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Small Blue Bird Scares Centrist Hack

Ducksoap

Guardian columnist Rafael Behr is fearful.

He is frightened by little blue birds pecking at the media bubble.

He is absolutely terrified of the success of twitter as a tool used to organise political action and to share political analysis, views and information.

He expressed his fears in Twitter poison.

Phrases of doom

Behr decided to write in a cod emotional style that oozed despair and exasperation.  Behr’s fear needed to be displayed with childlike horror.

Like a vicar delivering a sermon who noticed a few eyes closing and heads nodding, Behr had to keep interrupting his aimless concocted narrative with phrases of doom to maintain the interest of his congregation.  All phrases of doom below were taken directly from his blog with no concern about any phrase being taken out of context because there was no context.

super-accelerated online frenzy
sparks ignite partisan wildfires that rage intensely
they scorch a little more of the earth
24/7 production line of grievance and indignation
twitter’s dark gravity
quasi-robotic frenzy
conformity to tribal ethics
ideological vigilantism
swarms of loyal adherents
mesmerising chain reaction of micro-controversies
this is to a healthy interest in news what junk food is to a healthy appetite
hurling snark into the void
rage appears endemic to the platform
disciples of radical ideologies express themselves ferociously
virtual stone-throwing yobs
the website is a vast polarising machine
twitter turns us into quasi-religious cults
online disinhibition effect, a behavioural distortion
cause people to lose impulse control
turns ordinary users into caricatures of the worst kind of politician
looks like a weapon of civic destruction
superficial and sinister

doomed
Doom

The phrases of doom and the emotionally expressed despair were just the cover story for Behr’s blog.  Tossing the cover story aside revealed his intent.

The plebs are revolting

Like all professional centrist hacks – Cohen, Hyde, Dunt, etc. – Behr’s role is to pretend to object to right-wing ideology as a ruse to hoover up column inches and media airtime in favour of useless, vacant, invented centrist tripe to keep socialist views marginalised.  In newspapers and on TV and radio, this occupation of debate time is easy to do due to the compliance of the hosts.  However, on social media platforms such as twitter the public has equal access.

Behr noted the equality of access.

Twitter appears to give broadly equal value to every tweet.”

His observation was in the context of the veracity or otherwise of an opinion in a tweet. Did he expect every tweet to be absolute truth?  His own contributions show that he didn’t.  His real objection was to the equal value as a public voice given to each tweeter.

Understandably, Behr expressed his objection to twitter voice equality from the perspective of a professional hack trying to earn a living. 

[Twitter is] a method for mass communication that bypassed the editorial filters of conventional media.”

So-called “conventional media,” particularly newspapers, employs editors whose job is to ensure that the copy directs and distracts the reader, obscures the truth, creates vitriolic false politically charged narratives and offers no balanced informative analysis.

Behr wanted to depict “conventional media” as superior to social media communication. 

Reuters, PA, Bloomberg, AP—specialise in dry, fact-driven stories crafted to an orthodox journalistic template.”

Behr was deeply troubled by the ease and speed with which users of twitter can state an opinion, discuss their opinion with others and then, deliberately or not, set the online narrative for a particular issue.  How dare the public have the intelligence to quickly assess, analyse and offer a retort!  Behr’s hypothetical example (quoted below) stupefied his point.

Theresa May’s conference speech, for example, will be so thoroughly picked over in real-time on Twitter that settled views on whether it is a success or not will be formed before the prime minister has finished speaking.”

As all who have ever heard a speech by Theresa May are fully aware, she has had nothing to offer but hollow platitudes, dead cats and blatant lies.  As soon as she has started speaking it has always been correct to respond immediately with snorts of derision, peremptory vitriol and sharp breaks of wind.  But, Behr demanded respect and circumspection.  An informed aware public, capable of recognising a charlatan and responding appropriately, is something that he wants to muzzle.

Behr demonstrated his knowledge of directional word choice and his contempt for people with the sentence

The system [use of twitter] can be gamed by organised campaigners.”

System: Evocative description designed to imply badminded control
Gamed: Used to imply dishonest acts
Organised: Belittling free thought and personal intelligence
Campaigners: Used to imply that opinions expressed are done so as part of restricted political perspective rather than balanced intelligent individual views.

