Huxley's Brave New World  in 2001

by Berit Kjos - 2002

See also Brave New World Revisited

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"Orwell feared that the truth would be concealed from us. Huxley feared the truth would be drowned in a sea  of irrelevance. Orwell feared we would become a captive culture. Huxley feared we would be come a trivial culture, preoccupied with some equivalent of the feelies, the orgy porgy, and the centrifugal bumble puppy... In 1984... people are controlled by inflicting pain. In Brave new World, they re controlled by inflicting pleasure. In short, Orwell feared that what we hate will ruin us. Huxley feared that we love will ruin us." 

--Neil Postman, Amusing Ourselves to Death (NY: Viking Penguin, Inc., 1985), vii-viii.

Note: Postman suggests that Huxley, not Orwell, was right. I believe that if Huxley was right, Orwell's realty will follow. New Age optimists, who believe man's inherent goodness will lead him on an upward journey to spiritual perfection, have, in Huxley's words, "failed to take into account man's almost infinite appetite for distractions."


Eighteen-year-old Rosemary Goldworthy had "eagerly awaited" the birth of her twins. But she would never hold them in her arms. When her babies were 22 weeks old, she began to hemorrhage and was taken to a hospital where the tiny girls were born. The babies - one dead and one living -- were put in plastic bags and left next to the heart-broken mother.  

"The firstborn was alive. She kicked and cried, but the nurse stuffed her in a plastic bag and knotted it. Rosie saw the baby's leg kicking through the plastic bag,” said the grieving grandfather, Jack Goldsworthy. "The second baby was stillborn and also placed in a plastic bag.... They were her first children, and they left the two bodies right in front of her eyes for her to see." [1]

Shocking? Perhaps not to young people raised on today's media diet of sex, violence and propaganda for population reduction and animal rights. Though this incident happened in Johannesburg, South Africa, last June, it brings a sober reminder of America's growing indifference to traditional values and to the inherent worth of human life. Such a shift from moral absolutes to a changeable consensus brings devastating consequences. Deut 8:10-20 

"You see it's not about 'compassionate conservatism' or saving lives," says columnist Paul Proctor. "That's just the party line.... No, it's really about reducing human life to a marketable commodity for the rich and powerful by persuading us as Hitler did Germany, that it's all for a good cause."[2] 

The media debate has been strangely silent about the erratic lab results, inflated promises and viable alternatives to embryonic stem cell research. The articles "Stem cells from skin grow into brain tissue" and  "Adult Stem Cells More Effective Than Those From Aborted Babies" remind us that when we turn from a wrong way in obedience to God, He provides a better way. [Prov 3:5-7]  But His better ways rarely provide global leaders with the justification needed to win public consent to their unspoken ends. 

We are looking at a world where international leaders view "human resources" -- called "human capital" by the [UN] World Bank -- as products that must be developed, managed, monitored and measured for its continual worth to the global village. Each community must be assessed and its "social capital" monitored. The latter refers to its worth based on the compliance of its people and the absence of dissent or conflict. Federal incentives and disincentives are then used to conform the community to national and international standards. But globalist leaders won't mention these offensive facts. 

Instead they want us to envision a world without war -- a global village where young and old would welcome the United Nations' global ethic, live by its Earth Charter, and consent to what Al Gore called "a wrenching transformation of society."[3] This new world would encourage sexual license but use swift reprisal to quench dissent and resistance. It would mandate group consensus and community service, but its "peace and unity" would abolish all the rights and freedoms Americans take for granted. 

Aldous Huxley outlined this vision well in his 1932 fantasy, Brave New World.  Most of its points are fast becoming reality: 

       They returned... with eight-month old babies, all exactly alike and all dressed in khaki.

       "Put them on the floor."

       The infants were unloaded....

       "Now turn them so they can see the flowers and books." ...

       The babies ... began to crawl towards those clusters of sleek colors..... From the ranks of the crawling babies came little squeals of excitement, gurgles and twittering of pleasure.... The swiftest crawlers were already at their goal. Small hands reached out uncertainly, touched, grasped... crumbling the illuminated pages of the books.

