<http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article23446.htm>

Words Matter

By Ralph Nader

September 07, 2009 "Information Clearing House" -- Ever wonder what's 
happening to words once they fall into the hands of corporate and 
government propagandists? Too often reporters and editors don't 
wonder enough. They ditto the words even when the result is deception 
or doubletalk.

Here are some examples. Day in and day out we read about "detainees" 
imprisoned for months or years by the federal government in the U.S., 
Guantanamo Bay, Iraq and Afghanistan. Doesn't the media know that the 
correct word is "prisoners," regardless of what Bush, Cheney and 
Rumsfeld disseminated?

The raging debate and controversy over health insurance and the $2.5 
trillion spent this year on health care involves consumers and 
"providers." How touching to describe sellers or vendors, often 
gouging, denying benefits, manipulating fine print contracts, 
cheating Medicare and Medicaid in the tens of billions as "providers."

I always thought "providers" were persons taking care of their 
families or engaging in charitable service. Somehow, the dictionary 
definition does not fit the frequently avaricious profiles of Aetna, 
United Healthcare, Pfizer and Merck.

"Privatization" and the "private sector" are widespread euphemisms 
that the press falls for daily. Moving government owned assets or 
functions into corporate hands, as with Blackwater, Halliburton, and 
the conglomerates now controlling public highways, prisons, and 
drinking water systems is "corporatization," not the soft imagery of 
going "private" or into the "private sector." It is the corporate 
sector!

"Medical malpractice reform" is another misnomer. It used to mean 
restricting the legal rights of wrongfully injured people by 
hospitals and doctors, or limiting the liability of these corporate 
vendors when their negligence harms innocent patients. Well, to 
anybody interested in straight talk, "medical malpractice reform" or 
the "medical malpractice crisis" should apply to bad or negligent 
practices by medical professionals. After all, about 100,000 people 
die every year from physician/hospital malpractice, according to a 
Harvard School of Public Health report. Hundreds of thousands are 
rendered sick or injured, not to mention even larger tolls from 
hospital-induced infections. Proposed "reforms" are sticking it to 
the wrong people-the patients-not the sellers.

"Free trade" is a widely used euphemism. It is corporate managed 
trade as evidenced in hundreds of pages of rules favoring 
corporations in NAFTA and the World Trade Organization. "Free trade" 
lowers barriers between countries so that cartels, unjustified patent 
monopolies, counterfeiting, contraband, and other harmful practices 
and products can move around the world unhindered.

What is remarkable about the constant use of these words is that they 
permeate the language even if those who stand against the policies of 
those who first coin these euphemisms. You'll read about "detainees" 
and "providers" and "privatization" and "private sector" and "free 
trade" in the pages of the Nation and Progressive magazines, at 
progressive conferences with progressive leaders, and during media 
interviews. After people point out these boomeranging words to them, 
still nothing changes. Their habit is chronic.

A lot of who we are, of what we do and think is expressed through the 
language we choose. The word tends to become the thing in our mind as 
Stuart Chase pointed out seventy years ago in his classic work The 
Tyranny of Words. Let us stop disrespecting the dictionary! Let's 
stop succumbing to the propagandists and the public relations 
tricksters!

Frank Luntz-the word wizard for the Republicans who invented the term 
"death tax" to replace "estate tax" is so contemptuous of the 
Democratic Party's verbal ineptitude (such as using "public option" 
instead of "public choice" and regularly using the above-noted 
misnomers) that he dares them by offering free advice to the 
Democrats. He suggests they could counteract his "death tax" with 
their own term "the billionaires' tax." There were no Democratic 
takers. Remember, words matter.

Using words that are accurate and at face value is one of the 
characteristics of a good book. Three new books stand out for their 
straight talk. In Grand Illusion: The Myth of Voter Choice in a 
Two-party Tyranny, Theresa Amato, my former campaign manager, exposes 
the obstructions that deny voter choice by the two major parties for 
third party and independent candidates. Just out is Empire of 
Illusion: The End of Literacy and the Triumph of Spectacle by 
Pulitzer Prize winner, Chris Hedges. Lastly, the boisterous, 
mischievous short autobiography of that free spirit, Jerry Lee 
Wilson, The Soloflex Story: An American Parable.

Not withstanding their different styles, these authors exercise 
semantic discipline.

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