July 12, 2005
Curse Of The Language Corrupters
By
Michelle Malkin
Across the pond, the British
Broadcasting Corporation is taking
well-deserved lumps for whitewashing the 7/7
terrorist attacks in London. Editors have reportedly
expunged the word
"terrorist" from the BBC website and substituted
the sanitized "bomber" to describe the killers.
Next:
"Burglars" will be "takers."
"Child molesters" will be "ticklers." "Rapists"
will be "unplanned lovers."
High-minded BBC guidelines admonish
employees against using words like "terrorist" that
"carry emotional or value judgments." Yet, employing
a reporter, Barbara Plett, who told viewers she
bawled her eyes out when an ailing
Yasser Arafat was whisked off to France in
November 2004, is model objectivity.
But bashing the terror-coddling BBC
is too easy. Let us turn to our own language corrupters.
Nearly four years after the
9/11 attacks, the White House and the press still
use the empty phrase "War on Terror" to describe the
global battle against radical Islamist throat-slitters,
suicide bombers and hijackers who incinerate
children on their way to Disneyland. And in the wake
of the
London terrorist attacks, we Americans continue to
bow to an unwritten editorial policy of invoking
sanitized phrases and bloodless bluster as a substitute
for concrete action.
How many times have you heard some
cable TV talking head or political hack urging us to be
on "heightened alert"—without having the courage to
spell out exactly what that means?
How many times has this been
followed by a furrowed-brow precaution from some civil
rights lawyer or human rights activist urging us to
avoid an "anti-Muslim backlash"?
I'd have an easier time cheering
the "We will not yield" and "We are not afraid"
sloganeering if just one of our tough talkers in
Washington would get brutally specific about how they
will show vigilance, courage, alertness and refusal to
yield to radical Islamic terror. Allow me:
It's precisely these kinds of
national security profiling and targeted immigration
enforcement measures that obstructionists characterize
as an "anti-Muslim backlash," which is why no one
will talk about them despite all the "heightened
alert" posturing.
In London, "terrorists" are
"bombers." In the U.S.,
citizen watchdogs are "vigilantes."
The Ministry of Truth would be
pleased.
Michelle Malkin [email
her] is author of
Invasion: How America Still Welcomes Terrorists,
Criminals, and Other Foreign Menaces to Our Shores.
Click
here for Peter Brimelow’s review. Click
here for Michelle Malkin's website.
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