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[Closed] I've never read 1984. Should I?

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Who suggested it was like Stalinist Russia? Not me. I was drawing comparision's between Orwell's prophetic future and the world we live in today.


 
Posted : 12/06/2014 11:30 am
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anpr? records that track where you have been.
e-passport tracking with enhanced intergovernmental tracking in an apparently more "liberal" society?
big screen in your house tracking everything you do? not literal, but there is a big screen that brainwashes most into divulging their private lives to zuckerberg, in a jurisdiction that can force them to hand over that info to a government.
laws to monitor all email, phone etc. contact and stored "in case they are needed".

may not all be literal but there is an authoritarian - liberal paradox via the use of screens with cameras.


 
Posted : 12/06/2014 11:41 am
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One of the greatest works of literature in the English Language. Anyone who hasn't read it by early adulthood has been educationally deprived, in my opinion. I've read it several times, as a child, a teenager and at various times during my adult life. It resonated with me at each reading, in different ways.

Scour some second hand shops, get a paper copy, and download it for free. The idea that you can get it on Amazon, as already pointed out here, would have Orwell spinning in his grave.

What set Orwell apart from his contemporaries/similar authors, was that he imersed himself in the situatios that affected his subjects, and whilst his familial wealth always offered him sanctuary, he chose instead to shun that, and live the lives of others as his own. Which gave him an incredible objective and subjective perspective, rather than the flaneuristic approach of most other writers who focus onthe condition of the dregs of society without ever having experienced it.

The bit that always stood out for me, was the account of how Smith, as a chid, stole his younger sister's meagre chocolate ration, which sparked off a series of events which led to his mother and sister's abduction by the authorities. Utterly, utterly heartbreaking.

Molgrips; I think you need to read 1984, maybe several times. And maybe then it might make sense.


 
Posted : 12/06/2014 11:50 am
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Sitting in my room now, I am not being monitored by CCTV, unlike in the book.

using the internet, what you're doing is being logged. didn't you know that?


 
Posted : 12/06/2014 11:51 am
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I haven't read any of the above - but I have managed to get a copy of "Make Room, Make Room" by Harry Harrison (my favourite author) which I am enjoying a lot - basically about overpopulation and diminishing resources and is quite scary so far.
Soylent Green was based on it (the film) IIRC.


 
Posted : 12/06/2014 12:03 pm
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I think there are done very interesting and obvious parallels that one could draw.... It's not just CCTV though, web cams baby-cams, traffic cams, dashboard cams , satellites, drones, google earth and street view.

3 wars that we've "won" supported not by the population, but very much by corporations, and those "interests" that are served by such. "War on terror" "War on drugs" "War on poverty" ever increasingly growing economy. The continuing and resolution of EVERY political debate into the financial. Dwindling newspaper sales, e-books being downloaded, revisionist interpretations of historical events, the fear of Communism replaced by the fear of Islam

None of that has happened at all...


 
Posted : 12/06/2014 12:07 pm
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not literal, but

So in other words, not at all like it, unless you really screw up your eyes and try.

using the internet, what you're doing is being logged. didn't you know that?

It MAY be being logged, but almost certainly no-one is scrutinising it. And I can say ALMOST anything I like without fear of repercussion. Let me demonstrate:

Cameron is an arse! Obama is an arse! Britain is shit! The government are crooks! Start a revolution!

And of course, aside from the NSA listening intently to STW it's obviously being logged because I am posting it to a public website where it'll be indexed by Google.

Molgrips; I think you need to read 1984, maybe several times. And maybe then it might make sense.

Well it did make sense at the time, of course, so I'd expect it to make sense still. I'm not sure how much Cold War social history you are aware of though - this is after all the context of the book. It's a warning about communism, not privacy in the 'free' world. If the same book had been written now it would constitute a different message.

revisionist interpretations of historical events, the fear of Communism replaced by the fear of Islam

None of that is new either. And dwindling newspaper sales are only a consequence of increased free consumption in other media.

Fear of Islam now isn't the same as fear of communism was then. A lot of people, including politicians, a large section of the population and media had watched communism form an empire across a huge part of the globe and thought there was a very real risk of it either continuing to subvert countries, or the Soviet empire taking up arms and invading the free world in a traditional war. Whereas now most people are simply concerned about random acts of terror. Now it's small groups of fanatics, then it was governments and hundreds of millions of people, potentially.


