Tuesday, February 25, 2025

Full Article: What George Orwell would say about Trump – and how to handle him

 begin quote:

https://www.the-independent.com/news/world/americas/donald-trump-orwell-1984-b2702309.html

What George Orwell would say about Trump – and how to handle him

Orwell conjured up the ultimate dictatorship to illustrate how anti-democratic leaders use brazen deceit to prove and magnify their power, writes his biographer Dorian Lynskey. Never has his warnings about hypocrisy and doublethink been more relevant

Saturday 22 February 2025 01:00 EST
58Comments
Donald Trump claims Zelensky only has a 4% approval rating

It has been a tricky week for conservatives who thought they could support both Donald Trump and Ukraine. On Tuesday, Trump falsely claimed that Ukraine, far from being invaded by Russia in 2022, had “started it”, and that the country’s president Volodymyr Zelensky’s approval rating was just 4 per cent (it is over 50 per cent). Zelensky retorted that Trump was living in a “disinformation space” created by Russia. Trump fired back by calling Zelensky a “dictator” for not holding elections during wartime.

Some Trump admirers had enough integrity to point out that Putin was the actual dictator who had in reality started the war, but many vacillated. Boris Johnson protested that Trump’s words were “not intended to be historically accurate” while Nigel Farage said they were not to be taken “absolutely literally”. You can imagine what George Orwell, a crusader for linguistic precision and scourge of slippery euphemisms, would have made of that.

It is a massive cliche to invoke Orwell’s 1949 novel Nineteen Eighty-Four when discussing Trump’s assaults on reality, but it’s an unavoidable one when 77 million Americans re-elected a man who, according to The Washington Post’s Fact Checker team, made 30,573 “false or misleading claims” during his first term.

Back then, Trump’s breathtaking hostility to the truth could sometimes seem comical. His adviser Kellyanne Conway coined the phrase “alternative facts”, a risible substitute for “lies”, in response to something as trivial as the size of the crowd at his inauguration.

But there was nothing funny about his anti-democratic insistence that he had won the 2020 election, leading to the mob violence seen during the 6 January riots. Around two-thirds of Republicans currently believe this self-serving fiction. As Orwell wrote, “The Party told you to reject the evidence of your eyes and ears. It was their final, most essential command.”

Remarkably, many of Trump’s supporters claim Orwell for themselves, despite his being a proud democratic socialist and anti-fascist. As soon as it was published, Nineteen Eighty-Four was misread by American conservatives as an attack on Clement Attlee’s Labour government as well as Stalinism, and his political enemies continue to hijack his moral prestige.

Vice-president JD Vance recently caused jaws to drop by denouncing Europe’s restrictions on hate speech as “Orwellian”. I would respond that deleting words like “climate” and “diversity” from federal websites is Orwellian, much as Orwell’s protagonist Winston Smith rewrites old newspapers at the Ministry of Truth or the architects of Newspeak seek to make certain thoughts inexpressible. Banning the Associated Press from White House briefings for refusing to rename the Gulf of Mexico the Gulf of America is Orwellian. Erasing any mention of trans people from the National Parks Service’s website about the 1969 Stonewall riots is Orwellian: they have become “unpersons”. Denying an election is Orwellian. Pardoning the 6 January “hostages” is Orwellian. Blaming Ukraine for being invaded is Orwellian. In that context, Vance’s abuse of the word is as Orwellian as it gets.

It’s cliche to reference ‘1984’, but Trump’s track record speaks for itself
It’s cliche to reference ‘1984’, but Trump’s track record speaks for itself (Getty)

Orwell conjured up the ultimate dictatorship to illustrate how anti-democratic leaders use brazen deceit to prove and magnify their power. The seed was sown when Orwell himself was at the receiving end of Stalinist lies while fighting in the Spanish Civil War. The propaganda on both sides was so contemptuous of reality, he later wrote, that he feared “the very concept of objective truth is fading out of the world … This prospect frightens me much more than bombs”.

As Orwell explained, the standard political lie at least acknowledges that the truth exists but the totalitarian lie aims to demolish the very concept. Fact-checking Trump or highlighting his hypocrisy therefore feels almost quixotic. His wild fantasies are a loyalty test for his followers – they must not just say, but truly believe, that 2+2=5 – and a means of fatiguing and overwhelming his opponents. The bigger and more blatant the lie, the more effective it is as psychological warfare.

