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"The Global Plutocracy Is Terrified of Dissent"

George Washington's picture




 

By Washington’s Blog

The Most Liberal Part of the Country Takes a Page from Dictator's Playbook

The most liberal part of the country - the San Francisco Bay Area - is taking a page from Egyptian dictator Mubarak's playbook.

As leading free speech organization Electronic Frontier Foundation reports:

This week, EFF has seen censorship stories move closer and closer to home — first Iran, then the UK, and now San Francisco, an early locus of the modern free speech movement. Operators of the Bay Area Rapid Transit system (BART) shut down cell phone service to four stations in downtown San Francisco yesterday in response to a planned protest.

 

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BART said today that it had instituted the following rules, including:

No person shall conduct or participate in assemblies or demonstrations or engage in other expressive activities in the paid areas of BART stations, including BART cars and trains and BART station platforms.

What does that mean? We can't talk?

One thing is clear, whether it’s BART or the cell phone carriers that were responsible for the shut-off, cutting off cell phone service in response to a planned protest is a shameful attack on free speech. BART officials are showing themselves to be of a mind with the former president of Egypt, Hosni Mubarak, who ordered the shutdown of cell phone service in Tahrir Square in response to peaceful, democratic protests earlier this year.

U.S. and Britain Attack Social Media

It's not just cell phones.

For example, the Pentagon is trying to manipulate social media for propaganda purposes. And the government is trying to censor any suggestions on the web and other media that powerful people might actually be acting in their own interests (and not necessarily in the interests of the little guy). 

And in Britain, the government is blaming the protests in that country on social media (here are the two real causes).

But as professor of media psychology Ann Rutletdge writes in a post entitled, "Social Media Did Not Cause the London Riots":

After four days of looting and rioting across the UK, people are looking for answers. The violence that started in London, spread rapidly across not only Greater London, but most of the country, not as single oozing mass, but more like an outbreak of the measles. Its speed and range is attributed to the rioters’ use of social media, such as Facebook, Twitter, and Blackberry Messenger. Information and disinformation alike travel fast in social networks. As people try to make sense in the aftermath, an emerging theme is the culpability of social media. Focusing blame on social media is akin to killing the messenger and is both naïve and dangerous.

 

Social media is just a tool. It’s a powerful one, but a tool nonetheless. It can be used in good ways and bad ways, just like a hammer or a baseball bat.

 

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Social media is an easy target. When you’re a politician, it’s great to have something to blame that can’t vote. Prime Minister Cameron almost immediately offloaded the blame onto social networking sites for fueling the riots and hinted at intervention. “When people are using social media for violence, we need to stop them.”

 

UK Home Secretary, Theresa May, is scheduling meetings with Facebook, Twitter and Research In Motion (RIM) to “discuss their responsibilities in this area.” Suggestions have ranged from banning suspected rioters from social media networks to the wholesale shutdown of social media in times of unrest without regard to individual freedoms in order to “catch the bad guys.” The key unanswered question is who gets to decide who’s a ‘troublemaker’ or what’s ‘unrest.’

 

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We should learn from history, as well as from current societies that we do not want to emulate. Can anyone say “China” or “McCarthyism”?

 

Beyond rights violations, any government that thinks they can totally suppress information flows is kidding themselves. Even if it were possible, shutting down social media will not stop anything. In countries where people do not have easy Internet access or rights like freedom of speech, resourceful, persistent, and effective citizens continue to find ways around Great Fire Walls and information blackouts. Suppressing information these days is like holding a balloon under water. It will absolutely pop up somewhere else.

 

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Social media may have accelerated the pace of information travel, bringing groups together faster, but it did not put bricks and fire bombs into the hands of the looters. Social media did not create the anger or sense of powerlessness against authorities. It did not create the heightened emotions of the group, crowd leaders, the adrenalin that comes from a sense of danger and risk, the lack of empathy for others, or the sense of no consequences. Emotion may be contagious, but social media is not.

 

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The real danger from these events is ... the wholesale liquidation of personal freedoms as a solution to deal with fear. When people are scared, they are willing to surrender individual rights to whomever tells them they can “fix” the problem. Whenever we give away our power so that we no longer have access or due process, we are on a slippery slope indeed.

The Use of Heavy-Handed Tactics Is Actually a Sign That We're Winning

But the use by government's worldwide of the iron fist of repression is actually a sign that we are winning.

