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New Words, Old Phobias
00:10:57
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| Hello, I'm Jared Taylor with American Renaissance. | |
| The internet censors hate my videos. | |
| If you like this one, I hope you'll send the link to a lot of people. | |
| In his famous essay, Politics and the English Language, George Orwell wrote that the English language was becoming a catalog of swindles and perversions. | |
| He added that the slovenliness of our language makes it easier for us to have foolish thoughts. | |
| And that... | |
| Dear viewer, was in 1946. | |
| The left has a genius for swindles and perversions. | |
| It's always inventing new words in its fight against reality. | |
| A pioneering example was the word racism. | |
| It didn't exist until 1934, when a German-Jewish medical scientist, Magnus Hirschfeld, wrote a book which was translated into English with the title racism. | |
| It may be hard to believe, but the United States managed to institute and abolish slavery, set up Jim Crow, and segregate schools and neighborhoods without once using a word that society considers indispensable today. | |
| How did we manage? | |
| Since then the word has had a very good career. | |
| This is a graph of the word's percentage of all words used in American books since the word was invented. | |
| This is a percentage, so it's a direct measure of the popularity of the word, not of the increase in the number of books. | |
| The data are from Google Books. | |
| Unfortunately, they don't go past 2019. | |
| As you can see, the word really took off in the 1960s during the Civil Rights Movement and has been climbing steeply since 2012. | |
| It's a real pity we don't have data after the May 25, 2020 martyrdom of George Floyd. | |
| There must have been a huge surge since then. | |
| However, racism has lost a lot of its sting through overuse. | |
| If everything's racist, nothing is racist. | |
| So, white supremacy is in vogue because it evokes slavery and lynching. | |
| It's a real word, which goes back to before 1900. | |
| And means whites ruling over non-whites, as in colonialism. | |
| It's shooting up now, with no end in sight. | |
| Institutional racism was invented in the late 1960s, but it took another 20 years for liberals to discover systemic racism, which is coming on strong. | |
| But neither can compete with the emotional power of white supremacy. | |
| And neither of these newfangled, invented forms of racism, systemic or institutional, can compete with white privilege, the orange line, which goes all the way back to the 1980s. | |
| Implicit bias, the blue line, didn't really take off until 2000, but it has surged ahead of the venerable institutional racism. | |
| Very impressive. | |
| Remember, not one of these words even existed before 1960, and every one is a lefty invention. | |
| Enslaver and enslaved person have hit the big time, especially since 2015. | |
| The left loves these words because it thinks slave sounds like a permanent, inherent status, whereas enslaved person puts the emphasis on person, and enslaved is supposed to sound like an evil imposition. | |
| Enslaver is the nasty new word for slaveholder, and is supposed to make it sound like anyone who owned a slave, even if he just inherited one, was an enslaver out in the jungle. | |
| Catching black people. | |
| Now I'll add the traditional term slaveholder to the comparison. | |
| As you can see, it had a tremendous surge during the civil rights era and was no doubt a reminder to white people about how bad their ancestors were and encouraged them to accept new laws and to get used to race preferences for blacks. | |
| Slaveholder then began to drop out of sight, but started coming back in the 1990s. | |
| This is what you get if you combine slaveholder and enslaver. | |
| Isn't it curious that the further we get from real slaveholders, the more we talk about them? | |
| There's no mystery in that. | |
| Talking about slavery is one of the best ways to soften up white people for reparations, minority status, and general humiliation and dispossession. | |
| Here's an interesting comparison. | |
| The relative frequencies of negro capitalized and lowercase, all the way back to 1890. | |
| As you can see back then, a lowercase n, the blue line, was more common, but uppercase n took off in the 1920s and hit its peak in 1970, and then crashed. | |
| Negro suddenly went out of fashion. | |
| You can throw in black for comparison. | |
| It used to be mostly just a color, but as "negro" went out of fashion, it became a race, and it's gone from strength to strength. | |
| Racism, as we know, almost always means bad white people. | |
| Are there words for racism against white people? | |
| I can think of only reverse racism and anti-white racism, and at least reverse racism is making a little headway. | |
