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American Newspeak
by Wayne Grytting
Advanced War Spinning
Objectivity in the News Dept.
Faced with the bewildering hatred of America in the Middle East and the
need to solidify support for the Crusade at home, the Wall Street Journal
posed the following question to a panel of distinguished advertising
executives: "Should we try new national advertising in a time of crisis?"
Among the few who answered in the negative was Cheryl Berman, chief
creative officer for Leo Burnett USA. "I wouldn't try it," she argued. "The
news stations are already doing that for us." (WSJ 9/21/01)
"Ask Not What Your Country Can Do for You..."
The new willingness of lobbyists to serve their country was in evidence as
Kenneth J. Kies, one of Washington's top corporate lobbyists, declared it
would have been not only irresponsible, but unpatriotic for him to have
refrained from seeking repeal of the corporate minimum income tax. "I
wouldn't be doing the job," he said, "not necessarily for my clients--but
for my country if I wasn't being helpful in terms of offering ideas that
can be helpful in stimulating the economy." His patriotic ideas: $1.4
billion for IBM, $832 million for General Motors... (WP 11/11/01)
Lawyer Math
What is the value of any of the lives lost on September 11th? As the New
York Times put it, "In measuring the value of a lost life, lawyers often
say that dollars are inadequate..." Then they reach for their calculators.
Compensation to the families of the 5,000 victims will be based partially
on estimates of pain and suffering. But the crucial factor is loss of
potential income. According to attorneys James Kreindler and Alan
Fuchsberg, the family of a married 28-year-old sales executive with one
child, making $500,000 a year, could expect about $25 million. But the
family of an unmarried 42-year-old firefighter who went to rescue such a
sales executive could expect about $100,000. We might call it "Operation
Infinite Justice." (NYT 11/11/01)
Joe McCarthy Look-alike Contest
Lynne Cheney, wife to the Vice-President, heads an organization called the
American Council of Trustees and Alumni, that has entered the forefront of
groups defending the security of our nation with the publication of a study
aptly called "Defending Civilization: How Our Universities Are Failing
America..." The study reports that historically, "when a nation's
intellectuals are unwilling to defend its civilization, they give comfort
to its adversaries." Citing the names of 40 academics who've been
inadequately patriotic, the study concluded that, "college and university
faculty have been the weak link in America's response to the attack." It's
actually kind of an honor. I'm betting most history professors have had no
clue how important their writings are to America's security. Why, not since
the McCarthy era have they been considered such a vital line of defense.
(http://www.goacta.org/)
Advanced Numbing
Clear Channel Communications, owners of 1,200 radio stations nationwide,
responded to the September 11th tragedy by "graylisting" 150 songs labeled
"lyrically questionable." In what management described as a "grassroots
movement," the nation's largest radio chain suggested to disc jockeys they
not play songs that failed to "support a high level of patriotism."
>From that list, here are the Top Ten worst offenders: 1. "Imagine" by John
Lennon, 2. "Peace Train" by Cat Stevens, 3. Louis Armstrong's "What a
Wonderful World," 4. "Bridge Over Troubled Water" by Simon and Garfunkel,
5. Neil Diamond's "America," 6. "Ticket to Ride" by the Beatles, 7. "On
Broadway" by the Drifters, 8. "American Pie" by Don McLean, 9. "Get
Together," by The Youngbloods, 10. All songs by Rage Against the Machine.
This puts us in the Guinness Book of World Records as the world's second
society ever to conceive the possibility of censoring Neil Diamond. The
Taliban were the first. (NYT 9/19/01)
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