Volume 3, #33 May 12, 1999 POLITICS WITH BITE! CONTACT HELP previous BACK ISSUES next
A FORUM FOR ANTI-AUTHORITARIAN POLITICAL OPINION, RESEARCH AND HUMOR

American Newspeak



Hoarded at http://www.scn.org/newspeak Celebrating cutting edge advances in the Doublethink of the 90's Written by Wayne Grytting

Friendly Firearms

The National Shooting Sports Foundation has launched an ad campaign to get Americans to think of guns as sporting equipment. Doug Painter, of the ad firm Porter Novelli, points out that for many urban Americans, guns are associated with "crime and violence as opposed to hunting and skeet shooting." (I was shocked to find among the inner city youth I surveyed, not only an ignorance of skeet shooting, but of polo and cricket as well). To correct this abysmal lack of knowledge, the NSSF has come up with a thought-provoking slogan to explain why guns are so safe when used properly. Shown in its ad against the backdrop of a Ruger shotgun are the words "The very fact that it can be dangerous is what makes it safe." Great slogan. We can only wonder if this will be extended to help promote other seemingly dangerous activities like doing heroin, jumping from 20 story buildings, or wrestling rattlesnakes. (WSJ 4/5/99)

War of the Week

NATO admitted to having mistakenly bombed "a civilian vehicle" after Serbian television broadcast film of civilian corpses amidst burnt out tractors (plural). Sixty-four refugees reportedly died when a convoy of what appeared to be about 100 cars and tractors was bombed. NATO spokesman General Giuseppe Moroni made a crucial advance in military logic when he announced he could not account for the Serbian video. "I understand that tractors were filmed," he said. "Nevertheless, what I want to say is that when the pilot attacked the vehicles they were military vehicles. If they turned out to be tractors, that is a different issue." Obviously the responsibility of a another department. General Moroni (that's spelled with an "i") did not say if Divine Intervention was involved in this sudden conversion, but at a minimum it would appear we have a new criteria for what constitutes military targets. (Reuters 4/15/99)

New Ad Space

Video production engineers have finally solved a problem that has plagued the broadcasting of old reruns on TV. Classic shows like I Love Lucy, Gilligan's Island or All in the Family were produced before advertisers had mastered the art of product placement. This means that valuable film footage on TV is being commercially wasted. Now engineers for companies like Princeton Video and DeWitt Media can insert brand name beer cans and potato chip packages into old shows and even give them the look of the original production. This exciting advance has raised concerns about a possible backlash by consumers to obvious commercials wandering into the programs. That's why Gene DeWitt, chairman of DeWitt Media, adds a cautionary note: "I'm big on exploitation," he says (aren't we all!), "but not to the point where it is self defeating." Maybe someday in a better world, we'll be ready for the real thing. (NYT 4/6/99)

Power to the Little People

Public school districts are discovering they can raise money not only by accepting corporate sponsors, but also by offering their pupils for market research. Children are being given the opportunity in numerous schools to participate in taste tests on cereals and focus groups right in their own classrooms. Robert Reynolds, president of Education Market Resources, says "the education marketplace" (formerly known as schools in Oldspeak) "offers tremendous potential to sell products, and to gain access to the youth market." In return, students' lives are enriched by the addition of another "educational process" to their curriculum. Mr. Reynolds explains that "Kids these days love the feeling of empowerment, and we are empowering them, but we are doing it in a proper way." So be careful when driving to avoid hitting any children newly empowered by their choice of Kellogg's sugar over Post's. (NYT 4/5)

Special thanks to Tony Thomas and Cynthia Bock-Goodner for spotting quality Newspeak. If you'd like to send in some or subscribe to the mailing list, e-mail wgrytt@blarg.net.



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