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Culture War Roundup for the week of October 24, 2022

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Well the results for 2022 have just been released and people who answered "not at all" for trust in mass media is at 38%.

What are those 38% going to do about this though? Vote for a dissident candidate in the presidential election? That was already tried before, with zero results. If they voice their views openly, they'll get dismissed as QAnon cultists, potential terrorists, Nazis etc. They may get doxxed, their bank account frozen etc., and they know it. This is what it means to be ruled over by your enemies. And yet you claim that "progressives are running scared"?

What are those 38% going to do about this though?

What makes you think something has to be done? Why concern yourself with the enemy's labels? Being "ruled", by your enemies or otherwise is a state of mind.

What makes you think something has to be done?

That having trustworthy mass media available to you is a self-evident normal human desire in a modern civilized society.

Being "ruled", by your enemies or otherwise is a state of mind.

That's what Winston Smith thought. He was wrong.

That's what Winston Smith thought. He was wrong.

Tell me that you completely missed the point of 1984 without using those words.

And yet to the people of only two generations ago this would not have seemed all-important, because they were not attempting to alter history. They were governed by private loyalties which they did not question. What mattered were individual relationships, and a completely helpless gesture, an embrace, a tear, a word spoken to a dying man, could have value in itself. The proles, it suddenly occurred to him, had remained in this condition. They were not loyal to a party or a country or an idea, they were loyal to one another. For the first time in his life he did not despise the proles or think of them merely as an inert force which would one day spring to life and regenerate the world. The proles had stayed human. They had not become hardened inside. They had held on to the primitive emotions which he himself had to re-learn by conscious effort.

Internal vs external loci of control, where does yours lie?

As long as we're not disembodied beings of pure thought -- and perhaps even if we are -- we have an external locus of control. That was the lesson of Miniluv and Room 101. Maybe they can put rats on your face. Maybe they'll turn your family against you, as with the story of vaccine-fanaticism elsethread. Maybe they'll take your children away if you don't submit. Maybe they'll just shun you and require everyone else to shun you too. Maybe you think you can remain free within your own mind while outwardly submitting, but I suggest you can't -- once they've got you by the balls, your heart and mind will follow.

As long as we're not disembodied beings of pure thought -- and perhaps even if we are -- we have an external locus of control.

Yoda: ...and that is why you fail.

Winston Smith is weak, he craves comfort and approval, and he lacks those "primitive emotions" and "helpless gestures", that would otherwise ground him. He betrays Julia, not because of some some law of nature but because that is who Winston is. He was always a creature of the party. He's not a character you're supposed to emulate, or aspire to. He's a character you're supposed to feel sorry for. He's an answer to the question of "how does this happen?"

A man who can not control himself will inevitably be controlled by another.

Have you never had anything for which you were prepared to lose everything?

Winston is weak, and he thought he was strong. Julia, too, was weak. But everyone is; everyone can be broken. Room 101 has an answer for everyone.

Have you never had anything for which you were prepared to lose everything?

How would I ever know, without actually losing everything? Winston thought he did, until he cried out "Do it to Julia!"

everyone can be broken. Room 101 has an answer for everyone.

You tell yourself that to salve your own ego, much as Winston did, but does it?

I get the impression that you completely missed and/or glossed over a good chunk of the book.

I think O'Brien says this pretty explicitly. Of course O'Brien is a Party torturer, and thus perhaps not entirely objective. But there's no indication in the book that he's at all wrong. 1984 is a pretty heavy black pill.

Orwell's whole message was that there's always something that will break you and sweep all your bluster and stoicism away. What's in the room is different for every person, but it will always be there. And the total state will find it regardless of cost, because by its nature it has to dominate and destroy the individual.

If you want to die free with your ideals unbroken, you'd better have saved a hand grenade for when the time comes.

You and I must have read very different versions of 1984 then. Winston's' resolve breaks because it was brittle, shallow, and never firmly held to begin with. Orwell's message is not that the party and O'Brien are right, its don't be like Winston. Don't fall into that trap. Don't let go of your humanity.

The man was a communist: humans being powerless toys of historical forces is his entire thing. It was a consistent message in his books from Coming Up For Air to Keep The Aspidistra Flying. None of his men are supermen, despite being stronger willed and more thoughtful than they give themselves credit for, and none of them win against the forces they struggle against because for a communist no individual can. Only the revolution he was growing more disillusioned with after every betrayal.

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