice because the charge is easy to make.
You are also wrong in this is Stalinist Russian. PC is attributed to a Thomas Sowell opinion piece. What you are alluding to is Groupthink which comes out of 1984, but certainly is applicable to Stalinist Russia.

Perhaps the argument is not fully spelled-out, but it is certainly followed. I'v..."
But you have found some accoridng to your own statement. Think that you cannpt be conformed to PC thinking? Wait to your job is on the line. Remember, freedom of speech does not count in the workplace, only for public speech that cannot be interferred with by the governement. If you are willing to lose a job over principle, then you are a very good man.

Perhaps the argument is not fully spelled-out, but it is certain..."
I'm a U instructor. There are many things I could not say in a classroom if I want to keep my job. A lot of them are not 'PC' and most of the ones that are would be hateful.

Perhaps the argument is not fully spelled-out..."
Do you find that Orwellian?
Orwellian is the usurpation of the only true power, loyalty.

Perhaps the argument is not fu..."
No. I just consider that good manners and speak my mind elsewhere. I think it's also important to keep in mind that they way we are brought up is prejudiced and ethnocentric, and some of the thoughtless things we say reflect that. There's nothing Orwellian about being aware of my un- or subconscious biases and wishing NOT to speak from them. They don't reflect how I think or feel so much as they reflect faulty education.




I work in Emergency Management and it is a great tool to use, but I do find it a bit creepy.


"Fifty years after the birth of the free speech movement at the University of California, Berkeley, officials across the UC system are encouraging faculty and students to purge mundane, potentially offensive words and phrases from their vocabularies."
And who exactly is it that deems which words are potentially offensive? Hmmm...I wonder. It seems to me that just about anything said could "potentially" offend someone, if you ask enough people. Orwellian much? I think between stuff like this and the NSA, 1984 and Animal Farm are not as far fetched as some would like to imagine.
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