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AMERICAN NEWSPEAK.
Hoarded at http://www.scn.org/newspeak Celebrating cutting edge advances in the Doublethink of the 90's Written by Wayne Grytting
"Sometimes a Great Notion"
Amazon.com has been accepting payments from publishers of up to $10,000 to
have books featured and reviewed on its website under the headings
"Destined for Greatness" and "What We're Reading." Faced with public
criticism for not disclosing the ongoing payments from publishers, Amazon
found some resourceful responses. Vice President Mary Morouse opposed
labeling purchased reviews because of the often overlooked "neatness"
issue: "I think it would be more distracting to have a book tagged," she
said. "I think that would clutter it up." Next, Amazon founder Jeff Bezos
argued his company was "pioneering a new medium that shouldn't be held up
to the same standards" as book reviewers in magazines who strive for
"independence from advertising concerns." (After all, who can meet those
high standards?) Then he added the real kicker: "We're a buying
co-operative. If we can lower costs by collecting co-op advertising money,
that can lead to lower prices." Publishers buy reviews and we get lower
prices. It's win-win. See why Amazon.com stock keeps rising? (WSJ
2/9/99, NYT 2/8/99)
It's Only Cigars
Nearly two years ago David Weisenthal, AKA Havana Dave, brought 100 duty
free cigars back from Cuba after having faithfully followed instructions
from a U.S. Customs publication entitled "Know Before You Go." For his
efforts, he had his cigars confiscated. Let's see where Dave went wrong
according to Judge Dalzell of the U.S. District Court of Eastern
Pennsylvania (1/8/99).
1. Even though the Customs book said in "plain language" that 100 or less
cigars could enter the country duty free, Dave had relied on information
from the wrong agency. He came under the Regulations of the Office of
Foreign Assets Control.
2. Dave responded that OFAC had issued no "instructions" to follow. To
this the Court said, Dave "gave OFAC more credit than the agency was due
when assuming mention of `instruction' (in their Regulations) meant that
OFAC actually would issue an instruction from time to time."
3. The bottom line: Dave's defense failed, said the judge, because "it is
only supported by common sense." If this makes no sense, try rereading "Alice
in Wonderland." (www.itsonlycigars.com)
Beyond "Follow the Money"
In Berkeley, California, SmartTouch Inc. has been test marketing a new
identification system that can link fingerprints to Visa accounts. At the
High Tech Burrito restaurant, customers now just put a finger to a
touchpad and their meal is deducted from their bank account. SmartTouch
CEO Phil Gioia says the device, soon headed for grocery stores, is needed
because, "In a consumer environment, everything is moving to a higher
level of convenience and security." (For whom he didn't say.) Pointing out
the deeper significance of this breakthrough was the founder of
SmartTouch, Ned Hoffman, who says with this device, "You are the money."
Now you are the money walking, talking and breathing. Now I can look at
myself and know who I am. I am $53.27. Peace at last. (Daily Californian
@ 2/4/99)
Defending the Fatherland Dept.
Faced with the increased immigration of foreign speakers to our shores, 22
states have responded by declaring English our official language. Now a
number of small towns like Norcross, Georgia (a wealthy Atlanta suburb) have
gone a step further and passed laws penalizing linguistic "infringements."
Recently Maria Cobarrubias was fined $115 for the name sign posted outside
the supermarket she owns saying "Supermercado Jalisco." She had violated
Norcross' ordinance banning signs that are less than 75% English "as
determined by local authorities" (which I presume means no ghetto talk).
The law, which ostensibly was passed for safety reasons, has also been
used against several Korean churches and an Oriental beauty shop. The good
news: Norcross Sgt. H. Smith believes some Spanish words are "acceptable,"
which should be cause for celebration in Norcross' Hispanic community. And at
the local Taco Bell. (WP 2/6/99)
Special Thanks to David West and Wm. Leler (they tied) and Geov Parrish
for spotting quality Newspeak. To report Newspeak or join the mailing list,
try e-mailing to wgrytt@blarg.net
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