The Ministry of Truth
How Orwell's 1984 Became the Playbook for Modern Power
Échec de l'ajout au panier.
Échec de l'ajout à la liste d'envies.
Échec de la suppression de la liste d’envies.
Échec du suivi du balado
Ne plus suivre le balado a échoué
0,99 $/mois pendant vos 3 premiers mois
Acheter pour 25,00 $
-
Narrateur(s):
-
Gene Snowden
-
Auteur(s):
-
James G. Edwards II
À propos de cet audio
What if George Orwell's 1984 wasn't a warning, but a blueprint?
In 1949, George Orwell painted a chilling portrait of a totalitarian future where Big Brother watched every move, the Ministry of Truth rewrote history, and thoughtcrime was punishable by death. Seventy-five years later, his dystopian nightmare has become our digital reality—and we handed over the keys willingly.
Welcome to the age of voluntary surveillance.
Your smartphone tracks your location 24/7. Social media algorithms know your political beliefs before you do. Search engines decide which version of reality you see. Tech giants possess more power than most governments, and they're using Orwell's playbook to maintain control.
The Ministry of Truth is a disturbing examination of how Orwell's fictional instruments of oppression have been perfected in the digital age:
• Big Brother 2.0: How smartphones, smart homes, and wearable devices created a surveillance network that makes telescreens look quaint
• Digital Newspeak: How algorithms manipulate language and thought, creating echo chambers that would make the Ministry of Truth proud
• The Memory Hole Goes Viral: How information disappears from the internet, history gets rewritten in real-time, and inconvenient truths vanish forever
• Thoughtcrime Enforcement: How cancel culture, deplatforming, and social credit systems punish dissent with surgical precision
• The Two Minutes Hate, 24/7: How social media platforms profit from outrage, amplify division, and keep us perpetually angry at each other
But this book isn't just a catalog of horrors—it's a roadmap to resistance. Drawing from privacy advocates, digital rights activists, and freedom fighters around the world, Edwards shows how individuals can reclaim their cognitive autonomy and digital privacy.
The question isn't whether we're living in 1984—we are. The question is what we're going to do about it.
©2025 ELC Publishing (P)2025 ELC Publishing