Taibbi's Tough Talk

 

Trust Matt Taibbi to re-open old wounds. 

In his latest piece, Taibbi looks at the invasion of Ukraine through George Orwell's eyes.  No one is spared.

In the last weeks, Russia took an already exacting speech environment to new extremes. A law was passed that would impose 15-year prison sentences for anyone spreading “fake news” about the Ukraine invasion; access was cut to Facebook and Twitter; stations like Echo Moskvi and TV Rain as well as BBC Russia, Radio Liberty, the New Times, Deutsche Welle, Doxa, and Latvia-based Meduza were effectively shut down; Wikipedia was threatened with a block over its invasion page; and national authorities have appeared to step in to prevent coverage of soldiers killed in the war, requiring local outlets to use terms like “special operation” instead. The latter development is connected to the state media regulator, Roskomnadzor, issuing a remarkably desperate dictum requiring news outlets to “use information and data received by them only from official Russian sources.”

...One would hope there would be at least a few Americans left who’d hear about Russia barring the BBC and Voice of America and at least recognize the sameness of the issue involved with banning RT and Sputnik. Or, seeing how pathetic and manipulative it is for Russians to prevent reporting on war casualties, we’d recall the folly of the ban we had for nearly twenty years on photographs of military coffins, or the continuing pressure on embeds to avoid publishing images of American deaths from our own war zones. We should be able to read that Twitter and Facebook are cracking down on the “fake accounts” spreading “misinformation” that “Ukraine isn’t doing well” and notice that Russia’s measures against “fake news” and “disinformation” about its own military failures — though far more draconian and carrying much more severe penalties — are rooted in the same concept.

We long ago reached the doublethink phase predicted by Orwell, where most of the population is conscious of double standards but ignores them effortlessly. A healthy person should be able to be horrified by what’s happening in Russia and also see a warning about the degradation that ensues from using “pre-emptive” force, or from trying to control discontent by erasing expressions of it. But years of relentless propaganda have trained Americans to doublethink their way out of such insights.

Lying to others is shameful, but lying to ourselves and not even realizing it, that’s hardcore spiritual decay. We’re being driven faster toward the cliff-edge of this moral insanity with each new act of mass forgetting. The ideal citizen of Orwell’s Oceania bubbled with rage a mile wide and a millimeter deep and could forget in an instant passions that may have consumed him or her for years. We just did this, with a pandemic that had the country steaming with indignation until it was quietly declared over the moment Putin rolled over Ukraine’s borders. We switched from “the pandemic of the unvaccinated” to “Putin’s price hikes” in a snap. National outrage moved a few lobes over with zero fuss, and now we hate new people; instead of “anti-vax Barbie,” we’re barring Russian and Belarussian kids from the Paralympics.

We’re at the end of a twenty-year cycle that has taken what was once the oppositional-skeptic portion of the American population and seen them rallied behind the people they once hated the most. This has been accomplished by keeping us in a rage that always escalates and is never watered down by contradictions, thanks to mastery of “reality control” via “an unending series of victories over your own memory.”

There’s a real tragedy unfolding on the other side of the earth. I don’t want to make light of it. But another of 1984’s predictions was a future where war would become a “purely internal affair,” where even when there’s real fighting going on in a faraway land, the real target is always the domestic population, whose memories and doubts and distracting emotional attachments are the real threats and must be constantly policed. It’s all coming true, with forever war and slogans like #CloseTheSky demanding primacy in our thoughts, and we’re asked to forget as patriotic duty. It isn’t. Never give up memories, no matter how hard you’re pushed.

Comments

  1. Those that make these decisions live in a world we will never have access to nor can we affect their decision making.
    As for slogans the newest kid on the block is 'Mandate Freedom"
    wtf.

    TB

    ReplyDelete
  2. Oliver Stone's Ukraine film and Abby Martin's series just part of the current purge on Youtube.

    At least the Russians will know they are being lied to and yes, Winston Smith would understand.

    ReplyDelete
  3. There are many signs that globalism is dying or even dead.
    That western companies have propped up the economies of authoritarian regimes since the Berlin wall came down and China offered and sold access to the fastest growing market in the world we have been conned.
    Our greed first for manufacturing advantages though cheap labour( Mexico was not cheap enough) and shareholders profit at any cost environmental or otherwise has led us to where we are.

    For years we were told , and believed, that our competitors were substandard in ethnicity and capability , now we can only compete by proxy wars.

    TB
    We not only exported our jobs but the technology to produce the goods.
    Our Wiley competitors soon caught on and beat us at our own game!
    We are now on the back foot ( a cricket term) as our competitors produce many products that are better and less expensive.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. In his 2005 book, American Theocracy, old school Republican insider, Kevin Phillips, looks at the grand European empires that grew from agrarian economies into manufacturing and trade giants until deciding that the very vehicles that propelled them to prominence could be outsourced for even greater, albeit short-lived, prosperity.

      In essence, TB, they used their wealth to grow a successor's economy, falling back on a financial economy that was brittle and incapable of weathering recessions as a manufacturing economy might. Why settle for 3 to 5% long-term stable profits when you can reap 15 to 20% returns in the immediate, short-term?

      The author concludes that America has succumbed to the "empire virus" that brought low its many predecessors.

      Delete
  4. falling back on a financial economy that was brittle and incapable of weathering recessions as a manufacturing economy might. Why......

    Financial economies rule the day..

    Wall street and the City of London are buying up discounted Russian investments particularly in oil and gas ..

    Shades of Rolls Royce delivering engines to Germany just before WWII and the USA's Ford Chrysler etc,

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/national/daily/nov98/nazicars30.htm


    The point is , money has no conscience.

    TB

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Navigating the Minefield of Short-Termism

The Gun We Point at Our Own Heads

The Cognoscenti Syndrome