Diplomarbeit, 2004
148 Seiten, Note: 1 (A)
INSPIRATION
INTRODUCTION
1 WHY ORWELL?
2 PRELIMINARY PERSONAL OBSERVATIONS
2.1 Dispelling the Myth
3 RISE OF SURVEILLANCE
3.1 McCarthyism
3.2 COINTELPRO
3.2.1 The “Church Report”
3.3 FBI Targets Civil Rights Movements
3.4 New McCarthyism
3.5 Why does New McCarthyism exist?
4 THE RAMIFICATION OF TOTALITARIAN ASPECTS GRANTED BY THE GOVERNMENT
4.1 The USA PATRIOT Act
4.1.1 My Personal Concerns about the USA PATRIOT Act
4.1.2 Attorney General John Ashcroft
4.2 The USA PATRIOT Act in more Detail
4.2.1 Diminished Constitutional Control
4.2.2 Guantanamo Bay
4.3 My Work with the ACLU at Columbia University
4.3.1 Campus Rally against the Patriot Act
4.3.2 New York City´s “Defend the Bill of Rights Campaign”
4.3.3 A Questionnaire
4.4 People´s Resistance against Totalitarianism in Fiction and Fact
5 EXAMPLES OF ORWELLIAN SURVEILLANCE
5.1 The TIPS Program
5.2 How Omni-Present Telescreens Almost Became Fact
5.3 MATRIX: Attempts for a Centrally Organized Surveillance System
5.4 Surveillance of Airline Passengers
5.4.1 CAPPS II
5.4.2 US-VISIT: The International Counterpart to CAPPS II
5.5 Military Spying on Civilians
5.5.1 Echelon
5.6 Surveillance Infers Security: A Fallacy
5.7 Truly Orwellian
6 THOUGHT CONTROL AND SUPPRESSION OF FREE SPEECH
6.1 The Government´s Aggressive Suppression of Individual Thought
6.1.1 Americans for Victory over Terrorism (AVOT) and the American Council of Trustees and Alumni (ACTA)
6.2 Patriotism: A Matter of Interpretation
6.2.1 Columbia: A(n) (Un)Patriotic University?
6.3 Project for a New American Century
6.4 Doublespeak: Free Speech Zones
7 THE SECRECY OF THE GOVERNMENT AND ITS CONTROL OF THE NEWS
7.1 Freedom of information: The People´s Right to Know
7.2 Office of Strategic Influence
7.3 All the News that Fit in the Memory Hole
7.4 The Total Information Awareness Program
7.4.1 TIA´s Afterlife
7.5 Ministries of Truth
The primary objective of this thesis is to critically analyze whether contemporary American society has adopted totalitarian characteristics in the aftermath of the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, drawing parallels to the dystopian world of George Orwell’s 1984. The research investigates how government policies and rhetoric may erode democratic foundations and civil liberties.
3.1 McCarthyism
One dark chapter in American history can be found during the government´s systematic propaganda of fear from the so-called Red Scare before and especially after World War II under Senator Joseph McCarthy. “McCarthyism” is a term that has recently been given significant attention in the debates about the government´s infringement on civil liberties.
Established in 1937, the House Committee on Un-American Activities (HUAC) was supposed to oversee fascist activities; later on, during the rise of the Cold War, the Committee shifted most of its attention to the activities of what it considered to be communists. In 1947 the HUAC began an investigation into the Hollywood Motion Picture Industry. In September 1947, the HUAC interviewed 41 people working in Hollywood. These people attended voluntarily and became known as "friendly witnesses". During their interviews they named several people who they accused of holding left-wing views. Emigrant playwright Bertold Brecht gave evidence and left for East Germany. Ten other actors were prosecuted on grounds of Contempt of Congress and imprisoned for between six and 12 months. Subsequently, the government created a blacklist with names of people who had been members of some leftist movement. The 320 on that list were stopped from working in the entertainment industry.
WHY ORWELL?: This chapter contextualizes Orwell’s life and work, exploring how his 1984 serves as a critique of totalitarian regimes and how these themes remain relevant to contemporary social and political trends.
PRELIMINARY PERSONAL OBSERVATIONS: The author details his personal experiences in the U.S. post-9/11, documenting his observations of a shift in American society toward self-censorship and government-led paranoia.
RISE OF SURVEILLANCE: This section traces the historical context of American state surveillance, specifically examining McCarthyism and the FBI’s clandestine operations, such as COINTELPRO, and their impact on civil liberties.
THE RAMIFICATION OF TOTALITARIAN ASPECTS GRANTED BY THE GOVERNMENT: The analysis focuses on the USA PATRIOT Act, arguing that its broad legal framework allows for the infringement of constitutional rights and the expansion of unchecked executive power.
EXAMPLES OF ORWELLIAN SURVEILLANCE: This chapter highlights specific government programs like TIPS, MATRIX, and airport security measures to illustrate how technology is being used to foster a "surveillance society."
THOUGHT CONTROL AND SUPPRESSION OF FREE SPEECH: The author explores how government-backed organizations use propaganda to enforce patriotic conformity and intimidate dissenters, linking these modern practices to Orwellian concepts of thought policing.
THE SECRECY OF THE GOVERNMENT AND ITS CONTROL OF THE NEWS: The final analytical chapter examines the government's efforts to control the flow of information through "news contamination" and the suppression of transparency, drawing parallels to the Ministry of Truth.
Orwell, 1984, Totalitarianism, Surveillance, USA PATRIOT Act, Civil Liberties, McCarthyism, COINTELPRO, Government Secrecy, Censorship, Patriotism, Dissent, Propaganda, September 11, War on Terror
The work examines whether the United States, following the events of September 11, 2001, has transitioned into a society mirroring the totalitarian characteristics depicted in George Orwell’s 1984.
The research centers on the expansion of state surveillance, the influence of mass media in manufacturing consent, the suppression of political dissent, and the legal implications of the USA PATRIOT Act.
The research asks if the government's response to the war on terror—specifically regarding domestic surveillance and the control of information—is systematically eroding democratic foundations and civil rights.
The author employs a comparative analysis, juxtaposing Orwellian literary concepts against documented historical and contemporary American political events, supported by interviews and primary research.
The main part of the book analyzes specific government programs and legal frameworks, such as the Patriot Act, MATRIX, and various surveillance initiatives, arguing they represent a departure from established constitutional limits.
Key terms include state surveillance, civil liberties, Orwellian, totalitarianism, political dissent, and the USA PATRIOT Act.
The author argues that the media plays a pivotal role in enforcing conformity by emphasizing evocative imagery over substantive information, thereby conditioning the public to accept government policies without critique.
The author connects the practices of McCarthy-era surveillance and COINTELPRO to the current "New McCarthyism," arguing that the current government is repeating historically discredited practices of spying on peaceful dissenters.
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