The Dawn of
an Orwellian Future
July 28, 2017
consortiumnews.com
By Robert Parry
It seems that The New York Times
can’t let a good lie lie. Even after being pushed into running an
embarrassing correction retracting its false claim that there
was a consensus of all 17 U.S. intelligence agencies that Russia hacked
Democratic emails and made them public to help Donald Trump defeat Hillary
Clinton, the Times is back suggesting exactly that.
The Times’ current ploy is to say the Russian hacking claims are
the “consensus” judgment of the U.S. intelligence community without citing a
specific number of agencies. For instance, on Friday, the Times published an
article by Matt Flegenheimer about the U.S. Senate vote to
prevent President Trump from lifting sanctions on Russia and deployed the
misleading phrasing:
“The Trump administration has
opposed the sanctions against Russia, arguing that it needs flexibility to
pursue a more collaborative diplomacy with a country that, by American
intelligence consensus, interfered in last year’s presidential election.”
So, instead of explaining the
truth – that the Jan. 6 “Intelligence Community Assessment” was the work of a
small group of “hand-picked” analysts from three of the agencies under the
watchful eye of then-CIA Director John Brennan and beneath the oversight of
then-Director of National Intelligence James Clapper – the Times opts to give
its readers the misleading impression that there was a “consensus” within the
U.S. intelligence community.
In other words, unless a Times
reader knows the truth by having
read it at a non-mainstream media outlet such as
Consortiumnews.com, that reader would continue to believe that all 17
intelligence agencies were in agreement on this foundational point in the
Russia-gate affair.
Marginalizing
Dissent
And the continuation of this willful deception comes as the
Times and other mainstream media outlets make progress in their plans to deploy
Internet algorithms to hunt down and marginalize what they deem “fake news,”
including articles that challenge the mainstream media’s power to control the
dominant news narrative.
A report by
the World Socialist Web Site found that “in the three months since Internet
monopoly Google announced plans to keep users from accessing ‘fake news,’ the
global traffic rankings of a broad range of left-wing, progressive, anti-war
and democratic rights organizations have fallen significantly.”
Google’s strategy is to downgrade
search results for targeted Web sites based on a supposed desire to limit
reader access to “low-quality” information, but the targets reportedly include
some of the highest-quality alternative news sites on the Internet, such as –
according to the report – Consortiumnews.com.
Google sponsors the First Draft
Coalition, which was created to counter alleged “fake news” and consists of
mainstream news outlets, including the Times and The Washington Post, as well
as establishment-approved Web sites, such as Bellingcat, which has a close
association with the anti-Russia and pro-NATO Atlantic Council.
This creation of a modern-day
Ministry of Truth occurred under the cover of a mainstream-driven hysteria
about “fake news” and “Russian propaganda” in the wake of Donald Trump’s
election.
Last Thanksgiving Day, the Post ran
a front-page article citing accusations from an anonymous Web
site, PropOrNot, that identified 200 Web sites — including such Internet
stalwarts as Truthdig, Counterpunch and Consortiumnews — as purveyors of
“Russian propaganda.”
Apparently, PropOrNot’s standard
was to smear any news outlet that questioned the State Department’s Official
Narrative on the Ukraine crisis or some other global hot spot, but the Post
didn’t offer any actual specifics of what these Web sites had done to earn
their place on a McCarthyistic blacklist.
An Orwellian Future
In early
May 2017, the Times chimed in with a laudatory article about
how sophisticated algorithms could purge the Internet of alleged “fake news” or
what the mainstream media deems to be “misinformation.”
As I
wrote at the time, “you don’t need a huge amount of imagination to see how this
combination of mainstream groupthink and artificial intelligence could create
an Orwellian future in which only one side of a story gets told and the other
side simply disappears from view.”
After my
article appeared, I received a call from an NPR reporter who was planning a
segment on this new technology and argued with me about my concerns. However,
after I offered a detailed explanation about how I saw this as a classic case
of the cure being far worse than the disease, I was not invited onto the NPR
program.
Also, as
for the relatively small number of willfully produced “fake news” stories, none
appear to have traced back to Russia despite extensive efforts by the
mainstream U.S. media to make the connection. When the U.S. mainstream
media has tracked down a source of “fake news,” it has turned out to be some
young entrepreneur trying to make some money by getting lots of clicks.
For
instance, on Nov. 26, 2016, as the anti-Russia hysteria was heating up in the
weeks following Trump’s election, the Times ran a relatively responsible article revealing
how a leading “fake news” Web site was not connected to Russia at all but
rather was a profit-making effort by an unemployed Georgian student who was
using a Web site in Tbilisi to make money by promoting pro-Trump stories.
The owner
of the Web site, 22-year-old Beqa Latsabidse, said he had initially tried to
push stories favorable to Hillary Clinton but that proved unprofitable so he
switched to publishing anti-Clinton and pro-Trump articles whether true or not.
While
creators of intentionally “fake news” and baseless “conspiracy theories”
deserve wholehearted condemnation, the idea of giving the Times and a
collection of Google-approved news outlets the power to prevent public access
to information that challenges equally mindless groupthinks is a chilling and
dangerous prospect.
Russia-gate
Doubts
Even if
the Russian government did hack the Democratic emails and slip them to
WikiLeaks – a charge that both the Kremlin and WikiLeaks deny – there is no
claim that those emails were fake. Indeed, all evidence is that they were
actual emails and newsworthy to boot.
Meanwhile,
U.S. government accusations against the Russian network, RT, have related more
to it covering topics that may make the Establishment look bad – such as the
Occupy Wall Street protests, fracking for natural gas, and the opinions of
third-party presidential candidates – than publishing false stories.
In some
cases, State Department officials have even made their own false allegations in
attacking RT.
The
current Russia-gate frenzy is a particularly scary example of how dubious
government conclusions and mainstream media falsehoods can propel the world
toward nuclear destruction. The mainstream media’s certainty about Russia’s
guilt in the disclosure of Democratic emails is a case in point even when many
well-informed experts have expressed serious doubts — though almost always at
alternative media sites.
See, for
instance, former WMD inspector Scott Ritter’s warning about lessons unlearned from the
Iraq debacle or the opinions of U.S. intelligence veterans who have questioned the accuracy of the Jan. 6 report on
Russian hacking.
Perhaps
these concerns are misplaced and the Jan. 6 report is correct, but the pursuit
of truth should not simply be a case of grabbing onto the opinions of some
“hand-picked” analysts working for political appointees, such as Brennan and
Clapper. Truth should be subjected to rigorous testing against alternative
viewpoints and contradictory arguments.
That has
been a core principle since the days of the Enlightenment, that truth best
emerges from withstanding challenges in the marketplace of ideas. Overturning
that age-old truth – by today unleashing algorithms to enforce the Official
Narrative – is a much greater threat to an informed electorate and to the
health of democracy than the relatively few times when some kid makes up a
bogus story to increase his Web traffic.
And, if
this new process of marginalizing dissenting views is successful, who will hold
The New York Times accountable when it intentionally misleads its readers with
deceptive language about the U.S. intelligence community’s “consensus”
regarding Russia and the Democratic emails?
Investigative
reporter Robert Parry broke many of the Iran-Contra stories for The Associated
Press and Newsweek in the 1980s. You can buy his latest book, America’s
Stolen Narrative, either in print here or as an e-book (from Amazon and barnesandnoble.com).
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