Christopher Hitchens
About
Prominent atheist writer and debater
Claims by Christopher Hitchens (20)
Orwell's greatest achievement was discovering, while fighting in Spain, that the belief in Soviet communism as a utopia was a huge lie and that its believers were capable of anything—and choosing to tell that truth even though he was accused of undermining the anti-fascist cause by doing so.
Czeslaw Milosz, in The Captive Mind, recounted that communists in Poland reading a pirated edition of 1984 were amazed at how well its English author—who had never lived under or even visited a communist country—understood the system, which Hitchens considers one of the greatest compliments ever paid by one author to another.
Trotsky predicted, after Chamberlain's Munich sellout, that Hitler's logical next move would be a pact with Stalin (because Chamberlain showed the conservatives would sell out European democracy for 10 more years of Indian domination), and even predicted that when the pact broke it would not be Stalin who broke it.
The International Brigades in Spain were largely made up not of famous writers but of Jewish garment workers, Welsh and Scottish coal miners, and engineers who had watched the great organized labour movements of Germany and Austria collapse into fascism without a shot, and decided to draw the line in Spain.
Orwell got the rise to prominence of America and the American idea wrong—his writing about the US was slight or condescending due to English snobbery about American mass culture, and he lacked a historical sense of America's importance, though Hitchens notes Orwell admired Twain and Thomas Paine.
Hitchens claims to be the only person to notice that 1984's opening line ('all the clocks were striking 13') may echo John Adams's remark about getting all 13 colonies to 'strike at the same time,' and that the Newspeak appendix uses the Declaration's 'we hold these truths to be self-evident' as the example sentence that cannot be rendered in Newspeak.
Much of the work of illegitimate power is done by 'slave volunteers' through euphemism—finding a nice word for a nasty thing (e.g. 'collectivization' for forced dispossession, 'collateral damage' for civilian casualties, 'purge' for mass murder)—so that getting a deed renamed accomplishes half the job of legitimizing it.
1984's genuine historical impact was not to encourage despair (as critics like Isaac Deutscher charged) but to enable resistance: by imagining how bad totalitarianism could become, readers could work to prevent it, which is why the book profoundly affected dissidents and future trade union leaders across the Soviet sphere.
Animal Farm is banned in almost every Islamic country—nominally because of its mention of pigs but really, as Iran's ban makes clear, as a satire upon absolutism—just as the Shah disliked public performances of Macbeth, so that attacks upon the book earn it the compliment accruing only to great literature.
The left has a built-in trap: it rightly values solidarity and fraternity, but this undervalues or treats with suspicion the independent thinker, recasting the person who breaks ranks as a traitor or scab and attributing the lowest possible motive to them—a tribal feeling that explains why an anti-imperialist, pro-working-class egalitarian like Orwell was caricatured by the left.
The communist-influenced argument that anti-communists were 'objectively'—and in Claud Cockburn's stronger version, knowingly—doing the work of Hitler, by which an anti-communist is by definition pro-fascist, drove a campaign to suppress Orwell's truthful Spanish reporting (Homage to Catalonia struggled to find a publisher partly due to KGB agent Peter Smollett in the British Ministry of Information).
Orwell signed away vast royalties by refusing to amend Animal Farm to make it more explicitly anti-communist for the Book of the Month Club and Reader's Digest, and gave free publication rights to Ukrainian, Polish, and Serb anti-communist socialist groups—demonstrating an unusual indifference to money and material comfort.
Churchill's 1945 'Gestapo speech'—claiming Labour's national healthcare plan would require 'a gestapo of bureaucracy'—was influenced by Hayek's Road to Serfdom and helped Churchill lose the election, because the British working class, having endured slump, war, bombing, and third-world health conditions, was in no mood to be told that voting for welfare meant voting for a Gestapo.
Orwell, reviewing The Road to Serfdom, judged it the wrong book at the wrong time for a working class that preferred state-intervention risks to laissez-faire risks—yet conceded Hayek's stubborn point that if a certain share of national income passes under state control past a certain point it becomes tyranny and the citizen loses both liberty and welfare, making Orwell again slightly out of step with the near-total social-democratic consensus.
Orwell anticipated, in 'You and the Atom Bomb,' a second danger beyond annihilation: that nuclear weaponry would make the state invulnerable—armored behind a shield no guerrilla war, insurrection, or revolution could ever overthrow—necessarily leading to tyranny, an insight Hitchens links to Orwell's general weather-eye toward the over-mighty state.
There were moments in the Cold War when one was forced to think the superpower rivalry had become about itself—with crisis-managers like Kissinger and Helmut Sonnenfeld feeling more sympathy with the managers in Beijing and Moscow than with troublesome movements in subordinate countries like Czechoslovakia or Vietnam—vindicating Orwell's insight that rival superpowers might share a secret common interest in maintaining a balance of terror.
Orwell's family background—his father made a living selling Indian opium under British imperial auspices to a China compelled to buy it—and his hatred of imperialism, class snobbery, and suburban hypocrisy meant he had no choice but to move left toward the underdogs; the conspicuous absence of any father figure in his works (and 'Big Brother' rather than a literal eternal father) reflects this distraught attitude to family.
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