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S. Anderson's avatar

Nice overview, Sarah. There should be more in the library literature on this issue.

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Craig Gibson's avatar

Thanks for this very good article. Sarah. I learned some details I didn't know before.

In the interest of viewpoint diversity, I'm offering these other perspectives:

Statement of Walter Kimmage, former official from the GEC (Global Engagement Center), before Congress, October 23, detailing some of the threats from foreign intelligence services and other actors from Russia, China, and Iran, and the mission of the Global Engagement Center. Despite the actions of a Republican Congress against this Center, and many other actions against offices at universities such as Stanford, studying what we'd broadly call "disinformation", this doesn't look like "censorship" to me. I always recognize there's a danger of government overreach, but liberal democracies and open societies are vulnerable to the laundered falsehoods and manipulations of bad actors in authoritarian regimes. It looks to me like this is a "wicked problem" that liberal democracies need to solve together, if that's possible.

https://docs.house.gov/meetings/FA/FA17/20231025/116506/HMTG-118-FA17-Wstate-KimmageD-20231025.pdf

In addition, Anne Applebaum's scholarship and perspective in this area matter since she knows the politics, the players, many of the diplomats, and the cultures of countries like Russia, and Russia's allies of convenience, in sowing cynicism and nihilism in western Europe and the U.S. and elsewhere. Her recent book Autocracy Inc. describes how much of this network of autocracies works. Her recent Atlantic article gives a briefer account of how this particular kind of propaganda from Russia and elsewhere seeks to demoralize. It isn't necessary to get the citizens of western countries to believe outright lies but to increase distrust in their own systems of government and their own civic institutions.

https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2024/06/china-russia-republican-party-relations/678271/

As for the 2024 election in the U.S., there were of course the expected attempts to manipulate the outcome with falsehoods spread about both Kamala Harris and Donald Trump. The outcome itself, according to media analysists and scholars at this point, probably was affected not much by those attempts, but the longer term strategies from the autocracies is to continue to increase distrust in elections and democratic politics. The German publication DW gives a really helpful summary of attempts at disinformation and the U.S. Presidential election:

https://www.dw.com/en/fact-check-what-role-did-disinformation-play-in-the-us-election/a-70729575

As for distrust in the "mainstream media" (Helen Lewis has suggested the term is no longer even appropriate since alternative media draws more viewers and readers), I'll continue to be the dissenter or "heterodox" one in this space. When we've reached the point where Joe Rogan's podcasts draw more listeners than anything like a reasonable news outlet, liberal, progressive, conservative, libertarian, or something else, I think we're in what Renee DiResta calls the "choose your own adventure epistemology" and everyone just finds what they want to believe anyway, to reinforce and amplify their existing beliefs. Recently, I came across an interview with journalist Matt Pearce in which he describes the enormous challenges facing journalism as a profession and media enterprises in general. He aptly calls what we're moving into as a kind of reversion to a "folk story society" ripe for subversion by demagogues, where actual sources of reliable information don't matter. I find his perspective quite in alignment with what Hannah Arendt described as the "annihilation of truth."

https://mattdpearce.substack.com/p/journalisms-fight-for-survival-in?utm_source=substack&utm_medium=email

As for getting any accurate perspective on the GEC or anything else from Elon Musk, I'm highly dubious. I'll just close these comments by noting Musk's use of his platform as an overt political project supporting MAGA world, Trump, and either conservative or far-right parties in other countries. It's a constant stream of disinformation most days because I see it. Notably, also, three European leaders (of the UK, France, and Germany) have denounced Musk in recent days for his overt intervention in their politics and their elections.

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