       The director waited until all were happily busy, then... he gave the signal.

       There was a violent explosion. Shriller and ever shriller, a siren shrieked. Alarm bells maddeningly sounded.

       The children started, screamed; their faces were distorted with terror. 

       "And now," the Director shouted, "now we proceed to rub in the lesson with a mild electric shock." ...

       The Nurse pressed  a second lever. The screaming of the babies suddenly changed its tone. There was something desperate, almost insane, about the sharp spasmodic yelps... Their little bodies twitched and stiffened.

       "Offer them the flowers and the books again." 

       The nurses obeyed, but... the infants shrank away in horror....

       Books and loud noises, flowers and electric shocks--already in the infant mind these couples were compromisingly linked; and after two hundred repetitions of the same or similar lessons would be wedded indissolubly. What man has joined, nature is powerless to put asunder.

       "They'll grow up with what the psychologist used to call an 'instinctive' hatred of books and flowers. Reflexes unalterably conditioned. They'll be safe from books and botany all their lives."[4] Brave New World 

        "The love of servitude cannot be established except as the result of  a deep, personal revolution in human minds and bodies. To bring about that revolution we require, among others, the following discoveries and inventions. First, a greatly improved technique of suggestion through infant conditioning....

        "Second, a fully developed science of human differences, enabling government managers to assign any given individual to hi s or her proper place in the social and economic hierarchy (Round pegs in square holes tend to have dangerous thoughts about the social system and to infect others with their discontents.)

       "Third, a substitute for alcohol... more pleasure-giving than gin or heroin.

       "Fourth... a foolproof system of eugenics, designed to standardize the human product and so to facilitate the task of the managers."[5] Brave New World

The similarities between our world and Huxley's vision shouldn't surprise us. Aldous' brother, Julian Huxley, became the first Secretary-General of UNESCO. Promoting the same socialist and humanist values as education pioneer John Dewey, he brought his brother's vision into the United Nations and helped lay the foundations for a global management system. Through the World Heritage Convention and other treaties and declarations, it would oversee the world's most scenic places and help standardize human resource development around the world. 

Our current education system is little more than the American branch of what UNESCO, in 1973, called a "continuous and integrated process" of "lifelong learning." Its outrageous psycho-social experiments were designed to indoctrinate our children with beliefs, values and thinking processes that replace Biblical faith and factual thinking. Today, the tragic cultural consequences are used to justify more of the same. 

Resistance is costly. A girl who refuses to endorse the gay lifestyle is labeled homophobic. A boy who appreciates traditional gender roles will score low in the new affective (feeling-based) school assessments. A man who refuses to participate in sensitivity training is fired. They simply don't measure up to the new standard for tolerance.

Some churches are faithful and courageous enough to take a stand and speak God's truth. But, as in Nazi Germany, much of the church is bending over backwards to avoid offense, meet the "felt needs" of their potential members and partner with the world's new managers. Many turn a blind eye as their children follow peers into the new paradigm where bad is good and good matches the global vision

Dewey, the Huxley brothers and their utopian followers might have been pleased with the world's "progress" toward their envisioned end. But they didn't understand human nature. In their arrogant pursuit of a better world, they ignored the lessons of history and mocked the Bible as a moral compass. The result is a world gone wild with boundless lust, lies and life-changing experimentation in forbidden realms. 

God shows us that true peace and unity come through only Christ, not through genetic manipulation, psycho-social indoctrination or behavior modification. "These things I have spoken to you that in Me you may have peace," said Jesus after giving his disciples some scary glimpses of future trials. "In the world you will have tribulation; but be of good cheer, I have overcome the world." John 16:33


1. Dead fetuses left with mother

2. Stem Cell Research - It's not about saving lives

3. Al Gore, Earth in the Balance; Ecology and the Human Spirit (Houghton Mifflin, 1992), page 274.

4. Brave New World (New York: HarperCollins, 1932), page 19-21.

5. Ibid., page xvi.


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