The great enemy of clear language is insincerity.
-- George Orwell
George
Orwell (1903-50) was one of the most influential political writers of the
twentieth century. Although his works covered a broad range of topics
such as colonialism, the Spanish Civil War, and British society, Orwell
is best known for exploring how the modern state acts upon the individual. A
disillusioned idealist, he understood that the government big enough to
give you everything is also big enough to take it all away -- including
freedom itself.
Orwell's book 1984 serves
as a valuable warning about the power of words to mold popular thought. 1984 drew a frightening
picture of a future totalitarian
state in which Big Brother's official language of "Newspeak" created its
own truths: "War is Peace," "Freedom is Slavery," and "Ignorance is Strength."[1] In a less grim but equally trenchant
1946 essay, Politics and the English Language, Orwell decried the "euphemism, question-begging,
and
sheer cloudy vagueness" characteristic of political speech in modern democracies.[2]
A word or phrase is "Orwellian" when it is
impenetrably obtuse or even oxymoronic. Objective truth is eroded
by the endless blowing of windy rhetoric. Reality is then constructed
to suit the needs of the moment.
The state of American politics has become
increasingly Orwellian. At the national level in particular, elected
positions are dominated by career-minded officials who repeat empty and
often deliberately misleading or untruthful slogans. Consider the
two most recent Presidential campaigns. After "reinventing government," we "crossed
a bridge to the twenty-first century" to a place where "no child is left
behind," thanks to the wonders of "compassionate conservatism."[3] As Orwell understood, such vacuity
strips political communication of any concrete meaning. The absurd
end result was captured by President Clinton's niggling over what the meaning
of "is" is. If this trend continues, our language will ultimately
be useless to express the ideas that form the basis of rational political
discourse in a healthy republic.
Language
is at the root of political consciousness. We can only know what
we understand, and our understanding is limited by the words and phrases
used to frame an issue. The constant repetition of imprecise, politically
correct language is sure to have a cumulative effect upon a target audience -- eventually
we begin to accept what we are told. Indeed, the main goal of political
correctness, like Orwell's Newspeak, is to diminish the choice of words
and thereby reduce the range of thought.
Listed below are examples of Orwellian words
and phrases that proliferate in virtually every policy area of our deliberately
dumbed-down democracy.
Taxes
"Voluntary Compliance"
The government characterizes our tax system
as one of "voluntary compliance." Yet mandatory federal income tax
withholding makes a mockery of this term.[4] The
IRS defines the concept in classic Orwellian terms: "Voluntary compliance
means that each of us is responsible for filing a tax return when required
and for determining and paying the correct amount of tax."[5] Thus, failure to
exercise "voluntary compliance" risks a fine and imprisonment.
"Tax Cuts for the Rich"
Critics railed against the 2001 federal income
tax cut as a "tax cut for the rich."[6] In one sense,
this is true. What
remains unsaid, however, is that any federal income tax cut will disproportionately benefit
those with higher incomes because those individuals actually pay taxes. Currently, 44 million tax
filers (out
of 132 million) pay no federal income taxes.[7] Indeed, 16 million
of these "taxpayers" actually receive net payments averaging
$1,720 under the Earned Income Credit.[8]
Wealthier taxpayers also shoulder a much
higher proportion of the tax burden. According to IRS data, the top
one percent of taxpayers earn 17 percent of all Adjusted Gross Income (AGI),
yet pay 33 percent of total income taxes. The top five percent pays 53
percent of all income taxes while making 32 percent of total income. The
top quarter pays 83 percent of total taxes while earning 65 percent of
total AGI. For their part, the bottom half of taxpayers contribute
a paltry 3.9 percent of total federal income tax receipts.[9]
High marginal tax rates are often justified
on the ground that "the rich" should pay "their fair share." Politicians
even talk about high income earners as "winners in the lottery of life," as
if none of these individuals actually earned their success, and it is therefore
permissible for Congress to plunder them on behalf of those with losing
tickets.[10] Yet, as economics professor Walter
Williams asks, "Where is a society headed that holds its most productive
members up to ridicule and makes mascots out of its least productive and
parasitic members?"[11]
"Expensive" Tax Cuts
Politicians often oppose tax cuts on the
ground that they are "expensive." For example, Senator Joseph Lieberman
(D-CT) urged Congress to delay phasing in the Bush tax cut (scheduled to
take full effect over ten years), claiming it was too "expensive."[12] In the same vein, then-House
Minority Leader Dick Gephardt (D-MO) complained that repealing the death
tax would "cost $109 billion."[13] The American Federation
of State, County and Municipal Employees union decries "a new round of
expensive tax cuts for the wealthy and big corporations." [14]
To claim that a tax cut is "expensive" is
really to say that government is entitled to keep every penny earned by
every taxpayer. Anything the taxpayer manages to hold on to is "expensive" to
politicians and taxpayer-fed interest groups whose demands are ever-increasing. Apparently,
in this warped view, the groups who will not be able to capture as much
government largesse are the ones "paying" for "expensive" tax cuts.
