As Deutsch's former non-woke super-star Brett Craig said, all corporate America now realizes it means Conformity to Big Brother, unfairness to all who do not assimilate, and exclusion of those who do not think properly.
Orwell understood the American boardroom well when deep into his novel, he has Winston, the novel’s protagonist, the one who hates The Party with a passion, sit down to pen words expressing his disdain for the re-defining of words, the re-writing of history, and the forced conformity of thought. Winston is fantasizing of a life outside of the prison of Oceana's Hell-hole. He muses:
To the future or to the past,
to a time when thought is free,
when men are different from one
another and do not live alone –
to a time when truth exists and
what is done cannot be undone:
From the age of uniformity, from
the age of solitude, from the
Age of Big Brother, from the
age of doublethink – greetings!
All this brings to mind a statement in Erik von Kuehnelt-Leddihn’s Leftism Revisited:
When Words lose their meaning,
people lose their liberty.
One more thing about the film
THE WAR ON CHILDREN:
ESG also dictates the focus and identity of our universities, our kindergartens, and all else in between.
The film takes a dark turn when it interviews Seth Gruber, CEO of the White Rose Resistance.
|