 
Posted : 12/06/2014 12:22 pm
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*post reported*

*moves away from Molgrips*

Molgrips who?


 
Posted : 12/06/2014 12:27 pm
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It's a warning about communism, not privacy in the 'free' world.

Such a naive interpretation.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-25005703
http://uk.video.search.yahoo.com/search/video;_ylt=A9mSs3EAJZdT.woAhRdLBQx.;_ylu=X3oDMTB1Mzg2czUyBHNlYwNzYwRjb2xvA2lyMgR2dGlkA1NNRVVLMjdfMQ--?p=Blacklisting+2013+-+The+Workers+Strike+Back

Your names on the list, you're not coming in...


 
Posted : 12/06/2014 12:32 pm
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[i]Fear of Islam now isn't the same as fear of communism was then. [/i]

You don't think that "fear of the other" is a tactic being used by propagandist govts and mainstream media to control and direct perceptions?


 
Posted : 12/06/2014 12:39 pm
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And I can say ALMOST anything I like without fear of repercussion.

You're probably not a 'person of interest'. If you were, the police might try to get into you pants:

http://policespiesoutoflives.org.uk/

Just because nothing is happening to YOU, a conformist with 'nothing to hide', doesn't mean that all OUR civil liberties and human rights aren't being slowly eroded.


 
Posted : 12/06/2014 12:47 pm
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Watching the UK from the outside it's quite scary just how much of your freedoms are being eroded, bit by bit - the right to silence, radars and anpr everywhere, massive amounts of CCTV, government monitoring of communications, the anti-terrorism legislation, etc. The UK is [b]much[/b] more of a police state than where I live in Spain.


 
Posted : 12/06/2014 12:58 pm
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And I can say ALMOST anything I like without fear of repercussion. Let me demonstrate:

some guys said that on twitter, and got nicked.


 
Posted : 12/06/2014 1:02 pm
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radars

Speed cameras are an erosion of freedom? Give me a break!

The UK is much more of a police state than where I live in Spain.

But still nothing like a police state.

Just because nothing is happening to YOU, a conformist with 'nothing to hide', doesn't mean that all OUR civil liberties and human rights aren't being slowly eroded.

That's not what I'm saying. I'm saying that what we are experiencing now is trivial compared to what Soviet Russia went through, and what Orwell was writing about. In the book EVERYONE was under extreme threat, for the purposes of controlling the population. Currently they are being somewhat heavy handed in an attempt to catch people who would threaten the safety of the majority. In some ways the opposite of the book - the authorities are working to preserve the liberty of the [i]majority[/i] whereas in the book they are suppressing it.

The issue we currently have is that in attempting to catch people who are a genuine threat they are causing problems for others.

The intentions of the authorities now are completely different to the book. And that's the point.


 
Posted : 12/06/2014 1:10 pm
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Speed cameras are an erosion of freedom? Give me a break!

Constant surveillance an erosion of freedom? What an idea!


 
Posted : 12/06/2014 1:11 pm
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Some people above are rather confused on what 1984 was about. Facebook or blacklisting of workers by companies as described above are nothing to do with what 1984 was about.

Molgrips is right 1984 was concerned with the rise of Communism (the Stalin kind), as Orwell realised more and more that Communism wasn't the answer.


 
Posted : 12/06/2014 1:12 pm
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Constant surveillance an erosion of freedom?

Do you think they are watching you through speed cameras?! Do you think someone is making notes on you as you drive past?


 
Posted : 12/06/2014 1:15 pm
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Some people above are rather confused on what 1984 was about. Facebook or blacklisting of workers by companies as described above are nothing to do with what 1984 was about.

The operative bit being "was" about. How we interpret 1984 in 2014 is quite different to how Orwell originally intended it. You and molgrips are right in saying the UK is nothing like as bad as Stalinist Russia, but to argue that 1984 should only be interpreted in that light is IMO unreasonable.


 
Posted : 12/06/2014 1:15 pm
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Do you think they are watching you through speed cameras?! Do you think someone is making notes on you as you drive past?

No, it's far worse - they get a computer to do it. Far more pervasive.


