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July 19th, 2025

Insight

1984 in 2024: Orwell Was Right

 Dan McCarthy

By Dan McCarthy

Published June 11, 2024

1984 in 2024: Orwell Was Right

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Americans still read George Orwell's "Nineteen Eighty-Four," 75 years after it was first published on June 8, 1949.

At the time, the year 1984 was far in the future; now it's 40 years in the past.

Yet our present feels more than ever like Orwell's dystopia.

The novel is set on Airstrip One, a totalitarian version of what is today Britain.

Its protagonist is Winston Smith, a censor working in the Ministry of Truth.

His job is to alter historical records to conform to whatever the ruling party now decrees.

He rewrites history and the very documents on which historians rely.

Reality is whatever the Party says it is; who could prove otherwise?

Surveillance is inescapable: every screen watches the people who watch it.

Even thinking the wrong thoughts is a crime, though the authorities do everything in their power to prevent thoughtcrime before it happens by mutilating language itself.

"We're destroying words — scores of them, hundreds of them, every day," boasts one of Winston's colleagues who's working on the latest Newspeak dictionary.

There will be no more words like "excellent" or "bad," only "doubleplusgood" or "ungood," variations on a single base term.

The 1984 of Orwell's imagination resembled the Soviet Union of his lifetime in many ways.

But he intended the book as a warning about what could happen in the West, too.

The Soviet Union is long gone, yet much of what Orwell feared is coming to pass in the free world today, not under a totalitarian dictatorship but through the pervasive power of politically correct ideology.

"Nineteen Eighty-Four" presents a simple picture of a state run by one party.

We have competing parties in government, but in effect one ideological party dominates our schools, our media and the federal bureaucracy, as well as much of corporate America — particularly Human Resources departments.

And what does the party do?

It destroys words, alters books and documents, surveilles us all and polices opinion.

When a dissenter is made to disappear in "Nineteen Eighty-Four," he's "vaporized."

Our Newspeak word for that today is "canceled."

If we're better off because the Thought Police of 2024 don't employ torture, as the Ministry of Love does in "Nineteen Eighty-Four," we're also worse off in one way:

We have no excuse. We aren't violently coerced into obedience; we're simply nudged, nagged and incentivized into going along with insanity.

A Supreme Court nominee doesn't know what the word "woman" means; well, how could she, if the Newspeak dictionary hasn't been perfected yet?

The Canadian Cancer Society can't use the terms "cervix" or "vagina"; instead it's "front hole."

When someone like Bruce Jenner changes sex, a Winston Smith in 2024 amends birth certificates and encyclopedias to say Jenner was always a woman.

The modern Winston also rewrites novels by Roald Dahl and Ian Fleming to reflect today's political sensitivities — not under orders from the government but in compliance with self-censoring publishers and copyright holders.

In the novel, the Ministry of Plenty proclaims nothing but good news about the economy, even as chocolate rations are reduced.

Here and now, economists in step with the party flock to op-ed pages and social media to insist that America is prospering, even as inflation reduces what every shopper can buy at the grocery stores.

And of course, surveillance is everywhere in 2024, too; only the screens that watch us are the ones we carry in our pockets.

Sometimes there's even a totalitarian state on the other side of the screen, if the app you're using happens to be TikTok.

Re-reading "Nineteen Eighty-Four" in 2024 casts new light on our world in other ways, too.

The sloganeering and mindless rage of the Two Minutes' Hate, directed against a Jew in Orwell's novel — the Party's great subversive enemy, Emmanuel Goldstein — echo the hatred directed at Jews on many college campuses and in other bastions of the party in America and Europe today.

In the book, the Party is an elite; most of society consists of "proles" who are politically disempowered but otherwise, to a surprising extent, left alone — and lonely:

The Party keeps them docile with pornography.

Within the Party, on the other hand, a strict code of sexual regulation is observed, encouraged by the Anti-Sex League.

Unfettered sexual attraction and strong emotional ties between men and women are subversive of Party discipline, or even a spur to rebellion, as Winston discovers.

In Orwellian America, pornography is ubiquitous, but men and women have been taught to be suspicious of each other.

Unlike in "Nineteen Eighty-Four," however, the party we live under is not all-powerful.

It can be stopped, if we stop accepting its lies — if, after 75 years, we heed Orwell.

(COMMENT, BELOW)

Previously:
06/04/24: State that's long eluded GOP turns toward Trump
05/21/24: Trump's Sun Belt Hopes and Rust Belt Needs
05/14/24: What Trump Sees in Doug Burgum
05/07/24: The Vietnam Era Never Ended for Biden's Party
05/06/24: Nationalists of the World, Unite?
04/25/24: Foreign Policy Splits
04/16/24: How pro-lifers stand to lose everything gained in overturning Roe
04/02/24: PBS Misremembers William F. Buckley Jr.
04/02/24: Who Wants to Be House Speaker?
03/26/24: Trump Hunts for a VP Close to Home
03/19/24: Princess Kate and Democracy's Discontents
03/12/24: Can Biden Buy the Voters?
03/05/24: Veepstakes Give Trump an Edge
02/20/24: Do Americans Trust Either Party?
02/13/24: Vladimir Putin -- A Passive Aggressor
01/23/24: Will 'Lawfare' Take Trump Off the Ballot?
01/16/24: Will Africa Save America?
01/09/24:'The Sopranos' at 25: A new world tragedy
01/02/24: Trump, Biden and a Fight for the Heart
12/12/23: What Happened to Ron DeSantis?
12/12/23: Biden Looks Doomed -- But Is He?
12/05/23: A Test for Trump and His Rivals
11/21/23: When Inequality Is Fatal for Men
11/14/23: Nevermind, The Battle's Over
11/07/23: War in the Dem Party -- and at the Opera
10/24/23: Israel's Lesson for 2024: A Lib Crackup
10/17/23: Libs' Dilemma: Immigration or Israel?
10/10/23: Why Bidenflation Defines Bidenomics
10/03/23: Will Gavin Newsom Copy Trump?
09/26/23: Biden's a Loser -- but Dems Can't Ditch Him
09/19/23: Do Sex Scandals Matter?
09/12/23: Cornel West Spells Doom for Biden
09/05/23: What Trump Does for Democracy
08/2/23: Ramaswamy: A Trump Versus Trump?
08/22/23: Take 'Rich Men North of Richmond' Seriously
08/16/23: How America Kills Its Own
08/08/23: The Biden Pardon That Can Spare America
08/01/23: Harding, a consevative for the ages
07/25/23: Demography Destiny, for Us and China
07/18/23: The Frontrunner Who Looks Like a Loser Is Biden
07/11/23: Britain's Bad Example for American Conservatives
07/05/23: Could We Still Win a Revolutionary War?
06/27/23: Civilizations Clash -- in Ukraine and at Home
06/20/23: China Comes for the Caribbean
06/13/23: Fertility, Family and Bio-Socialism
06/06/23: From American Dream to Orwell's Nightmare
05/23/23: Ukraine war is an existential struggle --- for the West
05/23/23: Learn the Right Midterm Lessons -- or Lose in 2024
05/16/23: Feinstein Today Is Biden Tomorrow
05/09/23: Trump, DeSantis and Political Courtship
05/02/23: RFK Jr.'s Threat to Biden
04/25/23: Biden's Lost Generation
04/25/23: Who's In Charge of Clarence Thomas?
04/11/23: Beyond AI, Our Cyborg Future
04/04/23: 2024: 3 Leaders, 1 Way to Win
03/28/23: Climate Science Makes a Bad Religion
03/21/23: All the Conspiracy That's Fit to Print

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