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Words are weapons

Level 3 | Advanced

1 Pre-reading

The following words are all taken from the text.Which of them do you regard as positive, which as negative
and which as neutral?

1. liberation
2. dark forces
3. civilisation
4. terrorist
5. militant
6. freedom-fighter
7. guerrilla
8. insurgent
9. hero
10. martyr

2 Key Vocabulary
Match these words from the text with their meanings:

deadly crusade reckless divisive salient


unpalatable unwary secular vague loaded

1. not connected with religion


2. with a second or hidden meaning
3. able or likely to kill people
4. not thinking about the possible bad effects of one’s actions
5. extremely unclear
6. likely to cause arguments between people
7. unpleasant to think about or accept
8. a holy war
9. not paying attention to the dangers around you
10. particularly noticeable or relevant

Now read the text

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© onestopenglish.com 2003 | This page can be photocopied.
Words are weapons
Level 3 | Advanced

From ‘civilisation’ to ‘WMD’,


words are weapons
Simon Tisdall
Terrorism is a salient case in point. In the is ignored. In fact, WMD is a vague term that
abstract, "terrorism" is a terrible thing; can be used to cover a multitude of supposed

S
econd world war posters warning that everybody deplores it; nobody supports it. Why sins. Developed countries have their own WMD,
"careless talk costs lives" represented a then is terrorism such a growth industry? of course, but their arsenals are somehow
lasting truth. Then the fear was that spies Because its definition is not agreed. It depends regarded as acceptable. Not so the WMD in
might overhear conversations of value to the where you stand. Terrorism has thus become a developing countries or "rogue states"
Nazis. The equivalent US slogan was "loose lips much abused word. (whatever that means). This species of
sink ships". Sixty years on, in another era of unauthorised WMD is deemed destabilising.
For Donald Rumsfeld, for example, the recent
conflict, the careless talk comes more often helicopter attack at Falluja was simply the work There are certain words, conversely, that the
from politicians - but it is potentially just as of "terrorists". That statement conceals a West’s leaders carefully avoid. These include
deadly. When George Bush, soon after larger, unpalatable truth. To the oppressed of "resistance" - too encouraging a label for the
September 11, referred to a "crusade" against the world, the men of violence are, variously, "remnants" opposing Iraq’s emancipators,
al-Qaida, he helped persuade Muslims that militants, freedom-fighters, guerrillas, especially when used with a capital "R", as in
they were under renewed attack from Richard insurgents, heroes, martyrs. The real terrorists French. And then there is "occupation".
the Lionheart in a US navy bomber jacke t .I n belong to the "other side". Yet "state Occupation, as in Iraq, is a no-go word;
the context of a potential "clash of terrorism" is a concept that is barely liberation is far preferable. Occupation makes it
civilisations",Bush’s loose use of language was recognised by the ostensible oppressors. Which sound as if the US has barged uninvited into
not only insensitive. It was unthinkingly brings us back to Bush. By declaring an open- somebody else’s country and refuses to go
reckless. ended, global "war on terror", Bush invited away. It makes Iraq sound like Palestine, Tibet,
Bush has avoided the word "crusade" ever every aspiring autocrat to do his worst in the Afghanistan or, heaven forbid, Vietnam. That
since. But he still regularly talks about the need name of "security" (another much-scandalised really is careless, ship-sinking talk.
to defend "civilisation" and "the civilised word). From Chechnya to Colombia, Pakistan to
world" against "dark forces". He never quite the Philippines, the anti-terror "war" has Greater sensitivity in use of language is
says which part of the planet is the expanded with Bush’s blessing. required of politicians – and indeed the media.
"uncivilised" or "dark" bit. Perhaps he means The urge to suppress arguably loaded words
Kandahar in Afghanistan or Eastbourne in In this loose-lipped, rapid-fire lingo, such should as a rule be resisted as inimical to free
England. It is unclear. But the unspoken people, whether killed or locked up in Bagram expression and better understanding. As every
implication is deeply divisive, even racist, not to or Guantanamo or a thousand other hell-holes, spin doctor knows, acceptance of "official"
say insulting. are by definition "evil". Here, you might think, terminology can amount to implicit
is another trap for the unwary, to be endorsement of official policy. But the search
Words can define how a people sees itself: the sidestepped by sensible politicians in the for the right word requires constant awareness
US declaration of independence is one obvious secular West. Not a bit of it. The latest addition of ambiguity and politically and culturally
example. Yet modern-day Palestinians also see to the modern leader’s essential vocabulary, is charged, multiple meanings. As ever in human
themselves engaged in a struggle for WMD. This is now a universally understood discourse, there is truth and there is
"independence" and "freedom" from external term, or so you might think. WMD is propaganda. It is important to be able to tell
oppression. The current US government ignores proliferating, it’s deeply frightening, and it’s the difference. Before passing the ammunition,
such semantic paradoxes. Words such as coming to a cinema near you. pass the word.
"imperialism","emancipation","self-
determination" and "liberation" define how Yet symbolic WMD is also a reason why civil
history is scripted, how the future will be liberties are everywhere under siege, why
military budgets are rising, why the developing The Guardian Weekly 20-11-03, page 14
shaped, how contemporary conflicts are
perceived and thus how they may be resolved. world is not developing, and why your opinion

