“If you control language, you control yourself, and you probably control other people too” (Hale & Basides, 2013, p. 88). How does this claim relate to official uses of ‘coded’ language?

“If you control language, you control yourself, and you probably control other people too” (Hale & Basides, 2013, p. 88). How does this claim relate to official uses of ‘coded’ language? Order Description This is the essay question: “If you control language, you control yourself, and you probably control other people too” (Hale & Basides, 2013, p. 88). How does this claim relate to official uses of ‘coded’ language? 6 sources need to used/in" rel="nofollow">incorporated in" rel="nofollow">in the essay. 4 of them are set (see below) and 2 of them up need to be chosen yourself (must be an academic source – no onlin" rel="nofollow">ine websites etc, just books and scholarly reviewed pieces) Ahluwalia, P., & McCarthy, G. (1998). ‘Political Correctness’: Paulin" rel="nofollow">ine Hanson and the Construction of Australian Identity. Australian journal of public admin" rel="nofollow">inistration, 57(3), 79-85. Allan, K. & Burridge, K. (2006). Forbidden Words: Taboo and the Censorin" rel="nofollow">ing of Language. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Flowerdew, J. (2014). Academic discourse. Abin" rel="nofollow">ingdon (UK): Routledge. Hale, A. & Basides, H. (2013). The Keys to Academic English. Melbourne: Palgrave Macmillan. Halmari, H. (2011). Political correctness, euphemism, and language change: The case of ‘people first’. Journal of Pragmatics, 43(3), 828-840.