Orwell insisted that ‘1984’ wasn’t a prophecy but a warning
Orwell insisted that ‘1984’ wasn’t a prophecy but a warning (Mariner Classics)

Phrases from Nineteen Eighty-Four have been part of the lexicon for 75 years – Big Brother, the Thought Police, the Two Minutes Hate – but Orwell’s most subtle invention was doublethink: “The power of holding two contradictory beliefs in one’s mind simultaneously and accepting both of them … To tell deliberate lies while genuinely believing in them [and] to forget any fact that has become inconvenient.” Johnson, Farage and Vance are all demonstrating varieties of doublethink.

Winston is deluded to think he can bring down Big Brother’s Ingsoc regime. His real struggle is internal: to maintain his psychological integrity in a society so truly nightmarish that to insist on the truth is to feel mad. This was not meant to be a science-fiction prophecy but a satirical exaggeration of Stalin’s USSR, where innocent men were forced to confess to imaginary crimes and inconvenient heroes were transformed into irredeemable villains.

Even when the overt violence diminished after Stalin’s death, the propaganda persisted. Scholarship has shown that the average Soviet citizen found it so exhausting to constantly distinguish between truth and lies that they eventually resolved their cognitive dissonance by surrendering their judgement to the state. It wasn’t that they necessarily believed the official line; it just didn’t matter any more. Orwell’s contemporary Hannah Arendt wrote that the ideal totalitarian citizen “would, at the same time, believe everything and nothing, think that everything was possible and that nothing was true”.

Orwell pictured during the 1940s
Orwell pictured during the 1940s (Granger/Shutterstock)

Vladimir Putin, a veteran of the Soviet KGB, has similarly used his control of the media and brutal repression of dissenting voices to bludgeon his citizens into accepting his version of events. It is perfectly normal to believe that Ukraine started the war and dangerous to disbelieve it out loud. Trump’s desire to repeat Kremlin lines and side with Putin against America’s longstanding allies suggests that he envies the Russian leader’s power to lie so shamelessly without pushback or consequences.

Of course, Trump’s America is not currently a dictatorship like Putin’s, let alone Stalin’s, but the information environment created by social media and right-wing broadcasters produces a similar reality-bending effect. Federal websites can be rewritten in an instant and fabrications propagated by Fox News while conspiracy theories flourish on X, a global disinformation machine owned by shadow president Elon Musk. The crudeness of this psychological bombardment, in which sincere belief cannot be distinguished from cynical trolling, is the point.

Elon Musk speaks via video at an Alternative fur Deutschland (AfD) rally in January 2025
Elon Musk speaks via video at an Alternative fur Deutschland (AfD) rally in January 2025 (Getty)

Hopes lie in the fact that reality can be denied but not erased. In Nineteen Eighty-Four, Big Brother’s Ingsoc regime has no governing vision beyond power for its own sake. Airstrip One is not a thrusting, hi-tech state but grim, stagnant and rickety, much like Putin’s Russia. Without brainwashing propaganda, it would fall apart.

Right now, Trump and Musk are gleefully degrading America’s economy, national security, international influence, scientific freedom and capacity to govern effectively. If the US becomes palpably dysfunctional, even Fox and X might not be strong enough to override voters’ own experiences. Polls show that much of what Trump has done so far, including his bromance with Putin, is strikingly unpopular. Facts are still widely available and you are not arrested for repeating them, although you can be bullied, threatened or fired. Americans can still choose to stop believing Trump’s absurdities.

For now, though, doublethink reigns in America. Orwell insisted that Nineteen Eighty-Four wasn’t a prophecy but a warning. “The moral to be drawn from this dangerous nightmare situation is a simple one,” he wrote in a press statement. “Don’t let it happen. It depends on you.” No matter how often his book has been read and quoted, the message clearly hasn’t got through.

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

58Comments

|

All Comments

  1. Comment by MadAsABagOfMonkeys.

As the Greeks pointed out so very long ago, democracy only works with intelligent citizens. Sadly the normal curve of IQ means there's half of us who are less than average IQ.


  • Comment by lupuslazuli.

  • Orwell identified authoritarian doublethink. But he couldn't have anticipated the popular, instant outrage conspiracy-theory doublethink enabled by social media. This is Trump's style, and it has clearly shaped his decision-making. His doublethink will be much less stable than that of a cynical Big Brother regime and it can't but undermine itself.


