The Memory Hole |
People think that the ideas in the book like the
memory hole are modeled on communist or fascist dictatorships from the early
part of the last century.
What those people forget is that George Orwell worked at the BBC during the Second World War. As Dorian Lynskey noted in his recent history of the novel, Orwell thought that “radio, as it existed in the 1940s, [was] ‘inherently totalitarian.’”
In Spain during the Civil War, he saw his first
newspapers that “did not bear any relation to the facts, not even the relationship
which is implied by an ordinary lie.” But it was in his exposure to radio
during the Second World War that Orwell heard in all the propaganda on all
sides very similar distortions of reality.
“This kind
of thing is frightening to me," Orwell wrote in his 1943 essay Looking back
on the Spanish war, “because it often gives me the feeling that the
very concept of objective truth is fading out of the world.”
“After all,
the chances are that those lies, or at any rate similar lies, will pass into
history… Yet, after all, some kind of history will be written, and
after those who actually remember the war are dead, it will be universally
accepted. So, for all practical purposes the lie will have become the truth”.
This is only a small step to the slogan of the Party in Nineteen eighty-four: “Who controls the past, controls the future: who controls the present controls the past.”
Winston Smith’s job, as anyone who read the book or seen the
movie versions knows, is to alter newspapers from the past to reflect the
current Party messages. The old
newspapers – indeed any fragments of paper – disappear down a chute popularly
known as the memory hole, which led to incinerators somewhere in the building
where he worked. They would be replaced by Winston's altered version.
“The past, [Winston] reflected, had not merely been altered,
it had been actually destroyed. For how could you establish even the most
obvious fact when there existed no record outside your own memory?”
A popular line in Newfoundland and Labrador these days came up in the House of Assembly a couple of weeks when the politicians were not talking about the latest news of management cock-ups at Muskrat Falls. Energy minister Andrew Parsons was sparred with opposition leader Ches Crosbie about who was responsible for the cost over-runs that had driven the cost of the project to be almost three times what the public had been told it would cost in November 2010.
“The
project the minister refers to,” Crosbie
said, “was sound in concept but poorly executed by Nalcor, and much of the
poor execution happened on his watch.”
Sound
in concept but poorly executed.
That’s a popular line among Muskrateers. Dwight Ball said something along the same lines during the 2019 election debate. Ball told his familiar lie that he had never supported Muskrat Falls. Crosbie quoted Ball’s words from the December 2012 Hansard when Ball said he had loved the project when he first heard of it that November now a decade past. So, Ball changed his line to say the project was sound in concept but poorly executed.
That
was Dwight’s
longstanding rationalization for his past support of the project and his
continued refusal once in power to do anything meaningful to stop it. Muskrat Falls was a fine project. It was just poorly managed. Or words to that
effect.
It’s
nonsense, of course. The project never
made sense, as regular readers well know. The concept from the outset – April 2010, as
we now know – was to force local ratepayers to cover the full cost even though
they did not need the power and there were cheaper alternatives the government
never considered. No one looked at what this might mean for those taxpayers as
the project went over-budget. They just ploughed ahead, regardless.
Muskrat
Falls was always supposed to double domestic
electricity prices.
Muskrat
Falls was always supposed to double public debt.
Muskrat
Falls was always supposed to deliver free or really cheap electricity to other
people while Newfoundlanders and Labradorians paid the full cost of it, plus
profit for the companies involved, and got no lasting benefit of it for themselves.
This
isn’t the first bit of Muskrat Falls the project supporters despatched down the
memory hole as they re-imagined the past. They started relatively early on by
calculating the start date of the project as December
2012. Realistically, we should start
it from November 2010, when Danny Williams and Kathy Dunderdale announced it.
And politically, this totally political of politically projects was unstoppable
from about 2005 onwards.
The
effect of using December 2012 as the start date is to alter reality. The architects of the LeBlanc inquiry terms
of reference used the start date in December 2012. This allowed the commission to focus only on
the execution of the project and ignore entirely the role played by politicians
in conceiving of, developing, and driving the entire project from the
beginning.
The
emphasis that LeBlanc played on things NALCOR officials hid from the
politicians feeds the myth the project was sound but, as Crosbie said, NALCOR
executed it poorly. The truth is the politicians
did not care.
The
2012 myth also allows people to forget that Danny William was the father of this
monstrous product of ego and ambition, of politics and pride. It shifts the blame for the project from the
father to the midwife whose only real job was to bring the creature into the
world.
The
2012 myth hides the extent of the cost over-runs. Five billion we were told in 2010. But by 2012 it was over seven billion. A year after father Williams and midwife
Dunderdale announced their creation, it has already exceeded the total cost
everyone was assured the dam, line to the island, *and* the one to Nova Scotia
would cost.
The
fabrication of a false past is not a conspiracy. It doesn’t take a dictatorship. Individuals
are doing on their own, sometimes unaware of the implication of their
alteration. For many of them, making up
a false history is their mind’s way of protecting itself from trauma. They had supported
Danny, supported the project, disregarded the critics, went along with the
crowd. They feel pain and maybe guilt
but by believing another small lie, they can free themselves of the guilt.
And
now by believing that Muskrat Fall was actually good, they pave the way for
Gull Island. If the problem was merely
the piss poor management of the project, then Gull Island will be handled by
different managers. We will not make the
same mistakes again, some future Premier will announce. This time we will get it right even though
all of the things that made Muskrat mad still make the Island insane.
And
the same people who cheered wildly in 2010 will cheer wildly for the glories of
Gull, comforted - even if only for a moment - by the controlled reality, the
shared delusion they helped create.
-srbp-