IN MY OPINION
A new course on 'staying the course'
BY LEONARD PITTS JR.
lpitts@MiamiHerald.com
'The Party said that Oceania had never been in alliance with Eurasia. He,
Winston Smith, knew that Oceania had been in alliance with Eurasia as short
a time as four years ago. But where did that knowledge exist? Only in his
own consciousness, which in any case must soon be annihilated. And if all
others accepted the lie which the Party imposed -- if all records told the
same tale -- then the lie passed into history and became truth. `Who
controls the past,' ran the Party slogan, 'controls the future: who controls
the present controls the past.' '' -- from 1984 by George Orwell
''I'm here to tell you we're going to stay the course.'' -- George W. Bush,
Nov. 28, 2003
``. . . We've got to stay the course, and we will stay the course . . .'' --
George W. Bush, April 5, 2004
''The United States of America will stay the course . . .'' -- George W.
Bush, Nov. 21, 2004
''We will stay the course; we will complete the job in Iraq.'' -- George W.
Bush, Aug. 4, 2005
''We will stay the course; we will help this young Iraqi democracy
succeed.'' -- George W. Bush, Aug. 31, 2006
``Listen, we've never been stay the course . . .'' -- George W. Bush, Oct.
22, 2006
Ahem.
''Orwellian'' is a word you toss out to prove you stayed awake in freshman
English. Often, it is used to evoke a world in which all people are always
under surveillance, as was the case in the totalitarian state George Orwell
depicted in 1984, his 1949 masterpiece. But as you know if you read the
book, surveillance wasn't the most chilling aspect of the world Orwell
foresaw.
No, the thing about that world that made your skin creep on your bones was
the shameless intellectual dishonesty of its leaders, the brazen way they
savaged objective truth and dared anyone to call them on it. Nobody did. The
people simply accepted what they were told.
In the world Orwell invented, words had no objective meaning beyond that
assigned to them by the Party, whose slogans, not incidentally, were, ''War
is Peace,'' ''Freedom is Slavery'' and ''Ignorance is Strength.'' In that
world, there was no past -- or rather, the past was what the leaders said it
was, and it was a waste of time to check for yourself, because all books,
newspapers and other records were constantly being updated to reflect
whatever the new reality was.
Thus, ''Oceania had never been in alliance with Eurasia.'' Much as we now
learn that the Bush administration's policy toward Iraq has ''never been
stay the course.'' And never mind that the president and his henchmen have
spent three years pounding that phrase like nails into the public
consciousness.
''Stay the course'' doesn't work anymore, not with most of the nation united
against the war, so the White House announced last week that the phrase
would no longer be used. That's their prerogative. But it's quite a leap
from won't be used to never has been used.
So did we dream these last three years? Is ''stay the course'' just
something we mumbled in our collective sleep as we twisted in our collective
sheets? Or do we learn something here about the administration's level of
respect for our collective intelligence?
It is not, by now, surprising that the president and his surrogates rewrite
the past. We've seen that before, after all. Seen it with John Kerry the war
hero ''traitor,'' with John Murtha the Marine ''coward.'' Saw it with WMD,
which, it turned out, were not the reason we invaded Iraq. (Where'd we ever
get that idea?) What's painful, though, is that we see it so quietly, see
it, as the citizens of 1984 did, with apparent acceptance.
The truth is being stolen right before our eyes. Yet there are no mass
demonstrations at the executive mansion. There are not a million headlines
saying, ``Wait Just A Bleeping Minute!''
''We've never been stay the course,'' he says. Oh, we say.
To which I can only add that war is peace, freedom is slavery, ignorance is
strength. And Orwell was off by only 22 years.