|

|
John North
Editor & Publisher |
A story about the British government’s effort to formulate a statement of values on what it means to be British recently caught my eye and made me chuckle.
Never having had the equivalent of a Declaration of Independence, the Brits never came up with a written statement of national purpose along the lines of “life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness” or “Liberté, Égalité, Fraternité.”
Despite the serious intent of the endeavor, the British citizenry has taken this in a decidedly British direction, making it the butt of self-deprecatory wit in pubs across the land.
Not to be outdone, The Times of London cynically sponsored a British
motto-writing contest for its readers that included some side-splitters.
One that mocks Latin mottos intones, “Dipso, Fatso, Bingo, Asbo,
Tesco.” (“Asbo” stands for “anti-social behavior order,” apparently the
Brits’ version of a restraining order; and “Tesco” is their equivalent
of Wal-Mart discount department stores.)
Other Monty Python-esque examples include “Once Mighty Empire, Slightly
Used,” “At Least We’re Not French” and “We Apologize for the
Inconvenience.”
Notwithstanding, the winner of the Times’ contest was: “No Motto Please, We’re British.”
The House of Lords even got in on the fun: The Earl of Mar and Kellie
suggested adopting the motto of Scotland, “Nemo me impune lacessit”
(“No one attacks me with impunity”), which he chose to translate as
“Don’t sit on a thistle.” Earl Ferrers drily proposed that, all else
failing, the House of Lords’ own motto
would do: “Questions and answers
ought to be short.”
Many British dislike the idea of a national mission statement because
they object to the soundbite/bumper-sticker mentality of reducing
everything to some inane five-word phrase.
After all, it was a British author, George Orwell, who encapsulated the
mind-control dangers of slogans in his classic, “1984,” by emblazoning
the mottos of the all-controlling Party on the façade of the Ministry
of Truth: “War Is Peace,” “Freedom Is Slavery” “Ignorance Is Strength.”
From my own experience, a lot of Ashevillians feel the same way about
the Greater Asheville Chamber of Commerce’s mottos for the city. The
chamber started out with “Altitude Affects Attitude,” which prompted
jokes about oxygen deprivation. Then, it must have been some overpaid
marketing consultant who dreamed up “Asheville: Any Way You Like It,”
which sounds vaguely like a hooker’s come-on. No one, of course, asked
you or me whether we wanted either slogan, or any at all.
Maybe the best slogan of all is, regrettably, the least understood —
North Carolina’s state motto, “Esse Quam Videri,” which means “to be
rather than to seem.” In other words, look to the essences, not the
appearances — or, as I would translate it for would-be official
sloganeers, “Get real!”
•
John North, publisher and editor of the Daily Planet, may be contacted at publisher-at-ashevilledailyplanet.com.
|