 
Posted : 12/06/2014 1:16 pm
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You're saying that your whereabouts are actively being monitored through speed cameras? So someone, somewhere could tell me where mogrim has been the last few weeks due to speed camera footage?

to argue that 1984 should only be interpreted in that light is IMO unreasonable.

I don't think so at all. He wrote it to make a point. You can't just pin whatever current concern you have on a book about something else, just to add a bit of weight to your point. That's absolutely ridiculous.


 
Posted : 12/06/2014 1:17 pm
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Seeing as you probably have little idea what 'Soviet Russia went through', like most of us, you have nothing to really compare with the current situation, which, in some ways, is actually a lot more similar to Orwell's dystopia than a SU with hardly any ofthe methods of surveillance available to agencies now.

Molgrips; seems to me that you're talking with very little knowledge indeed of the real lengths that the state and various other 'security' and even commercial agencies now go to to obtain information on groups and individuals. You really do need to read up on the subjects I linked to, and many others, to get a fuller picture.

'what we are experiencing now is trivial'

No, what YOU are experiencing may be trivial, but you aren't a 'person of interest'. Clearly. Or you'd have a different perspective.

http://www.markthomasinfo.co.uk/section_writing/default.asp?id=30


 
Posted : 12/06/2014 1:19 pm
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You're saying that your whereabouts are actively being monitored through speed cameras? So someone, somewhere could tell me where mogrim has been the last few weeks due to speed camera footage?

Sorry, should have been more clear: the anpr cameras. And thankfully there aren't many (not sure if there are in fact any) here in Madrid.


 
Posted : 12/06/2014 1:19 pm
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Ok, so you're syaing that the apnr cameras are tracking all of us and logging where we've been? So the government actually knows where I've been in my car?

Molgrips; seems to me that you're talking with very little knowledge indeed of the real lengths that the state and various other 'security' and even commercial agencies now go to to obtain information on groups and individuals.

No no no - you miss my point. The point is that in the book (and in Stalinist Russia) a 'person of interest' is anyone who says anything negative.

In the UK, a person of interest is generally suspected of a crime, terrorist offence or something dangerous.

Or is this not true? Are people being disappeared for being anti-regime?


 
Posted : 12/06/2014 1:20 pm
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You're saying that your whereabouts are actively being monitored.......?

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/4800490.stm


 
Posted : 12/06/2014 1:20 pm
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Ok, so you're syaing that the apnr cameras are tracking all of us and logging where we've been? So the government actually knows where I've been in my car?

Basically, yes, they know.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Police-enforced_ANPR_in_the_UK


 
Posted : 12/06/2014 1:23 pm
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http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/4800490.stm

Facepalm.

"In January, police requested journey information 61 times"

So EXACTLY like 1984 then! OMG!

Basically, yes, they know.

Ok so what are they going to use that information for? Remember, we are talking about the novel 1984 here, and whether or not the UK is like the state in the book.


 
Posted : 12/06/2014 1:23 pm
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Do you really think that the Stasi at the height of their powers were actively monitoring the whereabouts of everyone in GDR?


 
Posted : 12/06/2014 1:25 pm
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Not sure if anyone has done this yet, but thought it worth a laugh:

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 12/06/2014 1:26 pm
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No I think the Staszi were prosecuting people who spoke out against the regime. Something that I do not think happens here.

If you can point to ONE incidence of someone being disappeared by the authorities for being anti regime, I'll concede a point.


 
Posted : 12/06/2014 1:27 pm
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I'm interested though in a Goldstien/Bin Ladin comparison conspiracy theory I found on the internet the other day

Yep we need our bogey men to help keep us in line

I always enjoyed this Adam Curtis documentary


 
Posted : 12/06/2014 1:28 pm
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If you can point to ONE incidence of someone being disappeared by the authorities for being anti regime, I'll concede a point.

Ooh can I play 😀

Dr David Kelly


 
Posted : 12/06/2014 1:32 pm
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Facepalm.

"In January, police requested journey information 61 times"

So EXACTLY like 1984 then! OMG!

What about 22,000 times in 4 years then?

http://www.theregister.co.uk/2012/02/10/metropolitan_police_asks_for_tfl_data/

But you're missing the point. Which is that governments and various other agencies are incresingly using surveillance, infiltration and other information-gathering methods to gain information on individuals, groups and organisations, legaly and illegaly, for all sorts of reasons, not all of which are benign. As I have shown. Which you apear to ignore. And/or be in denial about.