Mutual worldwide solidarity is scary

Like many other gatekeepers of obedience to established (spurious) authority and control, Rafael Behr objected to the power of twitter to allow people around the world to express solidarity with one another and to share ideas and plans.

Through the mechanism of choosing who to follow and which voices to exclude, users construct opinion silos—deep but narrow, socially homogenous echo chambers, held together by shared political assumptions.”

Shared political assumptions” insulted the intellectual capacity of people to understand political issues and to be able to analyse. Behr depicted people as sheep.

His objection to what he called “silos” and “echo chambers” was a desperate plea for people to not possess a shared thorough understanding of a political issue and a demand that they should allow themselves to be distracted and misled by charlatans.  Behr objected to knowledge of cohesive, exhaustive political analysis because he prefers everyone to be numbed by centrist woolliness.

Inside these echo chambers we are all susceptible to common, powerful cognitive errors: confirmation bias—believing things because they support what we want to believe; selection bias—privileging data that supports our conclusions; availability bias—presuming that whatever is most recently seen is also most important.”

Behr’s use of “we” above – including himself in his criticism – was just a clumsy attempt to persuade by pretending to not be the supercilious observer that he was.  The silly psychological phraseology about biases had no meaning except as purposeful deception.

Twitter and other social media networks have been hugely useful in sharing political information, encouraging constructive political debate and organising political action.  Such uses of twitter have occurred across the political spectrum but have been most strongly visible in left-of-centre political activism.

This use of twitter for radical politics has been seen worldwide.  The global nature of the information-sharing and communication has helped to enhance understanding of different political cultures and priorities but, crucially, it has shown how many similarities there are, politically, around the world.  These similarities have been observed in the behaviour of governments, their use of military and police, the connection between governments and the global financial hegemony, the lies thrown at the public during elections, the attempt by governments to divide the population via use of prejudice and othering, etc.

One outcome of the sharing of information, opinions and stories has been mutual worldwide solidarity.  This solidarity has not been filtered through political parties or traditional media.

Mutual worldwide solidarity has exposed who the real enemies are and it has exposed who the real enemies aren’t. Such solidarity scares the hell out of those who work to exploit the majority, and their PR team members like Behr.

Behr’s depiction of twitter users who have developed political solidarity was not pleasant.  He spouted some more amateur psychology that tried to reduce the behaviour of people to that of automatons or animals.

Conformity to tribal ethics is rewarded with retweets and approving replies; contrary opinion can be treated as heresy. And so everyone bids everyone else up in a currency of implacability and indignation.”

His fear reeks.

Diametrically opposed political views are scary

Two of the dirtiest words in political lexicon are ‘cross party’ and ‘consensus.’ Both are appeals to submission to compromise.  Of course, the centrist world needs the intent behind such language to prevail.

Behr declared his desire to protect “the ethos of compromise without which a pluralist democracy cannot thrive.”  There is no such thing as a “pluralist democracy.”  If Behr meant a democracy where the majority are happy, then to create such a society would require the removal of the wealth terrorist elite; in other words, socialism.  However, Behr meant a democracy where everyone is fooled a little bit to con them into supporting exploitative status quo.

Behr compared twitter discourse unfavourably to “civilised, multi-party politics.”

A structure that accelerates and promotes conflict is inimical to the conduct of democratic pluralism.”

Two obvious problems with his axiom: 1) See aforesaid dismissal of “democratic pluralism” and 2) conflict is an absolute necessity to defeat an enemy and this conflict should not be “civilised.”

The blog’s political intent glared brightly in Behr’s discussion of “civility.”  “A subtle thread connects manners and democracy” was an indictment of his plea that everyone submits.  “Those social codes are as much part of the democratic eco-system as free elections and independent courts” was an admittance that democracy is severely restricted.

Behr, rightly in the context of his “civility” discussion, mentioned “unparliamentary language.”

The protocols of the Commons, including prohibitions against ‘unparliamentary language,’ exist for a reason. The code reflects a recognition that political debate is a form of verbal combat and needs rules of engagement. When a political culture is bleached of civility, when the public realm becomes pathologically ill-mannered, it loses its capacity to mediate between competing interest groups.”

