Internal
Memo
by
Christopher Manion
Internal
Memo
To: Doug Feith, Mind Overlord
From: Winston/Ministry of Truth
Re: WMD (Weapons of Mind Destruction)
As
you know, our department has been, er, overwhelmed with assignments
of late. We understand your wrath and beg you not to subject us
to scorn. We toil in an unweeded garden.
In
spite of our burdens, we have achieved singular success in our "Queen
of Hearts" project. I can now assure you that, by the end of the
year, our efforts will have rehabilitated the words "imperial" and
"empire." "Imperialist," a slightly more sticky wicket, will be
cleansed by mid-2004. We are investigating certain harmonies with
Lenin, who considered imperialism to be the "highest stage of capitalism."
Our
latest success appeared in USA Today, a coincidence that
warms my heart. May I remind Your Benevolence that the very name
of this organ represents another great victory for WMD – in fact,
it was my very first project after being assigned to the Enlightenment
Suite. Everyone thinks that it was easy to manipulate the adoption
of that little logo, but I can attest to the inordinate difficulties
we had, including the ultimate insult – when that Ivy-league copy
editor leaked her famous memo, alleging that we were proposing something
"revolutionary." Of course we were – but it was none of her
damned business, the meddlesome little termagant. After all, the
removal of the periods after the letters induces the reader’s malleable
mind to forget that there were ever "states" any other than those
eternally united by our benevolent forebearer, Father Abraham.
And we ram this message home every day, Your Benevolence,
from every newsstand in the USA!
I
am indeed proud of this, my initial success (heh, heh – get it,
O Benevolent One? Initial…? Well, you can pardon me my professional
puns, we have so little time for humor here in the department any
more).
Little
humor, but great victories! As I was saying, in yesterday’s edition
of USA Today, one of our most prodigious acolytes, Max Boot,
cut straight through the chit-chat-chaff to praise imperialism –
US imperialism! and no one blinked!
His
tactic was one that our advisors found to be quite successful during
the Clinton years, although it was often wielded in a manner somewhat
lacking in delicacy: Deny, deny, deny – then, suddenly, confirm,
with a "So what?!!"
(Of
course, this tactic of sudden confirmation commingled with righteous
scorn has not always succeeded, witness our friend Bill Bennett,
who is having some trouble rescuing his vocabulary of virtue from
the usual predators just now.)
Fortunately,
our success has experienced no such Bennettian impediments! Brother
Max adopted our tried-and-true formula. First, the denial (and he
quoted His Reverence himself!! Daring stroke!):
When
asked on April 28 on al-Jazeera whether the United States was
''empire building,'' Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld reacted
as if he'd been asked whether he wears women's underwear. ''We
don't seek empires,'' he replied huffily. ''We're not imperialistic.
We never have been.''
The
denial was firm. Planted. Even swallowed. But then our wily Boot
introduced the counter-intuitive audacious assertion pattern – Louisiana,
Puerto Rico, Hawaii, Alaska, all fruits of American imperialism.
Boot slyly nudged the reader, "hey, empire ain’t all that bad" –
he even called America an "Empire of Liberty!"
I
groaned with secret satisfaction and pleasure. He did not contradict
His Reverence, he merely added nuance. Dialectical multi-dimensionality.
Superb.
Believe
me, O Benevolent One, we worked on this for months down here. As
you know, our expenses for focus groups are higher than those for
any other project in our history. But imagine our task!
On
the first day we asked the groups what came to mind when they heard
"empire."
"George
III ,,, Hitler … Stalin … Third Reich"
Can
you not see? Our work was obviously cut out for us.
It
took us weeks months, even. We worked hard to make the word sound
less strident, less dangerous, less threatening. Each of our sessions
– some of them were all-nighters! – aimed at a particular manipulation.
Here were our goals for the word "empire":
Meaningless,
so that you do not find it hard to swallow (so what if you scratch
your head?);
Familiar,
so that you find it "traditional" – remember Teddy R charging up
San Juan Hill?