Information in itself is of little consequence; it's what is done with that information, how it is gathered, collated, interpreted, presented and manipulated, and by whom, that is. Which is the basic premise of Orwell's book.

[i]Quo custodiet ipsos custodes?[/i]


 
Posted : 12/06/2014 1:36 pm
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I read it this year, and was surprised/shocked by the content. Had been put off for years by the rat mask idea (highlighted by the film, which I haven't seen), but seemingly the 'ppl management' was the worst part of the book for me. Thought it worth a read and it was & I'd recommend it to others, but I won't be rushing to re-read it.


 
Posted : 12/06/2014 1:40 pm
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"In January, police requested journey information 61 times"

So EXACTLY like 1984 then! OMG!


a - how much access to information d they have that they don't need to ask for so there's no records of requests?
b - and I know this will stretch you little bit - the fact that the information is there means it CAN be used. As such 1984 is a warning about the abuse of the kind of technology the authorities have at their disposal and are using. It's not exactly like 1984, of course not, but I'd have thought that even someone as unimaginative as you would see that the state is using tools like islamophobia and paedofear to push us further down that path.


 
Posted : 12/06/2014 1:42 pm
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As I have shown. Which you apear to ignore. And/or be in denial about.

Well no, I'm not denying it happens.

What I'm saying, once again, is that the reasons for doing it in the west, now, are not the same as the reasons they did it behind the iron curtain, or in Orwell's book.

Dr David Kelly

Oooh, good one!

Which is the basic premise of Orwell's book.

I don't think so, not at all.

His book is about what could have happened to the world had Stalinist Russia continued to become more and more powerful.

Your interpretation is what happens when you read it purely from a contemporary point of view - which is not the author's original aim. You can't hijack his book just because there are SOME similarities.

I'd have thought that even someone as unimaginative as you

Oh piss off, there's nothing wrong with my imagination. I just know when to separate it from real life.


 
Posted : 12/06/2014 1:43 pm
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His book is about what could have happened to the world had Stalinist Russia continued to become more and more powerful.

Exactly where in the book does it say that - not page numbers please, I'm using a amazon purchased hence government monitored kindle.


 
Posted : 12/06/2014 1:48 pm
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His book is about what could have happened to the world had Stalinist Russia continued to become more and more powerful.

Your interpretation is what happens when you read it purely from a contemporary point of view - which is not the author's original aim. You can't hijack his book just because there are SOME similarities.

Why not? The author's long dead, we can interpret his work how we see fit. We do it all the time with Shakespeare and Dickens, why not Orwell?


 
Posted : 12/06/2014 1:49 pm
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Exactly where in the book does it say that

🙄 Just after the bit where it says it's about misuse of technology.

The author's long dead, we can interpret his work how we see fit.

Interpreting it isn't the same as hijacking it.

Interpreting it would be say, treating it as a love story as someone did earlier. You can't treat it as a story about something that didn't exist when it was written.


 
Posted : 12/06/2014 2:19 pm
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[i]What I'm saying, once again, is that the reasons for doing it in the west, now, are not the same as the reasons they did it behind the iron curtain, or in Orwell's book.[/i]

That's the point, the agenda of the Stalinist govts are Identical to the ones more "liberal" govts have


 
Posted : 12/06/2014 2:20 pm
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That's the point, the agenda of the Stalinist govts are Identical to the ones more "liberal" govts have

I disagree with that.


 
Posted : 12/06/2014 2:25 pm
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I think the point that's being made (and IMO the right one) is that even if the book was written from a view of progression from Stalinist Russia, that's largely irrelevant. What it's about is the use of technology, etc to subjugate and manipulate a population. That could develop from Stalinist Russia or from a Western Democracy.

Despite some doom mongers claiming otherwise, we're not even close to that right now. Could it develop from this point even in a Western Democracy? Yes, I reckon feasibly it could. Will it? Well that's the question, isn't it?


 
Posted : 12/06/2014 2:28 pm
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I'll say the same thing to you that I said to Raceface then;

Now you've read Orwell, go read Chomsky


 
Posted : 12/06/2014 2:29 pm
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Could it develop from this point even in a Western Democracy?

Well.. Yes, but the technology is just the tool - the motive has to be there.