Tax Cuts as "Spending"
Representative Steny Hoyer (D-MD) recently
complained that "the failure to pay for tax cuts . . . is an immoral abdication
of our responsibility to pay our own bills."[15]
Fellow Congressman Brad Sherman
(D-CA) sent a mailer to his constituents asking if they believe the federal
government should "spend" more on tax cuts for middle class families. Former
House Minority Leader Richard Gephardt (D-MO) ominously stated, "If we
move ahead with the President's tax cut, we will end up spending the entire
surplus on the tax cut alone."[16]
Only in Washington, DC does a return of taxpayers' money
(a decision not to spend) become a federal spending program.[17] After all, if a tax cut can be "expensive," it
must require government "spending" to fund it. Indeed, politicians
and the media routinely discuss "federal expenditures," "federal dollars," "federal
outlays," "government aid," "government investments," or "federal grants." This
terminology obscures the fact that the government has no money of its own
to "spend" -- it can only redistribute dollars from taxpayer A to taxpayer
B (while taking a significant cut for itself in the process).
Budget
"Investments in . . ."
Politicians are not known for candor. So it is
not surprising that pork-barrel projects are often referred to as "investments." The
terminology of investments -- with its suggestion of stock market-like returns -- eases
the minds of taxpayers. Thus, elected officials trumpet "major new
investments in . . . education, Medicare, health care, homeland security,
energy independence, the environment, compassion, and the unemployed."[18]
It is a vain struggle to remember the last
time you heard a politician say that the government should increase "spending." In
our feel-good society, spending is continually targeted for cuts, while
so-called investments enjoy funding increases -- even from that great mass
of officeholders who describe themselves as "fiscally responsible."
"Fiscal Responsibility" and "Fiscal Irresponsibility"
Over the past decade these phrases have been
used so much[19] that they now signify little more
than
support for, or opposition to, a specific program. If you favor something,
it is "fiscally responsible." If you oppose it, then it is "fiscally
irresponsible." The bottom-line cost has become irrelevant.
In fact, many Members of Congress who complain
that tax cuts are fiscally irresponsible support increases in spending
that exceed the supposedly irresponsible tax cuts. For example, the
so-called deficit hawks in the Senate who voted to slash the 2003 tax cut
in half sponsored or cosponsored legislation that would, if enacted all
at once, increase spending by $89.9 billion per year -- far more than the
$72.6 billion per year tax cut they derided as "too costly."[20]
More recently, Members of the House of Representatives
who opposed repeal of the marriage penalty on grounds of fiscal responsibility
exhibited the same hypocrisy. On average, these Members' net agendas
would increase federal spending by $583 billion per year ($5.83 trillion
over ten years). In contrast, the ten-year "cost" for the marriage
penalty bill, which they shunned, was $105 billion (equal to less than
two percent of their spending agendas).[21]
"The Era of Big Government Is Over"
Bill Clinton's famous pronouncement from
his 1996 State of the Union Address was --like much of what the former President
said -- completely untrue. In fact, Clinton subsequently proposed
$305 billion per year in new spending in his 1999 address, and in 2000
Clinton outlined $125 billion in new annual outlays on everything from "smart
gun" technology, to farm subsidies, to expanded foreign aid.[22] It was truly Orwellian for a
President who involved the federal leviathan with the issue of uniforms
in local public elementary schools[23] to
claim that the era of big government was over.
