By Daniel Allott on 11.16.09 @ 6:07AM
Whatever the official setting -- Cuba, Obamaland, NARAL
headquarters -- cynicism is the only spoken currency.
Have you ever noticed that the world's most un-democratic
countries often have the most democratic-sounding names? There's
the People's Republic of China and the Democratic Republic of the
Congo. Best of all, there's the Democratic People's Republic of
Korea (that's North Korea). Each is labeled "not free" by Freedom
House in its
annual report Freedom in the World,
which measures the degree of democracy and political freedom in
every nation in the world.
In the Republic of Cuba, walk the city streets or drive
along the countryside and you will find government-erected
billboards reminding the malnourished, despondent citizens how
great the now half-century old revolution has been and how much
their leaders care for them.
A typical billboard has Fidel Castro telling passersby,
"Ano 50 Del Triunfo De La Revolucion. La Victoria Fue, Es Y Sera
SIEMPRE NUESTRA!" ("50th Year of the Triumph of the
Revolution. The victory, was, is and will be OURS FOREVER!").
Another billboard simply reads, "Vamos Bien" ("We're Doing
Fine").
Whether they are authoritarian dictators or everyday
citizens, people often inadvertently reveal more through their
lies and exaggerations than they would if they told the
truth.
Just as truly free and democratic countries don't need to
constantly remind their citizens and other countries that they
really do respect human rights and democratic values, having
class means not having to talk about it. That's why when you meet
a girl who insists she is "classy" and "hates drama," you can be
assured of the opposite: that you've just met a girl without
class who thrives on drama, usually of her own making.
And has anyone noticed how popular the phrase "thank you so
much" has become? It is typically deployed by telemarketers or
store clerks and often in situations that warrant nothing more
than a simple "thanks" or a smile. The phrase can be
self-defeating, because while the speaker intends to intensify
what he is saying, he instead weakens it with the use of the
excessive and often blatantly insincere
so.
At the movies we are told that certain scenes contain
"adult" language and situations. And there are "adult" video
stores and bookstores with sections for "mature" audiences only.
Inevitably, however, such scenes and films resonate most with
immature people with childish sensibilities. And they typically
involve things mature adults do not do by definition.
Last year when New York Giants receiver Plaxico Burris was
charged with two felony weapons counts, his attorney told
reporters, "He is standing tall. He is a mature adult." Which was
a revealing statement to make about the then 31-year-old Burris,
who had been an "adult" for 13 years.
Burris's criminal counts followed an incident in which he
accidentally shot himself at a Manhattan night club then tried to
cover it up. Burris's attorney's statement merely reminded
everyone how immature and childish his client was.
Unfortunately, our president is not much of a role model in
saying what he means. Barack Obama often prefaces what he says
about abortion with nonsense about how he has thought long and
hard about the ethical implications of some new policy or
decision relating to it. In response to a question at a press
conference last spring about his decision to use taxpayer money
to fund research on human embryos, Obama
said, "I wrestle with these issues every day." In The
Audacity of Hope, Obama writes that abortion is
"undeniably difficult," "a very difficult issue" and a "wrenching
moral issue."
Based on these and other words on life issues, one imagines
our president sitting up at night, unable to sleep, brow
furrowed, deep in thought about the moral, psychological and
constitutional complexities of human life issues.
But does anyone believe that the man who brushed off a
question about when human life begins as being "above my pay
grade" gives more than a passing thought to life issues, aside
from considering their political implications? Obama's
earnest-sounding words collide with a voting record over more
than a decade that reveals an abortion absolutist who does very
little "wrestling" over the morality of a procedure he calls "one
of the most fundamental rights we possess."
Speaking of abortion, in an effort to revamp its image, the
National Abortion Rights Action League in 2003 officially changed
its name to NARAL Pro-Choice America. The letters don't stand for
anything. Perhaps NARAL suspected many Americans are uneasy about
an organization whose title combines the words "abortion" and
"action."
The NARAL change exemplifies the abortion industry's shift
away from the word "abortion," which has been replaced with
"reproductive rights" or "reproductive health" or "a woman's
right to choose." What is it about abortion that makes its
proponents unwilling to say the word? Oh, that's right.
In 1991, fast food chain Kentucky Fried Chicken changed its
name to the acronym KFC. The decision was due in part to its
desire to eliminate the word "fried," which began to have
negative connotations in our increasingly health-conscious
society.
It's the same thing with the SAT, which used to stand for
the Scholastic Aptitude Test. But then critics began objecting to
the word "aptitude," ideas about the measuring of which have
their origins in the eugenics movement. So since 2005 it's been
the SAT Reasoning Test, the letters standing for nothing other
than, perhaps, the day of the week high school students are
forced to spend four hours cooped up in stuffy classrooms,
sitting in impossibly uncomfortable chair-desks, filling in small
ovals with sharpened number 2 pencils.
Of course, KFC still sells fried chicken, NARAL still
exists to promote abortion of unborn babies, the SAT still
measures scholastic aptitude and Cuba continues to stifle free
expression and dissent. So why do they continue their transparent
charades and denials of reality? I wish I knew the answer, but I
don't. It must be above my pay grade.