Newspeak is No Accident at NHTSA, Says Automotive News
14 July 1997
Newspeak is No Accident at NHTSA, Says Automotive NewsDETROIT, July 14 -- The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration has slipped into an era of Newspeak straight out of George Orwell's book "1984," according to an article in today's edition of Automotive News. The industry trade paper reports that NHTSA, the government's safety agency, has banned the word "accident." The action was taken at the behest of NHTSA Administrator Dr. Ricardo Martinez because "accident" conveys the wrong impression. Following is the complete text of the article published in the July 14 edition of Automotive News: WASHINGTON -- Many safety experts dislike the word "accident" because it suggests "unavoidable." Nonsense, they say -- all accidents are avoidable. That is especially the case these days at headquarters of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration -- where "accidents" have been outlawed. Henceforth, by unavoidable order of NHTSA Administrator Dr. Ricardo Martinez: * The Accident Investigation Division has become the Crash Investigation Division. * The Fatal Accident Reporting System has become the Fatal Analysis Reporting System. * The National Accident Sampling System is now the National Automotive Sampling System. The latter two are the agency's databases on fatal crashes and on accident, oops, crash patterns. NHTSA spokesman Tim Hurd insisted last week that there is a logic to the word ban. "It's an indication of Dr. Martinez's serious approach to this. He's willing to make these changes to focus people's attention on how to avoid pain and suffering," he said. But Sam Kazman, general counsel of the Competitive Enterprise Institute, thinks any agency that has the time to tinker with the English language has far too much time on its hands. "If that's true," he said, "it seems to me that NHTSA should explain how its own rule-making accidents occur." Automotive News is published each Monday in Detroit by Crain Communications Inc., a privately held company that publishes 30 consumer, business and trade publications. SOURCE Automotive News