The Washington Post Can’t
Stop Babbling About Russians ‘Hacking Our Minds’
The Washington Post has published another article warning its
readers that the Russians are “hacking our minds”, this one authored by CNN’s
Fareed Zakaria.
“Russia hasn’t just hacked our computer systems. It’s hacked our
minds.” blares the ridiculous, propagandistic headline for an
article about “the Russian model” of propaganda which “rests on the principle
that people get convinced when they hear the same message many times from a
variety of sources, no matter how biased.”
Which
is funny, since this is not the first time WaPo itself has repeated this
cartoonish narrative about Russian mind-hackers.
Just two months ago the Washington Post editorial board published an
article titled “The
U.S. may be safe from foreign interference in this election. But what about
perception hacking?“, which opens with the line “Russia
and other adversaries may not need to hack the election if they can hack
something else: our minds.”
The paranoid screed unironically argued that
Russia is using its super-powerful propaganda engine to make people paranoid
and doubtful of US electoral systems, which could actually have an adverse
effect on the US election. As though telling people their mental and perceptual
faculties are being hacked by a hostile foreign enemy with the goal of
influencing the election would not make them paranoid and doubtful of US
electoral systems.
Zakaria’s piece builds on this already established
theme by parroting the still completely evidence-free claim that
Russia was responsible for the far-reaching cyber intrusion into the IT company
SolarWinds, whose cybersecurity we recently learned was left so unprotected
that its update server’s password was literally “solarwinds123”.
“But
what about the perhaps more insidious Russian efforts at disinformation, which
have helped to reshape the information environment worldwide?” Zakaria asks. He
then does a few mental gymnastics to tie Russia’s propaganda campaign to Donald
Trump, because of course he does, and leaves the reader with the closing line,
“The problem is not just that Russia has hacked America’s computer systems. It
seems to have hacked our minds.”
WaPo keeps hammering this narrative about powerful
Russian mind-hackers as though Russia is the only nation with an existing
propaganda campaign on the world stage and not one of the weaker ones doing so.
The US government itself openly uses propaganda on foreigners with programs
like Radio Free Europe, Radio Free Asia and Voice of America,
which actually serve the more important function of presenting the illusion
that those are the only form of US
government propaganda.
In reality, the plutocratic class which owns the mass media works closely with the US government and sets up its
institutions to only elevate voices that advance narratives that
are favorable to the status quo those plutocrats have built their kingdoms
upon. WaPo itself is owned by the richest man in the world who is
also a CIA contractor and sits on a Pentagon advisory board. The unofficial
propaganda operations of the oligarchic empire give it a massive edge in international narrative control that
dwarfs both official US propaganda programs and anything the Russian government
could ever come up with.
Among some very stiff competition, one of the
dumbest recurring themes in western imperialist media is the idea that world
affairs, entire electoral and governmental systems, and even our very minds,
are being controlled by a nation with the same GDP as South Korea. Russia does not have
an especially strong sway over the world stage, it just happens to be one of
the few remaining power structures which have resisted absorption into the
US-centralized empire and is being targeted with a propaganda campaign aimed at
changing that.
Russia
is not hacking your mind. If anyone is hacking your mind, it’s the vast
globe-spanning power structure loosely centralized around the United States
which has been aggressively propagandizing you into supporting the continuation
of status quo politics since you were born.
The
dawn of political insight comes when you realize that propaganda is not just
something that is done by other nations to other people. It is done by your own
rulers, in your own nation, and it is being done to you.
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