The parliamentary code against “unparliamentary language” is a problem.  It disallows accurate descriptions of corrupt, dishonest MPs.  Tories, DUP and others are professional liars, con artists and confidence tricksters who work for wealth terrorists.  Those characteristics define those MPs.  Without such characteristics they would not be who they are, politically.  It is entirely undemocratic to prohibit accurate descriptions of their intrinsic venal faults.

Behr’s description of parliament as just “competing interest groups” revealed his hope that parliament never becomes a true democratic environment where the gimps of financial gangsters are dealt with by real representatives of the people.

He regretted what he thought were “polarised” political votes

There have been a run of fiercely contested ballots: the 2014 Scottish independence referendum; the 2015 general election, followed by a bitter Labour leadership contest; the 2016 EU referendum, followed by another bitter Labour leadership contest; the 2017 general election. Wounds opened in those battles that haven’t yet healed. Polarised politics curdled the mood on Twitter.”

Fiercely contested ballots” are a necessity.  Otherwise, what is the point?  The “wounds opened in those battles” need to grow, fester and ultimately prove fatal.  Again, by objecting to the ferocity and to the wounds, Behr displayed his opposition to challenging politics and his support for a submissive population made catatonic by false choices between centrist charlatans.

Behr was worried that there will be “no scope for the kind of compromises and consensus-building that are necessary for stable government.”  “Stable government” is a euphemism for ineffective and neutered government.

The centrist comfort blanket is on fire

Almost everything that caused Rafael Behr’s dismay is something that is positive. The growing divides between political perspectives on offer to the electorate, the increase in the ferocity of criticism aimed at the defenders of and apologists for exploitation, the pooling of shared ideologies and the confidence of activists to speak, challenge and attack are all welcome progressive facets of political activism and knowledge.

Social media interaction has assisted the positive developments listed above.  That is why right-wingers and centrists are so afraid.  It is why the Tory government has plans to censor online communications – (see links below) – and it is why the self-described ‘moderates’ are so desperate to talk about “civility” and “good manners.”

Behr wrote a very political blog. The twitter theme was just a hook to hang his polemic onto.  His intent was transparent from the start.  His type is losing. They are being squeezed out of existence. The centrist comfort blanket has caught fire.  This was predicted 150 years ago.


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Paul Harvey
Paul Harvey
Sep 30, 2018 3:23 PM

“Reuters, PA, Bloomberg, AP—specialise in dry, fact-driven stories crafted to an orthodox journalistic template.”

Rafael Behr may be one piss poor excuse for a journalist, but if he can keep a straight face as he delivers lines like the above, then he has a bright future at next year’s Edinburgh’s Fringe Festival.

0use4msm
0use4msm
Sep 30, 2018 2:50 PM

The article’s byline says it all really:

the decline and fall of political life has been fuelled by a website that started off as a platform for sharing gossip and cat photos

In Behr’s rose-tinted memory, social media started out as a pristine garden of Eden used merely for idle gossip and cat photos. But then a Russian-looking serpent came along that tempted Twitter users with the fruit from the media of the knowledge of truth and evil, resulting in the Original Sin of disobedience towards orthodox journalism. Behr laments the inability to undo this Fall of Man, because in his opinion there aren’t enough cat pics on teh Internetz already.

robjira
robjira
Oct 1, 2018 6:05 PM
Reply to  0use4msm

You can has like >^.^<

DaveM
DaveM
Sep 30, 2018 10:07 AM

Very good piece- even the New Statesman is a hard read now- hardly a good word for Corbyn’s policies, and quite happy to have articles from Tories ‘for balance’…
I’m in Thailand, and Twitter and Facebook users are being rounded up by the Thai junta gestapo for any criticism of royals or the junta.
The U.K. is going the same way!.

ducksoap
ducksoap
Sep 30, 2018 2:06 AM

The Tories have plans to censor online communication under the guise or stopping “intimidation of MPs.” Lord Bew concocted a report on the issue, concluding that greater censorship of social media is needed and suggested there should be a law that would restrict the right to vote for perpetrators. https://ducksoap.wordpress.com/2018/01/05/tories-preparing-to-censor-revolutionary-politics-bew-report/

DunGroanin
DunGroanin
Sep 30, 2018 12:55 AM

I don’t believe that there is an alt-left.