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© onestopenglish.com 2003 | This page can be photocopied.
Words are weapons
Level 3 | Advanced

3 Comprehension Check
Which of these statements best reflect the meaning of the text as a whole?

1. When George Bush used the word ‘crusade’…


a. it had a negative impact on everyone.
b. it started a war with Muslims.
c. it had negative associations for Muslims.

2. Which words have replaced the word ‘crusade’ in Bush’s vocabulary?


a. attack and defend
b. uncivilised and dark
c. self-determination and liberation

3. What is the problem with the definition of terrorism?


a. t is a growth industry.
b. Terrorists are freedom-fighters or heroes.
c. The definition depends on your perspective.

4. Why do Western politicians avoid words like ‘resistance’?


a. Because such words might encourage people fighting against occupation.
b. Because they are too negative.
c. Because they want to ignore political problems.

5. Which of these titles best reflects the general theme of the article?
a. Freedom and terrorism
b. The power of words
c. Weapons of mass destruction

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© onestopenglish.com 2003 | This page can be photocopied.
Words are weapons
Level 3 | Advanced

4 Vocabulary: Find the word


The words and expressions are in chronological order in the text.

Find
1. A word which means ‘people inside a country who secretly support the enemies of that country’.
2. A word which means ‘a person who has complete power in a country’.
3. A slang word for ‘language’.
4. An expression which means ‘a terrible place’.
5. An expression which means ‘under prolonged attack’.
6. An expression which means ‘a country which is considered to be dangerous by other countries’.
7. An exclamation which you use when you hope something will not happen.
8. An expression used to describe a person who helps politicians to present their policies in a positive
light.

5 Vocabulary: Collocations
Match the verbs with the nouns they collocate with. Check your answers in the text.

1. to overhear a. war
2. to shape b. an urge
3. to resolve c. someone’s opinion
4. to declare d. a conversation
5. to ignore e. a conflict
6. to resist f. a policy
7. to endorse g. the difference
8. to tell h. the future

6 Discussion

Do you agree that the words used by politicians can shape our opinions of world events?
Think of examples of terrorists and freedom-fighters in history and discuss why they are labelled in this
way.

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© onestopenglish.com 2003 | This page can be photocopied.
Words are weapons
Level 3 | Advanced

Key

1 Pre Reading 3 Comprehension Check


There is no definite answer to this question but,
given the general meaning of the text, the 1 c; 2 b; 3 c; 4 a; 5 b
following are likely answers:

1. liberation positive 4 Find the word


2. dark forces negative
3. civilisation positive 1. spies
4. terrorist negative 2. autocrat
5. militant negative 3. lingo.
6. freedom-fighter positive 4. hell-hole
7. guerrilla negative 5. under siege
8. insurgent negative 6. rogue state
9. hero positive 7. heaven forbid
10. martyr positive 8. spin doctor

2 Key Vocabulary 5 Vocabulary 2: Collocations

1. secular 1 d; 2 h; 3 e; 4 a; 5 c; 6 b; 7 f; 8 g
2. loaded
3. deadly
4. reckless
5. vague
6. divisive
7. unpalatable
8. crusade
9. unwary
10. salient

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© onestopenglish.com 2003 | This page can be photocopied.

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