When you have a functioning ballot box, governments are bound to appease the population, and as long as the government isn't able to pull the wool over everyone's eyes at the same time and bully the rest, they won't be able to do what Hitler did in the 30s.

Technology could actually help prevent that as it allows more people's voices to be heard. As long as it's not strictly controlled...


 
Posted : 12/06/2014 2:38 pm
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Despite some doom mongers claiming otherwise, we're not even close to that right now. Could it develop from this point even in a Western Democracy? Yes, I reckon feasibly it could. Will it? Well that's the question, isn't it?

No idea, and I do basically agree we're still a fair way off. But the tools are there, and I genuinely do believe that the UK is a lot closer than it was 20 years ago.


 
Posted : 12/06/2014 2:39 pm
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Well.. Yes, but the technology is just the tool - the motive has to be there.

The motive is there: security. Fear of terrorists, immigrants, crime, paedophiles...


 
Posted : 12/06/2014 2:40 pm
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Yes, the tools are there. The issue is that they cannot be used in the 1984 way unless you redirect a huge amount of resources to doing that. Or maybe AI...

Of course as molgrips says, technology may be the counter to that - it's becoming hard for news to be buried these days with twitter, etc though as molgrips alludes to, if that were to be controlled...


 
Posted : 12/06/2014 2:42 pm
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[i]Well.. Yes, but the technology is just the tool - the motive has to be there.[/i]

And we're back as Mogrim points out to "fear of the other"

Still sure that there's no link at all between the Red Dread and the muslamic ray guns?


 
Posted : 12/06/2014 2:44 pm
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Of course as molgrips says, technology may be the counter to that - it's becoming hard for news to be buried these days with twitter, etc though as molgrips alludes to, if that were to be controlled...

Yeah, just imagine if the government mandated all the ISPs to stick in a great big filter to stop nasty things being shown on the internet. That could never happen, could it? Or if they started monitoring twitter just in case you said something that might be terroristy. That couldn't happen either, could it?

The tools are there, all over the place. Fortunately for the moment we still have democracy, more or less, and the two main parties limit themselves to nibbling around the edges of it when the Mail asks them to. I'm not sure a UKIP-style party with a majority would be so scrupulous, however.


 
Posted : 12/06/2014 2:47 pm
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The motive is there: security. Fear of terrorists, immigrants, crime, paedophiles...

Hmm. Do you think fear of those things could be extrapolated to Stalinist policies? I think that's a bit of a stretch tbh.

The overriding aim of the state in 1984 seems to be to fight the other states, at enormous cost - now does that require such totalitarian control of the population? Or is it just a pretext?

Why did Stalinist Russia end up like it did? I suspect a combination of Stalin's fundamental insanity, and the fact that state-wide communism requires everyone to toe the line whether they like it or not.

Could that situation be replicated in the West? Hitler did a fair old job of it, but that was 80 years ago now and the world was pretty different. I believe the novel is saying that in order to respond to Soviet Russia the West had to do something similar to even respond. Fortunately, as it turned out, they/we chose a different path and eventually won the ideological battle. That in itself is rather interesting.

Fortunately for the moment we still have democracy

Democracy, but also capitalism. Money talks more than governments in many circumstances. These two things both make it hard to force people to do what they don't want. Soviet Russia had neither of these things.


 
Posted : 12/06/2014 2:53 pm
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Yeah, just imagine if the government mandated all the ISPs to stick in a great big filter to stop nasty things being shown on the internet.

Because that's worked really well at blocking the P!rate bay and similar hasn't it - my point being that the internet is so big now, without making it largely useless (which would kill business), it's almost impossible to actually regulate it effectively.


 
Posted : 12/06/2014 2:57 pm
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Hmm. Do you think fear of those things could be extrapolated to Stalinist policies? I think that's a bit of a stretch tbh.

I never said we would get to Stalinist policies, I don't see that happening at all. What I can imagine is a society that is increasingly intolerant of dissent and non-conformance, and uses the tools available to stop it.


 
Posted : 12/06/2014 3:03 pm
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Because that's worked really well at blocking the P!rate bay and similar hasn't it - my point being that the internet is so big now, without making it largely useless (which would kill business), it's almost impossible to actually regulate it effectively.

I think you're overly optimistic. I hope I'm wrong, but I don't think I am.