Elections
"Campaign Finance Reform"
Although polls tended to show that the issue
was a non-starter with voters, Members of Congress put a high priority
on enacting campaign finance reform, ostensibly to remove the bogeyman
of special-interest money from politics. This Congressional zeal
is not all that surprising when one considers that the bill -- by limiting
contributions and stifling criticism before an election -- further tipped
the scales in favor of incumbents, who already enjoy higher name recognition,
greater media access, an in-place legislative staff, and the ability to
distribute taxpayer dollars and political favors.
Senator John McCain (R-AZ), whose name graced
the bill along with Senator Russell Feingold (D-WI), betrayed the actual
motive behind the legislation when he stated: "What we're trying to do
is stop organizations like the so-called Club for Growth that came into
Arizona in a primary [and] spent hundreds of thousands of dollars in attack
ads."[24] So,
despite the lofty rhetoric about clean elections and reforming a supposedly
corrupt system, the real impulse behind McCain-Feingold was to protect
politicians from those who would tell embarrassing truths about them.[25]
While the Legislative branch deliberately
undermined free speech, the Executive and Judicial branches failed to act
as a check upon this unconstitutional scheme. President Bush signed
McCain-Feingold even though he believed the legislation posed "serious
constitutional concerns."[26] The Supreme Court
then upheld McCain-Feingold as part of the "steady improvement of the national
election laws."[27]
Yet as Justice Kennedy pointed out in dissent,
McCain-Feingold "reorders speech rights and codifies the Government's own
preferences for certain speakers" -- such as giant media outlets.[28] Under
McCain-Feingold, Ross Perot would have faced five years in jail for contributing
more than $25,000 to help jump-start the Reform Party.[29] Worse, McCain-Feingold
makes it illegal for a citizen organization -- such as the National Taxpayers
Union or the Sierra Club -- to broadcast an issue ad that is critical of,
or encourages voters to contact, a Member of Congress 60 days before an
election.[30] Ultimately, McCain-Feingold was
a "reform" only in the sense that challengers and groups critical of incumbents
now face a steeper uphill climb.
Military/Security Policy
Department of "Defense"-- For Whom?
The Department of War became the Department
of Defense in 1947. Critics, many of whom approach the issue from
a pacifist perspective, have dubbed this change "one of the greatest Orwellian
doublespeak deceptions of all time."[31] Moral
considerations notwithstanding, this accusation also has a fiscal dimension. The
Department of Defense currently garrisons well over 100,000 American troops
in just four wealthy countries -- Germany, Japan, South Korea, and the United
Kingdom.[32] During the Cold War,
when this practice was even more prevalent, U.S. taxpayers were effectively
subsidizing the defense of some of America's biggest economic competitors.
Today, even with U.S. defense spending as a share of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) less than half of
what it was in the 1960s,[33] America shoulders a huge
burden relative
to other economic heavyweights. According to the International Institute
for Strategic Studies, U.S. military expenditures comprised 3.3 percent
of GDP in 2002, compared to Germany's 1.5 percent, Japan's 1.0 percent,
South Korea's 2.8 percent, and the United Kingdom's 2.4 percent.[34]
Meanwhile, many federal programs having little
to do with preparing or fighting wars have crept their way into the Department
of Defense budget, including $2 million for the Bosque Redondo Memorial
in New Mexico, $6 million for coronary/prostate disease reversal, and $2.5
million for marijuana eradication in Hawaii.[35]
Would such free-spending attitudes
be as readily condoned in a more forthrightly-named Department of War?
