When you write a check to the IRS, is that charity? According to UK-based philosopher Alain de Botton, that’s what we should call taxes, because the word “tax” is “colorless, odorless and offensive.” Yes, he’s really serious.
Modern political language seems to be intended to conceal the truth rather than make facts clear. It’s no wonder that nobody can agree about what’s going on when almost everybody is busy redefining words to mean what he wants them to mean — in order to make a point.
For instance, in normal conversation, if you say that someone’s budget has been cut, those words have a specific meaning. The money in the budget is something less than it was before. In politics, though, it can mean something altogether different. A “budget cut” might mean that a budget went up — not down — but that the rate of increase wasn’t as much as had been previously planned.
This language is dishonest, and its intent is to conceal the fact that real overall budgets are almost never cut. Politicians can claim to have cut budgets, even though spending still goes up.

Gloria Allred wants free speech for her, but not for Rush Limbaugh
Coming economic hardship may help me understand Aunt Bessie
How do we intuitively see truth through the fog of perception?
Why not join the LP? You can’t fight the state by becoming the state
Correcting an old error: there’s no such thing as ‘We the People’
Epiphany: Was it so bad that I used to work toward perfection?
Goodbye, William (1999-2015)