The ‘centrists’ neocon strategists of the status quo who created the alt-right are responsible for the labelling.

There is however a resurgence of the voice of the masses from the ever more tech savvy grassroots, of all age groups. (e.g a recently retired friend is converting to tweeting, rather then writing to the papers and he will only get more prolfic with time!)

A revolutionary voice echoed across history before the ‘left’ was invented.
A call for justice, security and opportunity.

Call it socialism if you like.

Why does the aristos teddy bear (and their other fierce and cuddly toy gatekeepers) raise such a hue and cry?

Because the modern day ‘Bastille’ is being stormed.
This assault on the towers of propaganda by the great unwashed. The imprisoned truth to be set free and to re-ignite the much hampered historic struggle agains warlords, robbers, slavers and barons.

The MSM is that fortress of lies!

Funny how history chimes :
‘..the Bastille was used – to support the operations of the Parisian police, especially in enforcing government censorship of the printed media.’
And
‘Historians were critical of the Bastille in the early 19th century, and believe the fortress to have been a relatively well-administered institution, but deeply implicated in the system of French policing and political control during the 18th century.’
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bastille

Chris
Chris
Sep 29, 2018 11:10 PM

Great article and comments. But just remember the uses Twitter has been put to by the CIA in the bogus colour revolutions from at least Yugoslavia onwards. Yes it fun to see Behr and his ilk with their nickers apparently in a twist but the serious folks at the CIA are currently plotting the ways to use Twitter in their next overthrow of a democratically elected government not toeing the line – Hungary anyone? My point? Let’s be glad for Behr’s discomfort but be watching for the next time we are sucked into believing a Twitter inspired ‘people’s revolution’ is apparently real. Indeed, Behr’s article is so stupid and desperate you would have to at least wonder if it is not a faint setting us all up to start applauding Twitter in time for the next hoax event.

Chris
Chris
Sep 29, 2018 11:14 PM
Reply to  Chris

Just to clarify – of course Twitter was not the mthod of communication in the staged Yugoslav uprisings of the 1990s which relied on mobile phones – but I trust the point is clear.

Mulga Mumblebrain
Mulga Mumblebrain
Sep 30, 2018 12:12 AM
Reply to  Chris

Twitter cancelled some sort of ‘maintenance’ down-time at the time of the fake Green Revolution in Iran, then all the ‘tweets’ of the ‘freedom-lovers’ were mostly in English, not Farsi, and many came, mysteriously, from Israel not Iran.

Makropulos
Makropulos
Sep 29, 2018 6:17 PM

OK – now to the core of the Twitter-geddon post:

Trump – bad man. He’s a ranter and – oh Good God! – he may even start a war! But wait: Trump’s Twitter voice is in fact “unexceptional …..for the site”. Because the site is “a natural milieu for fanaticism—a perfect tool for populists and an incubator for aspiring despots.” Connection made: populist = fanatic.

Twitter “privileges and promotes the most fanatically partisan voices” – not like that nice Facebook which has been successfully tamed.

Corbyn has “cultish disciples” who, we are assured, “do not speak for all Labour members”. Phew! Thank god we don’t have to worry about those loonies!

“It can be hard to distinguish between a mechanical troll working to a wrecking algorithm and a human maniac sitting in pyjamas firing off outrage through the night.” – well, welcome to the internet!

After this – a load of the usual by-the-numbers psycho-babble about media manipulation which could actually refer to manipulation of any media at any time. Ditto all that stuff about skewing arguments in your favour. “The blatant lie sits alongside the truth” – yeah it always did. “lurid fiction gets more traction than dull fact”? How about dull fiction covering up lurid fact?

Uh-oh – someone dared to mention the “deep state”. Quick! Get the system antibodies out in full!
“In place of the old top-down message discipline, Twitter brings bottom-up policing” Ah now this is revealing. We can’t have any of that “bottom up” stuff – even though I thought that was what democracy was supposed to be all about.

But now he’s “boasting” about giving up Twitter for a test period – and, guess what? – he feels so much cleaner, so much closer to moral clarity!