  • Comment by Betrayed-Brit.

  • ...🤔... Doesn't really have the same sort of ring to me.

    'Vat Rse Stubby Fingers is watching YOU !'

    Nope, just no zing in it ... 🙄


  • Comment by Orwellsmessage.

  • Its even more orwellian when newspapers forget the early causes of this war.

    Air strikes and shells were used to attack the regions which declared independence from ukraine. This war started when those first shots were fired in 2014, but if you believe the press it only started when Russia invaded!

  • Reply by Boy from ceiber.

  • It did start when Russia invaded, Putin's plants in Eastern Ukraine caused any retaliation. The same plants who shot down a civilian aeroplane.


  • Reply by TomSnout.

  • Surely there's been simmering resentment ever since Stalin starved millions on Ukrainians in the 20's!



  • Comment by arco iris.

  • Excellent article . Such an insightful analysis of all that is happening not only in the US which is teetering on the brink of autocracy , but also across the globe , where lies , disinformation and distortion / eradication or erosion of the truth and facts is not only prevalent , but the modus operandi of the most powerful leaders .

    Orwell's nightmarish vision is, bit by bit ,becoming a reality and is a terrible indictment of what we have allowed to happen in many countries that less than a century ago, fought so hard for democratic values and freedoms against one of the worst tyrannies the world has ever known.

  • Reply by praha7.

  • There are two points here. One is that the posting of information, correct or otherwise, was Contempt of court,an offence in itself, which was why,incidentally, those who knew the truth could not comment either because they would have been in Contempt if they had done so..

    The other point is that posting that story online was done with the wish that it would stir up trouble which of course it did. Incitement to Violence is one offence that comes to mind.

    Apologising after committing a crime is no defence, if it were nobody would ever be found guilty of anything.


  • Reply by Flossie.

  • Why was posting incorrect information contempt of court for the person who did it who I assume had never been arrested and/or convicted of anything previously? Also was it clear from the post that her intent was to incite violence or was this based on an assumption made by whoever it is who polices posts on X? Fine dividing line between making an observation and deliberately inciting trouble. Back to the original Orwellian theme, it Just seems a bit like the thin end of the wedge to me. Not allowed to say things that might make the government uncomfortable.



  • Comment by MajorClanger.

  • Inadequate men will always follow a bully, and bullies are inadequate men who will follow a bigger bully.


  • Comment by BeansNToast.

  • Trump should have accompanied Harry Enfield in the daim bar commercials "that blokes a Nutter! Nutter oi Nutter!"


  • Comment by AlgyBloom.

  • The really essential thing to learn from Orwell, and the thing that will be the most difficult to do anything about, is the relationship between the decay of language and the deterioration of all forms of thinking, of which the political sphere is just one aspect. Trump's sycophants use elementary schoolyard insults to dismiss critics as 'a dummy,' 'a full retard,' and lots of others, and, especially, the notorious 'woke.' Nothing demonstrates more horribly the rottenness of the culture that produces such gibberish masquerading as coherent discourse. Obviously it didn't happen overnight, and I don't see any cure among those who don't already have immunity. The inability to grasp that some petty, spontaneous, executive order of revenge here will have unanticipated effects elsewhere is also proof of the truth of Iain McGilchrist's thesis in The Master and His Emissary. Musk is unbalanced leftbrainism on steroids, and his juvenile personality is entirely consistent with that.


  • Comment by Sneaker.

  • Trump has fused Orwell with Goebbels: accuse your opponent of your own Orwellian agenda. Then sprinkle in some Joe McCarthy, Edward Bernays and Roy Cohn - and you have devastatingly toxic propaganda approach that self-insulates from attack. Finally add in some KGB/FSB style disinformation and two billionaires who own social media platforms, and the takeover is complete.


  • Comment by stillaardvark3.

  • It’s a great shame that many, like Trump, have learning difficulties and can’t read!

    • Reply by TomSnout.

    "Someone who won't read has no advantage over someone who can't read", Benjamin Franklin, I think.

    We know from Trump's first term that he wouldn't read anything, for a time he was encouraged to do so by constantly including his name, when that stopped working staff started using video presentations, missing out a few steps, he eventually stopped bothering with briefings altogether.



    No comments: