The Downside Of Irony
The Downside Of Irony
To the Editor:Â
Irony is such a wonderful word.
Major authors and filmmakers have admitted to the temptation to make deals with the devil if they would be blessed with the gift of true, unforced, irony in their work. Well-known novelists and talented playwrights have strived for years to achieve a review that boasts of the âsubtle but brilliantly ironic quality so rare in contemporary writers...â
Rare, perhaps, in literature, but overabundant in the political landscape in America today.Â
There are several different kinds of irony: Aside from synonyms like âreversal,â âsatire,â and âsarcasm,â there is âDramaticâ irony, i.e., âirony inherent in speeches or a situation of a drama, which is understood by the audience, but not grasped by the characters in a playâ (sound familiar?); also, âSocraticâ irony, defined as âpretended ignorance in a discussion...â (recognize anyone?) While either of these would suffice to describe any number of players in Bushâs âTheater of the Absurdâ administration, I would like to propose an even more fitting category â âPsychoticâ irony â characterized by âa loss of contact with reality and an inability to think rationallyâ producing a condition whereby a person âoften behaves inappropriately and is incapable of normal social functioning.â (bullâs-eye!)
May 2003 (about six weeks after we invaded Iraq): âMajor combat operations in Iraq have ended. In the Battle of Iraq, the United States and our allies have prevailedâ¦.â said Bush on the deck of the USS Abraham Lincoln, below an enormous banner with âMission Accomplishedâ in bold letters.
According to a recent Bill Moyers Journal transcript, âBy this point â 140 US troops had died during the mission.â (This week, total reached 3,372!)
âItâs unknowable how long that conflict will last. It could be six days, six weeks. I doubt six monthsâ¦.â said Donald Rumsfeld in February 2003 (Over four years ago!)
One week after the invasion, the Deputy Defense Secretary said, while trying to pooh-pooh the costs of the war, ââ¦the oil revenues of that country could bring between $50 and $100 billion over the course of the next two or three yearsâ¦Weâre dealing with a country that can really finance its own reconstruction, and relatively soon.â (Paul Wolfowitz, a Bush nominee who became president of the World Bank in 2005!)
Continuing his report, Moyers stated, ââ¦the warâs costs are soaring so fast the website costofwar.com uses a nonstop digital counter to keep up with the spendingâ¦projected to reach nearly one trillion dollars.â He included the following statistics from the National Priorities Project about what the money spent on the war so far could have provided America: 1.8 million new teachers; over 20 million college scholarships; health insurance for over 60 million children; nearly 4 million new housing units; and the incalculable price tag on the lost human livesâ¦
â¦And today Bush picked a âWhite House War Czarâ for Iraq! Czarâ¦if you want to have fun, look up the origins of this word, going back to Caesar, Kaiser, and Russian Tsar (as in Ivan the Terrible)â¦.
Irony is such a wonderful word.
Michael Luzzi
Boggs Hill Road, Newtown                                              May 15, 2007