The US Military’s Vision for State Censorship
By Andre
Damon
October 15, 2018 "Information
Clearing House"
-
In March, the United States Special
Operations Command, the section of the
Defense Department supervising the US
Special Forces, held a conference on the
theme of “Sovereignty in the Information
Age.” The conference brought together
Special Forces officers with domestic police
forces, including officials from the New
York Police Department, and representatives
from technology companies such as Microsoft.
This meeting of top military, police and
corporate representatives went unreported
and unpublicized at the time. However, the
Atlantic Council recently published a
21-page document summarizing the orientation
of the proceedings. It is authored by John
T. Watts, a former Australian Army officer
and consultant to the US Department of
Defense and Department of Homeland Security.
The Atlantic Council, a think tank with
close ties to the highest levels of the
state, has been a key partner in the social
media companies’ censorship of left-wing
views. Most notably, Facebook acted on a tip
from the Atlantic Council when it shut down
the official event page for an anti-fascist
demonstration in Washington on the
anniversary of last year’s neo-Nazi riot in
Charlottesville.
Are You Tired Of The Lies And Non-Stop Propaganda? |
Confident
that none of the thousands of journalists in
Washington will question, or even report,
what he writes, Watts lays out, from the
standpoint of the repressive apparatus of
the state and the financial oligarchy it
defends, why censorship is necessary.
The central theme of the report is
“sovereignty,” or the state’s ability to
impose its will upon the population. This
“sovereignty,” Watts writes, faces “greater
challenges now than it ever has in the
past,” due to the confluence between growing
political opposition to the state and the
internet’s ability to quickly spread
political dissent.
Watts cites the precedent of the invention
of the printing press, which helped
overthrow the feudal world order. In the
Atlantic Council’s estimation, however, this
was an overwhelmingly negative development,
ushering in “decades, and arguably
centuries, of conflict and disruption” and
undermining the “sovereignty” of absolutist
states. The “invention of the internet is
similarly creating conflict and disruption,”
Watts writes.
“Trust in Western society,” he warns, “is
experiencing a crisis. The 2018 Edelman
Trust Barometer has tracked this erosion,
showing a 30 percent drop in trust in
government over the last year in the United
States.”
Watts notes that this collapse in support
for the government cannot be explained
merely by the rise of social media. This
process began in the early 2000s, “at the
dawn of the social media age but before it
had become mainstream.” Left out are the
major reasons for the collapse of popular
support for government institutions: the
stolen election of 2000, the Bush
administration’s lies about weapons of mass
destruction, unending war and the impact of
the 2008 financial crisis.
However, while it is “hard to argue that the
current loss of trust results solely from
the emergence of social media,” Watts
writes, there “can be little doubt that it
acted as a critical amplifier of broader
trends."
He continues: “Technology has democratized
the ability for sub-state groups and
individuals to broadcast a narrative with
limited resources and virtually unlimited
scope.” By contrast, “In the past, the
general public had limited sources of
information, which were managed by
professional gatekeepers.”
In other words, the rise of uncensored
social media allowed small groups with ideas
that correspond to those of the broader
population to challenge the political
narrative of vested interests on an equal
footing, without the “professional
gatekeepers” of the mainstream print and
broadcast media, which publicizes only a
pro-government narrative.
When “radical and extremist views” and
“incorrect ideas” are “broadcast over social
media, they can even influence the views of
people who would not otherwise be
sympathetic to that perspective,” Watts
warns. “When forwarded by a close friend or
relation, false information carries
additional legitimacy; once accepted by an
individual, this false information can be
difficult to correct.”
People must be isolated, in other words,
from the “incorrect” ideas of their friends
and family, because such ideas are
“difficult to correct” by the state once
disseminated.
But how is this to be done? The growth of
oppositional sentiment cannot be combatted
with “facts” or the “truth,” because “facts
themselves are not sufficient to combat
disinformation.” The “truth” is “too
complex, less interesting, and less
meaningful to individuals.”
Nor can the growth of political opposition,
for the time being, simply be solved by
“eliminating” (i.e., killing or jailing)
political dissidents, because this only
lends legitimacy to the ideas of the
victims. “Eliminating those individuals and
organizations will not be sufficient to
combat the narrative and may in fact help
amplify it.” He adds, “This is also the case
for censorship as those behind the narrative
can use the attempt to repress the message
as proof of its truth, importance, or
authenticity.”
Enter the social media companies. The best
mechanism for suppressing oppositional
viewpoints and promoting pro-government
narratives is the private sector, in
particular “technology giants, including
Facebook, Google, YouTube, and Twitter,”
which can “determine what people see and do
not see.”
Watts adds, “Fortunately, shifts in the
policies of social media platforms such as
Facebook have had significant impact on the
type and quality of the content that is
broadcast.”
The private sector, therefore, must do the
dirty work of the government, because
government propaganda is viewed with
suspicion by the population. “Business and
the private sector may not naturally
understand the role they play in combating
disinformation, but theirs is one of the
most important…. In the West at least, they
have been thrust into a central role due to
the general public’s increased trust in them
as institutions.”
But this is only the beginning. Online
newspapers should “consider disabling
commentary systems—the function of allowing
the general public to leave comments beneath
a particular media item,” while social media
companies should “use a grading system akin
to that used to rate the cleanliness of
restaurants” to rate their users’ political
statements.
Strong-arm tactics still have a role, of
course. Citing the example of WikiLeaks
editor Julian Assange, Watts declares that
“governments need to create consequences”
for spreading “disinformation” similar to
those meted out for “state espionage” –
which can carry the death penalty.
What Watts outlines in his document is a
vision of a totalitarian social order, where
the government, the media, and technology
companies are united in suppressing
oppositional viewpoints.
The most striking element of the document,
however, is that it is not describing the
future, but contemporary reality. Everything
is in the present tense. The machinery of
mass censorship has already been built.
The Atlantic Council report, based on
high-level discussions within the military
and state, is a confirmation of everything
the World Socialist Web Site has said about
the purpose of changes in the algorithms of
internet and social media companies over the
past year-and-a-half.
On August 25, 2017, the WSWS published an
open letter to Google alleging that the
company is “manipulating its Internet
searches to restrict public awareness of and
access to socialist, anti-war and left-wing
websites.” It added, “Censorship on this
scale is political blacklisting.”
Over the subsequent year, key details of the
open letter have been indisputably
confirmed. At congressional hearings and in
other public statements, leading US
technology companies have explained that
they reduced the propagation of political
views and statements targeted by US
intelligence agencies, and did so in secret
because they feared a public outcry. At the
same time, they have explained the technical
means by which they promoted pro-government,
pro-war news outlets, such as the New York
Times and Washington Post.
But the Atlantic Council document presents
the most clear, direct and unvarnished
explanation of the regime of state
censorship.
The struggle against censorship is the
spearhead of the defense of all democratic
rights. The most urgent task is to unify the
working class, which is engaged in a wave of
social struggles all over the world, behind
the struggle against censorship as a
component of the fight for socialism.
This article was originally published by "WSWS" -
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