Sarah Palin tweeted, after Obama’s Iraq speech, something to the effect that ‘u should get out ur old Orwell books.’ She was implying, I guess, that Obama was trying to steal Bush’s credit for the invasion of Iraq.
I, for one, am happy to give Bush credit for Iraq. If Obama was trying to claim credit for anyone else, I think it was mainly U.S. troops and commanders.
But my real interest in Palin’s tweet–aside from the “u’s” and “ur’s” (how can someone make any claim to thoughtfulness with “u’s” and “ur’s”?)–is the mention of Orwell.
On a Labor Day weekend, the Orwellian phrase which most comes to my mind is the modified commandment from the Stalinist-type commune satirized in Animal Farm, “All animals are equal but some animals are more equal than others.”
We live in a society that is increasingly stratified. While equality is touted, and each human life is (on a speechifying level) deemed equally priceless, the fact is that some people’s lives are valued exponentially much more highly than others. Some people’s work, for example, is deemed to be worth millions, others less than minimum wage. These values don’t seem to always correlate to talent, effort, difficulty==sometimes they simply arise from the luck of being in a job that generates cash.
The ability of certain people to make stupefyingly large amounts of money in our culture seems to be viewed by Palin and other Tea Party types as a sign of our freedom. But it’s unclear to me that the rank and file American, especially those angered by what they view as handouts to the poor and underserving, fully understands the level of wealth of some in this country and the increasing disparity between classes. It’s also unclear whether the damage such disparity inflicts on both a society and an economy has been much thought through. (Both Robert Reich and Bob Herbert have interesting articles about this in the last day’s NY Times.)
Another new mantra appears to be “Taxes Bad–Any Business Good”. People seem to forget that taxes fund street lights, firemen, schools, police, our national defense–all those troops everyone wants to support–parks, clean food, clean water, help for the handicapped, Social security, Medicare; taxes also give people access to such services. And, of course, a progressive tax system is one means of redressing some of the issues of wage and access imbalance, i.e. the differences between the equal and more equal. But woe (or should I spell it, WO) to any politician who dares mention such an idea – U R risking instant Orwellization. (Or worse.)

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