Fifty-seven years and trillions of dollars later, Americans are left to
wonder.
"Homeland Security"
Created in 2002, the Department of Homeland Security
(DHS) unified 22 existing agencies with combined budgets of about $40 billion
and staffs adding up to 170,000 workers.[36] The
name is a bit unwieldy, but
most likely represents a governmental attempt to invoke reassuring images
of safety -- perhaps even family, hearth, and comfort. Yet considering
the failures which led to the September 11th attack in the first place,
including our own inability or unwillingness to enforce immigration laws,
why should Americans think that simply reshuffling the bureaucratic deck
is going to produce a winning hand in our open-ended "War on Terror"?[37] Apparently, many do not. Only
13 percent of Americans polled by the Gallup Organization said they have
confidence that DHS will make them "a lot" safer. Nearly four in
ten Americans expect that DHS will not make the country any safer at all.[38]
Since 9/11, Members of Congress have been
cloaking old-fashioned pork in the robes of "security" for the "homeland." In
fact, over half of all new federal spending ($164 billion) since 2001 is
unrelated to defense or the aftermath of the terrorist attacks.[39] Thus, anything that can be dubbed
as even remotely related to "security" is being used to justify higher
spending. For example, the Agriculture Act of 2001 was renamed "The
Farm Security Bill" post-September 11, as if subsidies for chickpeas, lentils,
and mohair have anything to do with national security.[40] One
Congressman even stated that the peanut subsidy, with a $3.5 billion price
tag, "strengthens America's national security."[41]
Social Policy
"Compassionate Conservatism"
President Bush campaigned as a "compassionate
conservative" in 2000 and has echoed this theme throughout
his presidency. The 2004 Bush campaign website describes compassionate
conservatism as the President's "governing philosophy" in the areas of "educating
our children, helping those in need, and fighting poverty at home and abroad."[42]
Equating federal dollars with compassion
is wrong for several reasons. First, it bolsters the misperception
that opposition to big government constitutes a lack of compassion. Second,
the President's rhetoric implies a belief that he is more moral than the
conservatives who came before him.[43] Third,
truly compassionate acts
are voluntary, not coerced. Yet every dime spent to advance so-called
compassionate conservatism is forcibly collected from taxpayers -- millions
of whom oppose activist government for religious, moral, or practical reasons.
"Undocumented Worker"
Often used to describe illegal immigrants,
the term "undocumented worker" brings to mind the quip about the Holy Roman
Empire: it was neither holy, nor Roman, nor an empire. Indeed, millions
of supposedly undocumented workers do possess documents (albeit fraudulent
or expired ones), and a significant proportion of these individuals are
not workers, but rather criminals or scammers looking to game the system.[44] Politicians use the term to avoid
criticism and to dodge meaningful debate, while the media prefer this politically
correct platitude over accuracy. As Edward Abbey has written:
The perfectly correct terms 'illegal alien' and 'illegal
immigrant' can set off charges of xenophobia . . . [so] [t]he only acceptable
euphemism, it now appears, is something called undocumented worker. Thus
the pregnant Mexican woman who appears, in the final stages of labor,
at the doors of the emergency ward of an
El Paso or San Diego hospital, demanding care for herself and the child
she's about to deliver, becomes an "undocumented worker." [45]
"Working Families"
Advocates of expanding government programs
often claim to be acting on behalf of "working families." Representative
Major Owens (D-NY) recently stated that "working families have a right
to make a claim on America,"[46]and
backed up this assertion by cosponsoring a nationalized health care bill
that would cost $1.5 trillion per
year.[47] The AFL-CIO issued a Working
Families Agenda that calls for nationalized health care, increased federal
education spending, and tax increases.[48] Representative
Denise Majette (D-GA) opposed the 2003 tax cut on the ground that some "working
families" would not be eligible to receive child tax-credit payments from
the IRS for amounts that exceeded their total income tax liability.[49]
It is perfectly fine for elected officials
to celebrate Americans who work. The problem is that many politicians
use the term "working families" only in reference to the subset of the
workforce employed in blue-collar -- particularly union -- positions. As
Representative Bernard Sanders (I-VT) stated, "when unions are strong,
all working families benefit."[50] Such rhetoric
flows from the
discredited Marxist notion that there is a "working class" struggling against
an idle and exploitative aristocracy and bourgeoisie. Indeed, the
repeated use of the term "working families" in reference to this limited
group of workers is Orwellian because it ignores reality. Millions
of American small business owners routinely put in seven-day weeks, and
professionals such as doctors, lawyers, and accountants often log 12-hour
days. How can anyone logically insist that these individuals are
not included within the ranks of working families?
