Lost in Doublethink

El_Smacko

It Wandered In From the Wastes
Doublethink is a term coined by author George Orwell in his book 1984. In the book (written in the '40s) The world has been divided into 3 massive empires, EastAsia, WestAsia, and Oceana. Oceania is under the rule of The Party, led by the likely fictional "Big Brother", whos face is plastered on nearly every wall and street corner.

One of the great horrors presented in the dystopic society in the book is "doublethink". The ability of the population, trained from birth to do so, to accept the blatant hypocrisy that the party operates. War is Peace, Freedom is Slavery, Ignorance is Strength. This is the motto of the party, symbolic of everything it does. When an alliance is switched, all the newspapers and speeches are re-written to fit it. In one part of the book, Big Brother announces in increase in chocolate rations from 25%-30%, then the next day everything is re-written to announce an increase from 20%-25%.

Of course, the loyal population accepts this as truth. They KNOW that the chocolate rations havn't even changed, but they accept what they are told as truth and dismiss reality as fantasy. The Party, themselves believing their own delusions, have total control over reality because whatever they say is seen as truth by the population. Perception becomes reality, and reality is lost in the process as the whole shebang spirals into a nightmare of psychological manipulation, until you reach the point where the only logical assumption is everyone on the planet has gone FUCKING INSANE.

Now lets take a look at, say, Christianity. Hardliner Christians insist the Bible is the literal truth of the creation of the world, despite all the scientific evidence disputing the claim, despite the truth of science they use themselves to watch Fox News and Pat Robertson on tv. This, right here, is Orwell's doublethink.

Even more baffling are the casual Christians, the normal everyday people you see in this town. People who go to school and accept evolutionary theory and the big bang, then go to church and prey to God and, as far as they are concerned, fully believe he is listening, but at the same time never expect their prayer to be answered or for any divine activity at all. Again, doublethink. These people are raised from birth to believe in God, and educated from an early age to accept atheist beliefs, and hold the two without reconciliation but also without paradox. They simply accept both as true and move on with their lives.

Of course, doublethink extends beyond religion, or any singular belief system or idea. It always has.

The world we live in now is one of constant information flow. Everyday we are bombarded with information. Murder, rape, plane crashes, terrorism, lost dogs, and everyday we sit in front of the TV, go "Oh, thats sad, how awful" then push the thought out of our heads and go see "American Pie 8: At least Eugene Levy is still in it".

This is further doublethink. We watch, but we don't feel, we accept it's real while at the same time refusing to accept it. It wont happen to us, it wasn't someone we know, it was on TV in some far away place. We only react because somewhere in our heads we know we should be sad, angry, happy, and to not react is A) A sign of something wrong, and B) Marks us different from others, and C) Might indicate we are inhuman, and therefore possibly evil. So we put up the charade of giving a shit, like the news anchor in front of us, until the next story comes up. We all do this, every day, and as a society we are doing it more and more. Changing our reality with the power of perception, of the desire to live in a world that doesn't exist. We're all going fucking nuts.

My great belief is that much of the world's problems are the result of a lack of empathy. The inability to sympathize with others, to see their problems and understand their pain, to see others as human beings. Unfortunately, this lack of empathy is growing worse. As mentioned above, we don't want to feel sad, because we're about to see a comedy. Because we have school in an hour, work tomorrow, kids to feed and lives to live and no time to waste on strangers. We have no time for empathy, so we pretend we feel it just long enough to forget what we we're empathetic about and go about our days doublethinking that hypocrisy into the back of our minds. Until we die of a stress related disease...or snap.

If your wondering why violence is increasing, why people seem less caring and more brutual, this is the reason. Our lack of empathy is spreading, our desire to block out the world increasing, and our ability t see it declining. Combined with the mental effort of denying reality and all the chemicals in our food, it's really no wonder everyone is shooting each other. School shootings? It's not videogames, it's reality. It's a bunch of teenagers coming of age a bit too soon, dealing with some hard shit, and breaking their brains in half between the conflict of reality and fantasy, until everything loses it's meaning and it the only thing to do is kill people until you feel something...or just kill yourself.

This is my great fear: This lack of empathy, this doublethink, this insanity, it's getting worse. People are getting worse, they are working harder and harder to make the world better as it gets worse. Both reality and fantasy fueling each other. I read a news report last month where a woman was stabbed in a shopping center. She lie there bleeding on the floor as customers stepped over and around her, for several minutes before someone called 9-1-1. Because of this delayed reaction, she died in hospital.