As Truthout's Matt Renner writes today:

Recently I sat down with two of the young adults who organized and led the Egyptian resistance movement that overthrew Hosni Mubarak. The media narrative said it took 18 days, when in fact, they had been organizing for over five years.

 

According to these young men, the moment they knew they had won was the day Mubarak’s government shut off the Internet and blocked cellphone communications. When people could no longer get updates about what was happening in Tahrir Square, they had to come out of their homes and see for themselves, tripling the size of the protests in one fell swoop.

 

The global plutocracy is terrified of dissent. In some places, the war on dissent is being fought with bullets. In others, the war on dissent targets social media and mobile communications, while repressing and deceiving communities of struggle. It’s already happening.

Our Voices Are More Important Than We've Realized

Renner is right: the plutocracy is terrified of dissent.

Indeed, the Asch Conformity Experiment showed that even one dissenting voice can give people permission to think for themselves.

And a new study shows that when only 10% of a population have strongly-held beliefs, their belief will be adopted by the majority of the society.

 

 

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Wed, 08/17/2011 - 22:36 | 1571306 tip e. canoe
tip e. canoe's picture

it is kind of funny that "progressive" has come to mean something completely opposite from its original intention.   and yes, words are indeed weapons now, loaded with all sorts of booby traps to trip up those who are less than careful.   that's why i share your choice to uses quotes & caps when necessary.

i grew up bred to see both Nixon & Reagan as sick evil bastards.   as i grew older and learned more of the nuances of their personal battles with the Shadows, i came to respect them no less than anyone else who chose to take that job as the frontman, and maybe just a tad more than a few of whom i was bred to believe were "honorable men".   in the end though, i would be most happy if all of us started to remember less of their History and started to create more of our new story. 

always a pleasure, my friend, always.   may our little conversation be another brick in the foundation of the palace that Jefferson & Voltaire dreamt of in their most peaceful nights.

Thu, 08/18/2011 - 05:52 | 1571803 nmewn
nmewn's picture

I was brought up much the same.

Of course when you're young, you suspect your parents are some of the stupidest people on earth...then by around the age of 25-30 you become surprised at their intelligence level on many things...lol.

I really don't think most adults, or presidents for that matter, paid too much attention to the fed with his pointy hat drawing his circles in the dust in the past.

Just as we handed over more and more of our responsibilities to government, they (and Congress) handed over more & more fiscal responsibility to it. It was an easy out for them. That has now changed.

Maybe personal responsibility and ethics is making a come back. That is the real foundation I believe. Thanks for the wonderful conversation my friend.

Wed, 08/17/2011 - 06:16 | 1568200 DarkStarDog
DarkStarDog's picture

Feels like I'm living in a Planet of the Apes movie.......  The orange moneys =(Banksters) The black gorrillas=(millitary/police).  It's all over for 80% of us.

Wed, 08/17/2011 - 15:45 | 1570089 Hamsterfist
Hamsterfist's picture

You are not a unique and beautiful snowflake.

Wed, 08/17/2011 - 14:16 | 1569679 Bolweevil
Bolweevil's picture

Sucks to be you. We space monkeys don't die we just multiply.

Wed, 08/17/2011 - 04:35 | 1568145 Barmaher
Barmaher's picture

I don't know how terrified they are since they control the military...

Wed, 08/17/2011 - 04:21 | 1568141 The Peak Oil Poet
The Peak Oil Poet's picture

 

old but.....

 

they led us to Iraq and war
with lies they led us, lies and more
they sanctioned children to their death
they curry hate with every breath

 

http://thepeakoilpoet.blogspot.com/2011/08/blair-and-bush-and-big-john-h...

Wed, 08/17/2011 - 10:21 | 1568750 Rhodin
Rhodin's picture

Even older:

You can lead a horse to water

But you can't make him drink.

You can lead a man to slaughter,

But you can't make him think.

Wed, 08/17/2011 - 12:10 | 1569128 rocker
rocker's picture

Rupert Murdoch controls the stupids at Fox as NBC's CEO controls the talking heads at CNBC.

All in power by the elite of the world to tell the stupids how to think. They do need to be told.

That's why the Plutocracy is scared of the internet and any other free media outlet.

America is scared that the UK fires could happen on Wallstreet.  Barracades. Hmmmmm

Carl on CNBC once said to Joe Kemit, (Kernin), "Could that happen here".   When ???

Wed, 08/17/2011 - 15:46 | 1570094 Hamsterfist
Hamsterfist's picture

You fly, I'll buy.  (The molotov cocktails.)

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