"Nondiscrimination" . . . "Equal Opportunity" .
. . "Affirmative Action"
Contractors and institutions that receive
federal funds are required to include "equal opportunity" clauses in their
contracts with the government.[51] This
sounds quite reasonable until one considers the government's Orwellian
definition of equal opportunity. According to the Department of Labor, "equal
opportunity . . . requires . . . affirmative action." Thus,
businesses are responsible for developing a "utilization analysis" and
hiring based upon "the presence of minorities and women having requisite
skills in an area in which the contractor can reasonable [sic] recruit."[52] The
non-Orwellian term for such a policy is "quota."
The Department of Labor claims that the numerical
goals do not create set-asides or seek to achieve proportional representation.[53] Yet
the agency also states that it uses the most current census data to determine
the availability of women or minorities for job openings -- with availability
determined by their proportion of the population.[54] Although
the government chooses not to call its system a quota, enforcement is based
on numbers alone: "the goal-setting process in affirmative action
planning is used to target and measure the effectiveness of affirmative
action efforts."[55]
The government's "nondiscrimination" policies
appear to be motivated by the same logic as the U.S. Supreme Court's Orwellian
plurality opinion in the seminal Bakke case: "In order to get beyond racism, we must first
take account of race . . . . And in order to treat some persons equally,
we must treat them differently."[56] Or,
as Orwell put it in Animal Farm: "All animals are created equal, but some animals are
more equal than others."
Conclusion
The
purpose of this Issue Brief is to provoke thought and discussion about
some of the major defects afflicting our political discourse. This
paper does not claim that America has become the totalitarian state presented
in 1984, but rather cautions that we have taken several steps down that road.[57]
The Orwellian language of big government
turns citizens into subjects. It lulls us into cheerfully accepting
ever-increasing taxes while encouraging our dependence on an entrenched
and growing bureaucracy overseen by career politicians. Unlike our
ancestors who wanted to be left alone, we can imagine nothing worse than
not having access to the benevolent hand of the managerial state:
Unlike the Communist garrison-state or the Italian fascist 'total
state,' the managerial state succeeds by denying that it exercises power
. . . . Managerial rule has consistently presented itself as collectively
administered assistance. Rhetorically and propagandistically, it
has been the helpmate of individuals set adrift in the industrial world,
and administrators have claimed to enjoy 'democratic' support because they
have updated liberalism and infused it with social concern. [58]
It may be naïve to hope that our leaders
will say what they mean and mean what they say.
Yet it is vitally important for citizens
in a free society to think critically about what they hear and read from
politicians, pundits, and the press. As Orwell wrote, "the slovenliness
of our language makes it easier for us to have foolish thoughts."[59]
About the Author
Mark Schmidt has served as Director of
Programs for the National Taxpayers Union Foundation.
Notes
[1] George
Orwell, 1984, (New York: Knopf, 1992).
[2] George
Orwell, "Politics and the English Language," George Orwell: A Collection
of Essays, (New York: Harvest/HBJ,
1981), p. 166.