Tell me, when was the last time you really felt something? The last time you genuinely laughed, genuinely cried? Most of my laughter comes out sounding forced (because it is), or like a hiccup because I'm working to keep it in. Because I've got too much to do and too much to worry about to let control and really laugh. The last time I cried (a couple years ago) it sounded more like a donkey having an asthma attack. "What the fuck?" I asked myself, confused. Why couldn't I cry? What was this choking wheezing noise I was making? For many years I hadn't cried, I didn't want to feel genuinely sad, because that would be allowing the reality in. To put it simply: I had forgotten how to cry. I had forgotten how to let it out, how to vent my emotions and really put my issues away. I had gone just a little bit insane. I'd forgotten how to feel, what to feel. I've reached a point where I can't tell what is genuine feeling and what is fabricated, where my fantasy and reality begin and end. I've become lost in my own mind, and I need a way out.

We all are. I don't know who or what to blame, it's not TV at fault, or chemicals, or our education. Not really. It's all of these things, but none of them. It's society, but it's not society's fault. It's each and every one of us, but not all of us. We can't lay the blame on any one thing, but it is there, for their is no effect without cause. I don't have answers. All I do know is that something needs to be done, someone needs to wise up and clue in, before reality takes a permanent vacation.

George A. Romero is best known for writing and directing a quadrilogy of horror films. Night of the Living Dead, Dawn of the Dead, Day of the Dead, and Land of the Dead. In each film, and especially in Dawn of the Dead, it is insuinated that the difference between the living humans and the mindless zombies is alot smaller then comfortable, almost invisible. If we keep going the way we're going, the line will disappear, and we might as well be the senseless, mindless shambling corpses from a 70's B movie.

It's September15th, 2007, 1:01 AM, Pacific Time, in [Location] . I am [Insert Name Here], born [Then]. This is all I can be certain is true.



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I posted this on my Facebook today. I don't know why I wrote it, but I felt compelled to. I figured you guys might dig it.
 
To call our present stance doublethink is exaggerating. As humans we possess empathy and I think I can hazard a guess it has developed in the 20th century, with progress in human rights, equality and awareness, at least in the west.

I disagree with the (insulting) statement that we're going fucking nuts. A regular citizen is not in any way related to the wrongs that are daily transmitted on the TV and thus he doesn't care, because he has problems of his own.

There's also the issue of manipulation. The media pick the most brutal and "attractive" pieces of information to transmit to captivate the viewer. You won't be told about positive developments of your country, it's economy growing, criminal rates falling down, closer ties estabilished with neighbouring countries.

No, you will be fed information about stabbing and rape in a backwater village somewhere on the end of the world. While this is tragic, it transmits the message of fear.

This message doesn't correspond with what I see and know.

Even Poland, as fucked up as the governments are, is growing, safer and stronger. Cleaner and better kept.

This really doesn't correspond with the "world as a hellhole" view propagated by the media and, unfortunately, you.
 
I agree with mikael for the most part.

fear mongering and sensationalism are age old money making processes and manipulation processes, but they are in sharp contrast with reality and the lives many of us lead.
 
I really didn't mean to imply we had near reached the level of insanity presented in Orwell's work, I suppose I should have made that clearer. Part of the article was pointing out that the concept behind doublethink is at work in the lives of most individuals I know.

Really, though, alot of the article is very personal, dealing with my own issues regarding the treatment I received in school for alot of my childhood, possible mental illness (it runs it some of my family), and some things I've had to deal with in my life that I sincerely hope are just raging hormones coupled with hypochondria.

...And it was 1 in the morning.

Thanks for the feedback!
 
Mikael Grizzly said:
There's also the issue of manipulation. The media pick the most brutal and "attractive" pieces of information to transmit to captivate the viewer. You won't be told about positive developments of your country, it's economy growing, criminal rates falling down, closer ties estabilished with neighbouring countries.

No, you will be fed information about stabbing and rape in a backwater village somewhere on the end of the world. While this is tragic, it transmits the message of fear.
Exactly! I remember when I watched TVN, their news and information programs created a constant sense of danger.
Also, the anti-gamer crusade of censorship loving beasts is a result of media, that don't show the majority real, normal players, but some murdering psychos that are a minority.

I think that it's not only because media are seeking sensation, but also, because of the rise of interventional journalism - they are really trying to help some people, but in result they are poisoning the lives of other people.

Mikael Grizzly said:
This message doesn't correspond with what I see and know.

Even Poland, as fucked up as the governments are, is growing, safer and stronger. Cleaner and better kept.

This really doesn't correspond with the "world as a hellhole" view propagated by the media and, unfortunately, you.
I think that things like people not reacting when crime happens (such things really happen - I've seen it, I heard of it, I read about it) has more to do with people becoming accustomed to safety, peace, etc and becoming oversensitive than with lack of empathy and real feelings.
Simply, people don't magically learn to quickly react to such things - one needs to be mentally prepared or don't have a knowledge what to do. Simply - they don't react because they go into some kind of shock.
 