| But look at this. | |
| Compared to racism, these words occur at a statistical rate of zero. | |
| The right is no match for the left. | |
| Let's have a little fun with some other expressions the left invented. | |
| How about toxic masculinity? | |
| It's a brand new discovery, coming along very nicely. | |
| Let's add a few phobias, because as time goes on, we apparently become frightened of more and more things, such as transphobia, which is a young word, but off to a fine start. | |
| To that, let us add Islamophobia, which was discovered about the same time, but is clearly a winner. | |
| But it's a piker compared to xenophobia. | |
| And look at that pedigree, all the way back to the 1930s. | |
| Look out for homophobia, though, which lefties invented way back in the 1970s. | |
| Look at this upstart. | |
| Intersectionality. It wasn't heard of until 1995, but lefties now can't do without it. | |
| Still, the leader of this pact remains white supremacy. | |
| Of all the things we're supposed to hate, white supremacy is the worst. | |
| Well, not quite. | |
| Add the various spellings and capitalizations of anti-Semitism and look what you get. | |
| My oh my, it's number one and nothing else comes close. | |
| And the problem appears to be getting worse by the minute. | |
| Even the perennial all-purpose racism there in blue is way behind. | |
| Let's look at a few more ways the language has changed. | |
| I'll take anti-Semitism and racism off the chart so you can see everything else better. | |
| And instead, I'll add the homeless in blue. | |
| As you can see, they got a lot of attention from about 1980 to 1995, but the order for them cooled, just as we discovered intersectionality, white supremacy, and assorted phobias. | |
| And weren't there any homeless before 1980? | |
| Of course. | |
| But we call them bums, winos, derelicts. | |
| They were all promoted to homeless. | |
| Which is more sensitive, you see, and makes it sound as though they used to live in beautiful homes that blew down in a hurricane. | |
| Here, for example, is how homeless person suddenly appeared around 1980 and has eclipsed wino. | |
| Well, there's great news on mental retardation. | |
| It looks like we've cured the problem. | |
| Well, no. | |
| We just changed the way we talk about it. | |
| I figured the new sensitive lingo would be mental handicap. | |
| and learning disability, but that doesn't really make up for it. | |
| Apparently, the new expression is intellectual disability, though that doesn't seem to cover it either. | |
| Maybe modern talk about autism and ADHD takes up some of the slack. | |
| I suspect we are getting both mentally unhealthier and inventing more ways to talk about it. | |
| So the left does tricky things with language. | |
| It softens the words we use for people for whom the left thinks we don't care enough about. | |
| Bums become the homeless, and mental retards have an intellectual disability. | |
| But the real genius of the left is in deciding to hate something ancient and normal, inventing a new name for it, and calling it a moral failing. | |
| It's normal to think homosexuality is abnormal. | |
| And to hope your children don't turn out that way. | |
| But now there is a moral failing known as homophobia. | |
| It's normal to notice that foreigners are different from us and to prefer our own people, but that's xenophobia. | |
| It's normal to notice race and to prefer one's own race, but that's racism, etc., etc. | |
| We don't have words to describe normal people because we never needed words for them. | |
| We don't have a special expression for people who put their pants on one leg at a time. | |
| At least for now, there is no word that implies it is a crime to love your own children more than you love other people's children. | |
| But it's easy to imagine some lefty, collectivist, child-rearing society in which it was a crime. | |
| People who suffered from that disorder might be called familists and be scorned and cancelled. | |
| And what would they call themselves? | |
| There's no word for normal people. | |
| It's the crazy new leftist disorders that need names. | |
| You could call people who put the interests of other races or of foreigners ahead of theirs ethnomasochists or xenophiles, but Google Books has never heard of these words. | |
| Good luck trying to popularize toxic femininity. | |
| This is really just another way of measuring media dominance. | |
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Orwell's Warning Evolved
00:00:24
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| Those who control the words we use control the thoughts we think. | |
| What did Orwell call the English language in 1946? | |
| A catalog of swindles and perversions. | |
| In this century, I would go further than Orwell when he said the slovenliness of our language makes it easier for us to have foolish thoughts. | |