[3] The
first two slogans were used by the Clinton/Gore campaign and the latter two
by the Bush/Cheney campaign.
[4] Mark Schmidt, "Income
Tax Withholding: Why 'First Dibs' for Uncle Sam Leaves Taxpayers Finishing
Last," National Taxpayers Union Policy Paper #106, July 29, 2002.
[5] Internal
Revenue Service, "Why Do I Have to Pay Taxes?," Publication 2105, www.irs.gov.
[6] See, e.g., Press Release,
Representative Jan Schakowsky (D-IL), "Schakowsky
Joins Illinois Fair Taxes for All Coalition to Warn Against Latest Bush
Tax and Budget Proposals," February 28, 2003, http://www.house.gov/
schakowsky/press2003/pr02_28_2003iltaxes.html; Press
Release, Representative Maxine Waters (D-CA), "President Bush: Just Stop
It!," January 13, 2003, http://www.house.gov/waters/pr011303.htm; Press
Release, Senator Tom Daschle (D-SD), "Daschle Denounces White House's Secret
Plan to Raise Taxes on Middle-and Lower-Income Working Families," December
16, 2002, http://
daschle.senate.gov/~daschle/pressroom/releases/02/12/2002C16944.html.
[7] Scott
A. Hodge & J. Scott Moody, "The Growing Class of Americans Who Pay No
Income Taxes," The Tax Foundation, April 14, 2004, http://www.taxfoundation.org/ff/
zerotaxfilers.html. The
authors note that the 2001 tax cut increased the number of tax filers with
zero net liability from 29 million to 44 million between 2000 and 2004.
[8] U.S. Census Bureau, Statistical
Abstract of the United States: 2002 (122nd Edition), No. 465, "Federal Individual
Income Tax Returns with Adjusted Gross Income (AGI) -- Summary: 1998 and
1999." See also U.S. Senate Joint Economic Committee, "Who Pays the
Income Tax?," April 14, 2004, http://jec.senate.gov/ .
[12] Dan Balz, "Lieberman Urges Congress
to Delay Future Tax Cuts," The Washington Post,
May 21, 2002, p. A6.
[13] Democratic Policy Committee, "H.R.
2143, Permanent Repeal of the Estate Tax," Floor Update,
June 6, 2002.
[16] Yuval Levin, "The Logic of Tax Cuts,"
Liberzine.com, February 19, 2001.
[17] Larry Elder, "Nothing Is Certain but
Taxes and Taxes," Daily Breeze (Torrance, CA), April 21, 2002.
[19] According to the
Congressional Record,
Members of Congress used the terms "fiscal responsibility," "fiscally responsible," "fiscal
irresponsibility," and "fiscally irresponsible" a total of 560 times during
2001. Jeff Dircksen, "The First Session of the 107th Congress:
Discord on Priorities, Harmony on Spending," National Taxpayers
Union Foundation Policy Paper #137,
August 29, 2002.
[20] Editorial, "The GOP's Tax Twins," The
Wall Street Journal, April 10, 2003; Demian Brady, "Don't Be Fooled by
the Deficit Hawks," National Taxpayers Union Foundation Issue
Brief #144, April 1, 2003.
[21] John Berthoud, "Opponents of Marriage
Penalty Relief: What's Their Real Agenda?," National Taxpayers Union Foundation
Issue Brief #147, May 3, 2004.
[24] George Will, "A Matter of Appearances,"
The
Washington Post, March 10, 2002, p. B9.
[25] Michael
Kelly, "McCain-Feingold's Fatal Flaws," The Washington Post, April 5, 2001, p. A27.
[27] McConnell v. Federal Election Commission,
124 S. Ct. 619, 645 (2003).
[28] Id. at 742 (Kennedy, J., dissenting).
[32] Paul J. Gessing, "Secure Economic Growth
Tomorrow by Freezing the Budget Today," National Taxpayers Union Foundation
Issue Brief #146, March 9, 2004. See also, e.g., Ivan Eland, "The U.S. Military: Overextended
Overseas," Cato
Institute, July 24, 1998, www.cato.org/dailys/7-24-98.html.