Sorrow said:
Exactly! I remember when I watched TVN, their news and information programs created a constant sense of danger.
Also, the anti-gamer crusade of censorship loving beasts is a result of media, that don't show the majority real, normal players, but some murdering psychos that are a minority.

Same here, although I have to say that TVN is arguably the least manipulative station of them all. As I'm studying law and precise language is a must, I tend to catch the nuances of sentence construction now.

Kinda scary come to think of it.

I think that it's not only because media are seeking sensation, but also, because of the rise of interventional journalism - they are really trying to help some people, but in result they are poisoning the lives of other people.

Agreed. It's even worse when they couple that with the fight for the viewer. Now that's armageddon.

I think that things like people not reacting when crime happens (such things really happen - I've seen it, I heard of it, I read about it) has more to do with people becoming accustomed to safety, peace, etc and becoming oversensitive than with lack of empathy and real feelings.
Simply, people don't magically learn to quickly react to such things - one needs to be mentally prepared or don't have a knowledge what to do. Simply - they don't react because they go into some kind of shock.

People don't react when there's a crowd or no one is addressed to help. It doesn't have anything to do with sense of safety, is merely about the lack of drive to help, removed by the presence of a crowd. Note how usually people don't help when there's a crowd around.
 
Mikael Grizzly said:
People don't react when there's a crowd or no one is addressed to help. It doesn't have anything to do with sense of safety, is merely about the lack of drive to help, removed by the presence of a crowd. Note how usually people don't help when there's a crowd around.
Yes. I've read that they usually think that someone else will help...
 
It doesn't have anything to do with sense of safety, is merely about the lack of drive to help, removed by the presence of a crowd.

I think there might be a misunderstanding with what he meant by that. I think some might pass the woman by because, due to the safety and comfort they're used to, they're shocked and don't know what to do. So, they just pass by. It's not so unusual, I know many people with hearts of gold who simply can't handle crisis situations.

I must reject the position that religion is an example of doublethink. It is possible to be Christian - or "spiritual" if you prefer - and also rational and mindful of science. Do I believe there is a God? Yes. Do I believe the earth is only a few thousand years old? No, of course not.
Can religion be abused, or taken to strange extremes? Yes, like anything else.
That's all I'd really like to say on that subject, since I don't want to start some half-baked argument about religion.

Society does have its problems, and I personally think much of it stems from mediocrity. Society is so afriad to dwell outside of an imaginary comfort zone that life loses its flavor and zest. Recent examples of this are the pushes towards more censorship by certain officials, or the crucifying of Jerry Lewis for uttering a slur during comedic banter.
 
prefer - and also rational and mindful of science. Do I believe there is a God? Yes. Do I believe the earth is only a few thousand years old? No, of course not.

I overgeneralized there. It wasn't an attempt to attack Christianity, just a way to make a different point (cognitive dissonance is common). Of course there are lots of Christians who hold science and religion in their mind with rational cohesion. I was simply talking of people who will talk of the bible as literal while still accepting contradictory ideologies without cohesive rationalization. People do it all the time outside religion, I just live in a pre-dominantly Christian town and it seemed to be the best way to convey the concept.

[EDIT] 100th post, woohoo!
 
I agree mainly with your point about how people lead lives that are too busy to really care about what is happening around the world; they may give a few dollars to charity now and then but really people are focused on working every day, taking care of the home/family/taxes, and then relaxing on the weekend. I think that people really need to start getting in touch with themselves, especially before they can become capable of helping others. Otherwise, people's lives seem kind of repetitive and pointless (have you heard "doin' the cockroach" by modest mouse?? great song!)

I think that may be one of the primary reasons why so many more people are meditating now (based on a TIME article I read a while ago), and although a great deal of it is due to stress, it still gives people valuable time to sit back and observe the chaos in their lives and the rapidly shifting ego (the cycles of happiness/depression in some cases that doesn't end, but is dependent on the environment). I wish people had more time for themselves...for REAL spiritual development, not just trying to get closer to god or anything like that. Like, really working on yourself so that you can control your situation. I think it is at that point in time when people will start to collaborate with one another sort of as a secondary effect (as things of material value will be less important that personal development, and people will see the true value of altruism...while that sounds a little idealistic I think people will inevitably find that co-operation beats competition and isolation (I don't mean friendly competition either)).

Its just this materialism that I feel is making the world worse and worse, particularly when one considers how the rich get richer, and the gap widens and all that. I've definately been active for a while now working on myself, because I think I realize that all the problems in my life are really due to my actions, which was actually quite the interesting revelation. Anyways, that's it...I'm sure most people agree with the negatives of materialism, but perhaps that there's no other workable system. But eventually we may be forced to work together, as is already happening due to global warming, poverty...yes. I guess that's it :wink:
 
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