Harmless,
even helpful, so that you find it salutary – you are grateful
to those who had the nasty job of re-educating all those Nazis;
Superior,
so that you begin to distrust anyone who questions its innate goodness
– especially when they mention "facts" (see our Annual Report for
2001 for this success story).
Sacrosanct
– vilify any detractors.
Frankly,
we had some stumbles. Someone blurted out that "Dritte Reich" means
"Third Empire." And we had to dream up "tough-love" when one participant
asked about our having killed 103,000 Filipinos to "liberate" them
100 years ago. We had to confuse them quite a bit here and there,
but the result was admirable. We made the term seem remote and theoretical,
then innocuous, then friendly, and, ultimately, indispensable. It’s
our established pattern.
Finally
came our patented "Verbal Rorschach." We began with the central
phrase of the desired op-ed:
"We're
going to be called an empire whatever we do. We might as well be
a successful empire."
We
then read the focus groups the same statement, substituting other
words for "empire":
"We're
going to be called a prostitute whatever we do. We might as well
be a successful prostitute." "We're going to be called an adulterer
whatever we do. We might as well be a successful adulterer."
"We're
going to be called an embezzler whatever we do. We might as well
be a successful embezzler."
"We're
going to be called a Catholic Priest child molester whatever we
do. We might as well be a successful Catholic Priest child molester."
In
every case, the focus group members experienced great discomfort
at hearing these words. Some visibly cringed.
We
then read them our target statement: "We're going to be called an
empire whatever we do. We might as well be a successful empire."
The
results, if I do say so myself, were simply stunning. No one flinched.
No one blinked. In some of the groups, we detected an increase in
the number who reached for our catered deli sandwiches during this
part of the exercise, but the sum total impact was simply breathtaking.
We
knew that "empire" was ready for the big time.
Here,
O Benevolent One, lies the secret to your success, the rule that
you have implemented throughout the department – "l’audace, toujours
l’audace!"
Never
have I so appreciated the impact of the words of our Founding Father:
"We have nothing to fear but fear itself!" Max leapt boldly – fearlessly!
across the chasm of disbelief and uncertainty, and he nailed
it! He forced the reader to gaze into the murky abyss, and won!
With our months of research firmly in hand, he pulled it off in
800 words! It was indeed a crowning achievement, and I hope you
will put it in my personnel file with your own generous observations
– especially in view of my role, however remote, in the recent unpleasantness
surrounding our linguistic implementation of "regime change."
O
Benevolent One, now you understand why our expenses have been so,
…. er, so extensive in recent weeks. This triumph required
the cooperation of several internal units, and the Department of
Denial does not come cheap these days! They complain of an overwhelming
workload, and bill us virtually all contributions at double or triple
overtime! (I would suggest – discreetly, of course – that you refer
some of the more egregious expenses, especially those referring
to the costs of Mr. Perle’s entertainment, to the IG.)
Double-time
or triple-time, those master wordsleuths were worth every penny.
They managed to massage out of our history everything in the Constitution
and Declaration – why, by the time they were finished you’d think
our own president was George III without the syphilis! When they
were finished, our country’s history was just a series of great
leaps from one imperialist victory to the next, virtually uninterrupted
by any sign of peace, freedom, or (that still-forbidden phrase
among the career force), "limited government."
Please
note one firm recommendation from my department (and we are unanimous
here): Boot should be taken to Room 101 for reminding his readers
about the failure of "nation-building" under Clinton. Does he forget
that our Dear Leader renounced nation-building during his
campaign? That will cause us additional months of work, and, I guarantee
you, we will see more gargantuan entertainment vouchers from Mr.
Perle.
In
Strauss and Trotsky,
Winston
P.S.
I love Big Brother.
May
7, 2003
Christopher
Manion [send him mail] writes
from the Shenandoah Valley in Virginia.
Copyright
© 2003 LewRockwell.com
Christopher
Manion Archives
|