 
Posted : 12/06/2014 3:05 pm
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Molgrips you have to look past the way governments behave, and look at what those behaviour patterns are trying to achieve IMO

I don't think anyone here is trying to compare 21st Britain to Stalinist Russia in the 40's and 50s, but there are scarily similar parallels to what they both try to achieve

Read a bit of Chomsky, really do


 
Posted : 12/06/2014 3:12 pm
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Read a bit of Chomsky, really do

I've always meant to.

Where would you start? Manufacturing Consent?


 
Posted : 12/06/2014 3:15 pm
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Yes or Necessary Illusions

There's an awful lot of stuff on you tube of speeches and so on, sometimes his wit and humour is lost


 
Posted : 12/06/2014 3:20 pm
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Molgrips you have to look past the way governments behave, and look at what those behaviour patterns are trying to achieve IMO

That's what I'm aiming to do.


 
Posted : 12/06/2014 3:25 pm
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Read Chomsky, then we'll have another crack at this


 
Posted : 12/06/2014 3:29 pm
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Of course as molgrips says, technology may be the counter to that - it's becoming hard for news to be buried these days with twitter, etc though as molgrips alludes to, if that were to be controlled...

Funnily enough, I was having this discussion with a few friends last week. There was a piece on R4 (I think) about it being 25 years since Tiananmen Square yet the anniversary was more or less being ignored internationally and not even mentioned in China. A survey of students over there had been undertaken and it was something like 90% of them had no idea the anything had happened and those that were aware of something believed there was a protest - not a single mention of the massacre or "Tank Man". Apparently, if it is 'googled' within China you get nothing other than its location and a map.

If that report was genuine then it is really quite scary, IMO of course.


 
Posted : 12/06/2014 4:42 pm
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it is prophetic in the sense that it is the principle of control of the population by secret methods.

What's really disappointing is the naivety, the amount of data held by various organisations about so much of your behaviour is huge.

The reason 1984 is relevant is not that it specifically referred to the Eastern Block, but that it showed a principle that the state has no conscience in achieving its aims, even at the expense of the people it purports to serve.


 
Posted : 13/06/2014 7:50 pm
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Just because they're out to get you doesn't mean you're not paranoid.


 
Posted : 13/06/2014 7:57 pm
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Read a bit of Chomsky

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 13/06/2014 8:00 pm
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Great book, and neat little Kurt Cobain quote there


 
Posted : 13/06/2014 8:05 pm
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it is prophetic in the sense that it is the principle of control of the population by secret methods

Not really, he was simply following on from what had already been happening, and on a much larger scale than now.


 
Posted : 13/06/2014 8:18 pm
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Molgrips, there's no shame in admitting you were having bad day the other day. A number of posters have proved generic accuracy about the topic, there's no need with the continued insistence of it being a Stalinist template to be.

Now, have a nice weekend 🙂


 
Posted : 13/06/2014 8:26 pm
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Noooo, the scale of data collected and stored today is unimaginably greater than it was in 1948, It is also captured in greater depth and far more easily analysed to provide a profile of you.


 
Posted : 13/06/2014 8:33 pm
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The reason 1984 is relevant is not that it specifically referred to the Eastern Block

Isn't Britain called Airstrip One, the potential launchpad for a a US strike againmst the evil eastern communist block? Ipso facto, it's not a far left but far right society, the warning not being about far right or far left ideaologies but about a totalitarian state. In a far right state, the power lies with the Capitlists, the point made IIRC when Winston went for a drink with the proles and got the history mixed in with the good old days of a pint as opposed to a litre/half litre of beer. Just like Daily Mail readers pining for some "good old days" that never really existed.


 
Posted : 13/06/2014 8:40 pm
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Kryton: firstly, I was just fine the other day, not cross or anything. Secondly, no-one can be accurate about this topic because the topic isn't "are we being watched?" but "what was Orwell trying to say?" and no-one can prove that.

Back to the interesting debate then - Roger, the scale of data collected now is of course greater but the scope of investigation is far narrower. In the book, everyone is under threat and even one word out of place could see you disappeared. Far closer to Soviet era than the present day.

I see the similarities of course between modern monitoring and Big Brother but that is simply a coincidence. The context of the book is different to the present day and hence this is not what Orwell was talking about.

Ipso facto, it's not a far left but far right society

Stalin showed us how a society can be both. And yes the book is about totalitarianism of course. But the further question is, can you have communism without it?


