West
Already Weaponizing Fake News
By Finian
Cunningham
November 24, 2016
"Information
Clearing House"
- "Sputnik"
- You really know that masses of people are living
within a mind-control matrix when the greatest, most
pervasive purveyors of fake news denounce others for the
practice.
And yet they do so
without the slightest hint of awareness about their own
monstrous hypocrisy.
"Fake news" has
become a hot issue following the surprise US election
victory of maverick business tycoon Donald Trump.
Supposedly serious Western media outlets have
highlighted the spread of hoax stories purporting to be
news reports as having swayed the presidential race
in Trump’s favor against his rival, Democrat career
politician Hillary Clinton.
One such hoax
"report" was that Pope Francis had allegedly given his
blessing to Trump just before the November 8 poll, which
presumably prompted some American Catholics on board the
Republican’s election ticket.
No doubt, the
internet is a plentiful source of false rumor and other
bizarre, tall stories.
But now, it seems,
Western corporate media giants are calling for Facebook
and other social networking sites to weed out "fake
news". Given how wrong the US media called the election
and also their rabid bias against Trump, the hunt for a
scapegoat is understandable.
US media mogul
Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook's CEO, seems ready to comply
with demands to provide a team of censors against the
spread of fictive reports. Even though, he claims that
the vast majority of news links on his worldwide network
are to genuine, factual content.
This is setting
a sinister precedent for abusive, systematic censorship.
Unfortunately, control of global information is prone
to subjective Western cultural and political bias.
Already we see how it is Western media outlets who are
making an issue over "fake news" and it is Western-based
internet companies like Facebook and Google who are
taking on the mantle of filtering out content.
It is not hard,
therefore, to imagine how this train of thought could be
applied eventually to non-Western news services that
supply information critical of Western government
interests an conduct.
Take,
for example, the war in Syria. Russian news media have
provided many important, documented reports and analyses
on how Washington and its Western allies are
systematically colluding with jihadi terror groups
to prosecute a covert, criminal war for regime change
against the elected government of Syria.
By contrast,
the Western corporate media have rarely if ever given
any coverage to such verifiable violations by their
governments in Syria. Or in any other recent conflict
for that matter, such as in Yemen, Libya, Iraq,
Afghanistan, Ukraine, Georgia.
Of course, this is
because Western media outlets are part of the
ideological, propaganda matrix that serves to conceal
the crimes of Western governments, which, in turn, serve
to facilitate the strategic interests of Western
corporations.
Western
so-called news services do on occasion publish outright
fake news, such as when Iraq was accused of possessing
weapons of mass destruction in the run-up to the US-led
war in 2003. But far more often, the informational fare
is less crudely fabricated and more subtly finessed
with distortions and omissions of crucial facts and
context. Still, that is tantamount to fake news, no
less.
This week, Western
newspapers and TV channels were reporting on how Russia
was "destabilizing European security" by installing
Iskander missiles and the S-400 defense system in its
territory of Kaliningrad – the exclave between Lithuania
and Poland.
The supposedly
august London Times headlined its report thus: "Putin
moves his missiles in new threat to Europe".
The foreboding
tone is typical of the constant flow of Western media
reports over many months alleging that Russian warships
and warplanes are menacing European territories. From
Britain’s Daily Mail to America's New York Times we have
been told since at least last year that Russian troops
were about to invade the Baltic states.
No matter that
Moscow, including President Vladimir Putin and his top
diplomat Sergei Lavrov, has repeatedly dismissed the
allegations of Russian aggression. Undeterred, the
Western "news stories" just keep being churned out as if
by a manic conveyor belt.
As always, this
week's Western Russian-scare episode was spun and
disseminated without the appropriate, crucial context.
The
installation of missiles on Russia's western-most
territory comes after the US-led NATO military alliance
announced plans last month to greatly escalate troops
on Russia's border. The Kaliningrad move also follows
the deployment of US missile systems in Romania earlier
this year.
Evidently,
Russia's latest military measures are in response to US
and NATO offensive steps, or as Putin told American film
director
Oliver Stone in an interview aired this week, the
Russian moves are "counter-measures".
Washington and
its NATO allies justify their reckless escalation
on Russia's borders as "defensive response" to alleged
Russian intervention in Ukraine in 2014 and Georgia
in 2008. But such Western claims are easily disputable,
indeed rendered baseless if given to objective scrutiny.
The trouble is,
however, Western media have by and large not allowed
factual reportage to intrude on their pre-ordained
narrative of impugning and demonizing Russia.
What we see is a
systematic information campaign – bluntly, propaganda –
that propagates fake news upon fake news in order
to justify Western strategic interests. Those interests
include: propping up NATO and the Western
military-industrial complex that is so vital to sustain
late capitalist economies; as well as subjugating Russia
and its enormous natural resources for exploitation
by Western corporations.
In this
perspective, fake news about the Pope backing Donald
Trump or about Hillary Clinton's health condition is a
trifle. The real perpetrators of fake news are
professional media conglomerates that pound TV channels
and internet screens every second of every day, with the
diabolical risk of igniting all-out global war.
This
corporate-controlled fake news about alleged Russian
aggression in Europe or purported violations in Syria
and Ukraine is correlated with the sanitizing of real
news about how Western governments are supporting
terrorists in Syria, or aiding and abetting
state-sponsored slaughter of civilians in Yemen.
So pervasive is
this matrix that the systematic purveyors of fake news
can turn around and, with a straight face, pontificate
to others about the "ethics of journalism".
What is truly
alarming is that the West’s weaponization of information
– self-declared as independent, free-thinking – has
become so inculcated that real, alternative news could
end up being banished from public access.
Dissenting news
sites, including many that are based in the West and
elsewhere, including Russian's RT and Sputnik, often
convey context and facts that upend Western official
narratives.
Just because
those alternative news perspectives might appear
outlandish to grossly distorted Western narratives, will
they then be subject to censorship?
Accusing
Western governments of sponsoring terrorism or
fabricating "Russian aggression" could, plausibly, seem
like fake news if control of the internet were given
over to a coterie of Western-based monitors. But such
designation of "fake news" is only due to oblivious
cultural arrogance and indoctrination.
Maybe the
internet will not succumb to the latest Western crusade
against "fake news".
However,
considering how so much of Western "news" is already
weaponized and when you consider the deeper malign
purposes that it truly serves, then the practice
of creeping censorship is never too far away. |