May 14, 2004

LYING AS A VOCATION:

The bankrupt culture of lies (Melanie Philips, Jewish Chronicle, 14 May 2004)

For the past two decades or more, post-modernism has written the very concept of truth out of our culture’’s philosophical script. Objective reality was replaced by ‘‘truth-for-me’’ as everything was reduced to a matter of personal opinion.

In journalism, this was translated into the view that, since all journalists had views, the pursuit of objectivity was a dishonest pretence and should be abandoned for the ‘‘journalism of attachment’’ ——more vulgarly known as twisting the facts to fit a prejudice. This doctrine first shot to prominence during the war in the Balkans, when journalists justified inventing descriptions, characters and quotes on the grounds that these reflected a ‘‘broader truth’’. So broad, in short, that it was a lie.

Only this week, I heard an academic dismiss concerns about a dodgy educational initiative for schools by saying: ‘‘But everything [ital ‘‘everything’’] is propaganda’’. The consequences of such contempt for truth is that propaganda based on lies is accepted as fact, if it accords with prevailing prejudices. Both Israel and the US in Iraq are victims of this phenomenon, with public opinion manipulated by a culture of pathological delusion in which lies, distortion and prejudice are substituted for facts, balance and rationality.

Both the Iraq war and Israel are routinely presented in the worst possible light and events misrepresented, distorted or fabricated to fit. The outcome is a moral and intellectual inversion, in which those defending free societies are presented as even more diabolical than the tyrannies attacking them.

In the Guardian this week Richard Overy, a history professor at London university, likened the coalition soldiers in Iraq to the Nazi Wehrmacht. Moreover, he said that the term ‘‘terrorist’’ had been used by the Nazis to demonise resistance movements throughout occupied Europe. Thus he implied that President George Bush was like the Nazis, while Islamic terrorists were akin to the wartime resistance.

In similar vein Peter Oborne, the political editor of the Spectator, wrote in the London Evening Standard of the ‘‘evil and bestial occupation of Iraq’’ and said: ‘‘America under Bush is a rogue state, no longer fit to belong to the community of nations, and it needs to be contained’’.

These outbursts were prompted by the appalling pictures of ill-treatment meted out to Iraqi prisoners by US forces. Of course, this was disgusting, indefensible behaviour which has besmirched the US army and shamed America. But it was the unspeakable beheading of Nick Berg which was the real barbarism. And to compare the Americans to the Nazis and ascribe heroism to terrorists bespeaks a moral and intellectual bankruptcy which would be astounding in anyone, let alone a professor of history.

Yes, many very serious mistakes have been made by the Americans in Iraq, whose fate remains perilously uncertain and where insurgency still poses a desperate threat. But to call the occupation ‘‘bestial and evil’’ when its aims were principled, it has already delivered tranquillity, growing prosperity and a return of civil society in much of the country, and is welcomed by most Iraqis as a deliverance from the true bestiality and evil of Saddam’’s regime, amounts to distortion of a high order. [...]

For in a culture of lies, it is the real forces of evil and bestiality which are always the winner.


Posted by Peter Burnet at May 14, 2004 8:53 AM
Comments

Travesty though it all is, I am inclined to be happy with (not necessarily "agree with", but be happy with) the idea that "America, as a rogue state, must be contained".

Well, GET CONTAINING! That means surrounding us with forces that will contain us, etc. And if you do that, those forces will also not only be potentially useful to bring order elsewhere in the world, but in order to "contain" the US, they will HAVE to keep order elsewhere, and thus be responsible for same. Badda bim.

So get to it!

Yeah right. More typical bullshyte and bloviation from the Euro-Left. Talk, meet, piss, bitch, moan, scream, intellectualize.... but when push comes to shove, they flat out don't have the balls to do a damn thing in this world other than whine.

Posted by: Andrew X at May 14, 2004 10:08 AM

I'm disappointed by the remarks by Overy. He's among my favourite historians and you'd think someone who knew so much about how dictators can warp a society would appreciate that reforming Iraq was never going to be easy, no matter what tone coalition leaders employed in their rhetoric.

Posted by: M Ali Choudhury at May 14, 2004 12:06 PM

I wouldn't say that trope began as recently as the Balkan to-do. It was buzz in the 1960s ('everything is political') and in my early days of newspapering, a lot of heated talk over beer concerned what 'objectivity' in reporting meant.

We mere provincials, however, never questioned that there were 'objective' facts to be reported. We were just skeptical about which process gave access to them.

It may have been different in the big leagues.

Posted by: Harry Eagar at May 14, 2004 2:38 PM

Nice turn of phrase, Harry. I like that.

Posted by: John Barrett Jr. at May 14, 2004 10:07 PM
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