What is most notable about this rant is how that condition he describes about the volatility that can happen through Twitter actually applies to the internet as a whole. Indeed – professional trolls have been stirring the users up since web inception.

Which brings me to my verdict: what really annoys Behr is not all the nasty stuff, the bullying, the disinfo, the trolling and provocations etc. that he perceives on Twitter (said nasty stuff being commonplace throughout the net) but the fact that all this nasty stuff has not yet been brought under control.

alaffcreator
alaffcreator
Sep 29, 2018 5:55 PM

Sorry for off-topic, but what happened with the article entitled “Capt. Paul Barril: We Know Who Killed Alexander Zakharchenko”?
https://off-guardian.org/2018/09/29/capt-paul-barril-we-know-who-killed-alexander-zakharchenko/

It’s unavailable now – “Page not found”.
Censorship again?

Though, at this moment it’s possible to get this article through cache – [LINK REMOVED BY ADMIN]

Kathy
Kathy
Sep 29, 2018 4:52 PM

Bher Bher bher. Oh dear oh dear oh dear. The Sheep are escaping in all directions. Its getting impossible to round them all up now. Blame social media. Why do they all want to run away from us their Guardian, MSM shepherds!!!. Haven’t we always kept them well ill informed and well lied to. The ungrateful peasants.

Makropulos
Makropulos
Sep 29, 2018 4:23 PM

I haven’t had time to wade through Behr’s bollocks yet but I note one of his headlines for Guardian: “On Europe, Labour’s left is revealing its affinity to the ‘alt-right’” which pretty tells you all you need to know. The plebs are no longer happy with their (alleged) representatives in the great media showbiz realm and said representatives are starting to sweat. I wonder how sweaty Behr’s bollocks are going to get?

Makropulos
Makropulos
Sep 29, 2018 4:34 PM
Reply to  Makropulos

Still haven’t examined the sweaty bollocks of that referenced Twitter Armageddon article. But the Crapdion one intrigued me:

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2018/sep/25/europe-labour-left-alt-right-corbynites-steve-bannon

“For many Labour people, Brexit was one of twin traumas in 2016, the other being Donald Trump’s election.”

Actually for the entire realm of our showbiz reps, this was a twin trauma.

And after this a lot of guff about “alt-right” and “alt-left” and …..well, here’s a surprise: they’re both the same! This confirmed by:

“The Tory right and Labour left are supposed to be miles apart on the spectrum, diametrically opposed foes. But that doesn’t mean they have nothing in common – only that they have no interest in drawing attention to the common ground between them.”

It’s an old song. Extreme right and extreme left meet. Feel free to insert your own scare quotes.

Seamus Padraig
Seamus Padraig
Sep 29, 2018 7:24 PM
Reply to  Makropulos

It’s an old song. Extreme right and extreme left meet.

All that proves is that both alt-left and alt-right are POPULISTS who oppose our ‘centrist’ elites for some reason or another. But their support for (and by) the ruling elites makes this alleged center the real right-wing. And that’s why I refer to the so-called ‘horseshoe theory’ and the horseshit theory.

Seamus Padraig
Seamus Padraig
Sep 29, 2018 7:18 PM
Reply to  Makropulos

I haven’t had time to wade through Behr’s bollocks yet but I note one of his headlines for Guardian: “On Europe, Labour’s left is revealing its affinity to the ‘alt-right’” which pretty tells you all you need to know.

The other thing about Behr’s article that tells me a lot is that–and this is very common at The Fraudian nowadays–the comments are turned off. Very telling!

harry stotle
harry stotle
Sep 29, 2018 2:04 PM

Behr, and the neoliberal foot soldiers he rubs shoulders with are all too aware their entire raison d’être is dependent on their role as apologists for the economic and military system that is in the process of destroying the planet.

Graun journalists are hardly in a position to complain about Twitter so long as they remain on the wrong side of seminal political events like 9/11, Syria, Venuezula, Killary, or the antisemistism trope they have invested so much energy in in order to block opposition to right wing lunatics in the tory party (and of course Israel).

Fair dinkum.
Fair dinkum.
Sep 29, 2018 1:10 PM

It gives a whole new meaning to that old whispered phrase:
‘A little bird told me’
Question is: When will the bird’s wings be clipped?