Monday, April 13, 2009

Communication is Dead

Communication is dead, and we killed it.

Interestingly enough, culture is generally seen as a mass expression of individualized communication. It is seen as the result of communication, and as a vehicle for communication.

In the case of the Modern West, however, and more especially America, culture is the blunt object with which political elites have bludgeoned communication to death. We are left with a bloody mess, and surprisingly (?), with silence.

It is the silence of the asylum, however. Dead quiet pierced by the occasional unintelligible shriek. Or the psychological silence self-imposed when one is trying to sleep through the banging, clanging, and Tourette's-like jibberish from those who want desperately to be heard, but have no way of saying anything meaningful.

How did culture kill communication?

1) Political Correctness -

Nowadays the average person is so busy tailoring their speech to meet the fraudulent mandates of “sensitivity” that they no longer have the will to state what they really think. Fueling this sterile and arbitrary vernacular is the need to exclude others from the arena of legitimate debate. It’s a method by which the irrational can silence the rational. It is a method by which the unthinking control those capable of thought. Political Correctness is not an aid to communication, it is the antithesis of communication.


2) Education -

The beginning of communication was once spelling, grammar, and composition - one prong of the so-called "3 R's." In the 1980s, trendy educrats started replacing actual teaching with the so-called "feel-good curriculum" in which such monstrosities as creative spelling and inclusive speech (like s/he) flourished.

The discipline imposed upon communication by such formal commitments as spelling, grammar, and logic were replaced by mere expression. The value of communication was in the expression, not the form. This wrongheaded nonsense has given rise to a culture in which everyone talks, but nobody listens, because at the end of the day nobody has anything worthwhile to say.

3) Entertainment -

Entertainment once told a story. One cannot help but admire, when watching old shows like "Good Times," "Welcome Back Kotter," and even "Married, With Children," the talent of the writers who once authored scripts for television shows. Strict, tight, intelligent, and witty, these scripts (and others like them) once wove in and out of a plot to give the audience not only a story, but insight into the culture and the human condition, along with the occasional surreptitious wink so that the audience understood that the actors and writers knew that they were engaged in a spoof.

Modern entertainment, seems amateurish and disjointed by comparison. And the spoof has become reality, as pop divas seem completely unaware that their value consists in constructing an alternate, fake reality - not in defining reality itself.

5) Superfluity -

In the final analysis, one of the reasons that communication has died is that thinking has died. Years of outcome-based education, lack of respect for the liberal arts, and the feel-good culture has produced generations in which the majority do not think thoughts worthy of being communicated. Without engaging in serious thought, there are precious few thoughts worth communicating.

Rhetorical Services exists to resuscitate effective communication. On our staff we have English teachers, public speakers, legal scholars, medical professionals, political activists, writers, and communication professionals. Our goal is not only to ensure compelling communication, but to teach it, and to argue for it.

Genuine communication is a foundational element in genuine civilization. When communication suffers, civilization's very underpinnings are weakened.

Check back to this site, as over the next several days we will be showing how each of the above factors have undermined communication, logic, and rhetoric in the modern world.

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