[33] Cited in Gessing, "Secure Economic
Growth Tomorrow by Freezing the Budget Today."
[34] Cited in Jeffrey Chamberlin, "Comparisons
of U.S. and Foreign Military Spending: Data from Selected Public Sources, Congressional
Research Service Report for Congress,
January 28, 2004.
[35] Eric V. Schlecht, "Social Spending
Trumps Troops at Pentagon," National Taxpayers Union Issue Brief #108,
October 11, 2000.
[37] "Open borders for terrorists means
a police state for citizens." Paul Craig Roberts, "A War On Terror or On
Citizens?," The Washington Times, July 23, 2002, p. A17.
[39] Brian M. Riedl, "Most New Spending
Since 2001 Unrelated to the War on Terrorism," Heritage Foundation Backgrounder
#1703, November 13, 2003.
[40] David E. Rosenbaum, "Since Sept. 11,
Lobbyists Put Old Pleas in New Packages," The New York Times,
December 3, 2001, p. B1.
[41] Tom McClusky, "The First Session of
the 107th Congress: Brave New World, Same Old Congress?" National
Taxpayers Union Foundation Policy Paper #136,
June 11, 2002.
[43] Conservatives such as Senator Barry
Goldwater (R-AZ) refused to water down their message. Goldwater's tag
line in the 1964 Presidential race reflected his unwavering commitment to
principle: "In your heart, you know he's right."
[44] "The percentage of noncitizens in Federal
prisons has increased to more than a quarter of the Federal prison population. Most
are illegal aliens, half of them convicted of drug dealing and drug trafficking." See "Illegal Aliens in
the United States," Hearing Before
the Subcommittee on Immigration and Claims of the Committee on the Judiciary,
U.S. House of Representatives, 106th Cong, 1st Sess.,
March 18, 1999 (Statement of Chairman Smith).
[46] Representative Major Owens (D-NY),
Speech, "American Working Families Bear the Burden of the Iraq Blunder," September
30, 2003, www.house.gov.
[47] "Executive Summary of The United States
Health Insurance Act (H.R. 676)," Physicians for a National Health Program, www.pnhp.org. Although
the group provides a $1.86 trillion cost estimate for the bill, NTUF's BillTally
program calculated its net cost at $1.5 trillion.
[49] United States House of Representatives,
Committee on Government Reform -- Minority Staff, "Tax Analysis for Rep. Denise
L. Majette: Thousands of Working Families in Georgia's 4th Congressional
District Will Not Benefit from the Increase in the Child Tax Credit," June
2003, http://www.house.gov/majette/pdfs/
child_tax_credit_report.pdf.
[55] "Facts on Executive Order 11246."
[56] Regents of the Univ. of Cal. v. Bakke,
438 U.S. 265, 407 (1978) (Blackmun, J., concurring).
[57] The parallels
between 1984 and contemporary America
are quite disconcerting. In 1984,
the government conducted open-ended wars in far-off theaters, watched over
citizens through omnipresent telescreens, and kept the people distracted
from these serious issues by sponsoring a lottery. Currently, America
is waging a vaguely-defined War on Terror that could keep American troops
mired abroad for a generation -- while leading to a crackdown on liberty at
home. Authorities in several cities, such as Chicago, Washington, DC,
and New York, have installed video surveillance cameras to constantly scan
the sidewalks for wrongdoing and to issue automated traffic citations. Thirty-eight
states sponsor lotteries, government monopolies which encourage low-income,
poorly-educated individuals to gamble for their shot at millions rather than
invest.
[58] Paul Edward
Gottfried, After Liberalism: Mass Democracy in the Managerial State, (New Jersey: Princeton
University Press, 1999), p.
141.
[59] Orwell, "Politics
and the English Language," p. 166.
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