 
Posted : 13/06/2014 8:46 pm
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Comparisons to communist era surveilance?

Please, we're not even close. Yes we have better means but definitely no will to do so. Read about Romania under Ceausescu or read this for perspective: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-26838177

That all said and done, 1984 does have a resonance with todays society, if it makes people examine their civil liberties and how they choose to give them up (or not) then it's no bad thing.


 
Posted : 13/06/2014 10:21 pm
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Then watch Brazil.


 
Posted : 13/06/2014 10:55 pm
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The totalitarian influence and control depicted in 1984 is not exclusive to either the right or the left.

It's shared by any religious or politial movement which reminds us how difficult, awkward and inconvenient free will can be and urges us to subjigate our ability to think in favour of ignorant, populist propoganda.
Given the promise of higher definition television, cheap alcohol and the ability to sneer at our neighbours we will vote for anyone that fails to remind us what a rancid, vile, venal species we actually are.


 
Posted : 13/06/2014 11:12 pm
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Bit busy right now so I can't read all the previous postings, apologies I'm sure that they are spiffing.

In answer to your question, yes. Yes you should read it. On a base level it is a pretty good read. However the second half about state control and double speak is [b][u]VERY[/b][/u] relevant. Surprisingly so.

Read it, you won't be disappointed.


 
Posted : 13/06/2014 11:17 pm
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I see the similarities of course between modern monitoring and Big Brother but that is simply a coincidence

What is your point here? They are monitoring us for the benign reason / to "protect" us rather to "spy" on us. Is that not doublethink?
Stalin showed us how a society can be both.

No he showed you can have a left wing despot and a right wing despot
He was a left wing one.
he was not personally both left wing and right wing.
What Rusty said


 
Posted : 13/06/2014 11:25 pm
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yes, read the ****ing thing. it's not long. As far as I can tell, Chomp-sky is right on lots of stuff, in theory.


 
Posted : 13/06/2014 11:43 pm
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no-one can be accurate about this topic because the topic isn't "are we being watched?" but "what was Orwell trying to say?" and no-one can prove that.

Many, many reders, critics and commentators have pretty much reached a consensus regarding this, which differs quite a lot to your interpretation. Which I think is far too linear and binary; 'if things aren't [i]exactly[/i] like they are in the book, then they aren't similar in any way'. That's far too simplistic and naive, and I think you should employ a little lateral thinking to your approach. You might tehn enjoy the book more.


 
Posted : 16/06/2014 10:23 am
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Out of interest Molly, how much other Orwell material have you read? ( newspaper articles essays speeches on so on) not just his novels or orher published non fiction?

In some ways you're correct 1984 IS a book about A particular future the Could have arisen in a society decimated from the terrors if WW2. However Orwell himself ( as did many others) saw a much greater picture, and warned as much in many articles about the rise and centralisation of govt power and propaganda


 
Posted : 16/06/2014 11:06 am
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You don't need to be quite so disparaging. I don't think books are to be interpreted by consensus, and I'm very capable of understanding the complexity of the ideas in the book.

'if things aren't exactly like they are in the book, then they aren't similar in any way'

See, you've interpreted my point in an unsubtle way. My point isn't that they aren't similar, my point is that they are similar for different reasons. And that the book is not sci-fi i.e. it's not about intrusive technology it's about totalitarianism in general. And we don't live in a totalitarian state.

Out of interest Molly, how much other Orwell material have you read?

None, but they are on my list. I remember reading some quotes and extracts and I was just as impressed with those words as I was with the two most famous books.


 
Posted : 16/06/2014 11:09 am
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And that the book is not sci-fi i.e. it's not about intrusive technology it's about totalitarianism in general. And we don't live in a totalitarian state.

1984 is very definitely sci-fi!


 
Posted : 16/06/2014 11:15 am
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[i] And that the book is not sci-fi i.e. it's not about intrusive technology it's about totalitarianism in general. And we don't live in a totalitarian state.[/i]

Its a love story set in a futuristic Britain. It's not about a Totalitarian state, its about Winston and Julia


 
Posted : 16/06/2014 11:36 am
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Not read the whole thread, but for the OP... it sure as hell isn't going to make you dumber by reading it


 
Posted : 16/06/2014 11:36 am
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