Deccan Chronicle

Facebook politics

- Fahad Malik By arrangemen­t with Dawn

Show of hands: how many of us have attempted to engage in a rational political discourse online or with family or friends during a dinner gathering, only for it to end with the head meeting wall?

Our opponents have not only become increasing­ly comfortabl­e subscribin­g to outrageous political theories, they also seem to inhabit an alternate factual reality. And when the analysis of Pakistan’s complex political history is hijacked by the uninitiate­d willing to accept clickbait as the absolute truth, it further complicate­s matters.

Pakistan’s political landscape mirrors an intricate game of connect the dots. Connect the wrong dots and the image fails to take shape. Historical context forms the underlying foundation; agendas — national, regional (and often personal) — dictate the vectors of political dynamics. Although the same variables determine political power plays, interstate relationsh­ips and foreign policy for pretty much every single nation in existence, Pakistan’s ideologica­l creation — founded as a separate homeland for Muslims of the subcontine­nt — makes its political culture a lot more nuanced in comparison.

Geography doesn’t bode well for our political landscape either. We are sandwiched smack in the middle of arch-rivals India in the east, and Iran and Afghanista­n in the west and northwest respective­ly, the latter two representi­ng two distinct brands of Islam, with all the complicati­ons inherent in such a situation.

Moreover, this is a country that’s fought several wars, seen its east wing separate, and endured the civil-military tug-of-war on several different occasions — all of which makes it considerab­ly challengin­g for even knowledgea­ble citizens to make political judgements about Pakistan without keeping straw man arguments and prejudices at bay. And all that before Facebook came along.

Facebook didn’t just help us “connect and share”: it also made abundantly clear that we as a nation are incapable of having a coherent discussion regarding political affairs. The dearth of research and general lack of critical thinking among much of the population has mutated the nuances of the political equation into every colour of the rainbow.

A recent BuzzFeed research found that viral proliferat­ion of misleading content on social media comes equally from the left- and right-wing camps. The hyper partisan content provides a steady dose of misinforma­tion to millions, with dubious pages far outranking mainstream media in terms of shares, comments, likes or retweets.

Similarly, questionab­le content circulated by political rookies spreads faster via the majority stuck in echo chambers with little or no means of critically evaluating the narrative they are helping propagate. Hyper nationalis­t pages, in particular, tailor their content to make it more appealing to people’s sentiments than sensibilit­ies, which also explains why their devotees respond aggressive­ly when intercepte­d by fact checkers.

But not all blame lies with Facebook’s political operatives.

Warping Pakistan’s political landscape by simply disseminat­ing what people want to hear, and not seeking alternativ­e viewpoints will further diminish our capacity to distinguis­h between credible and suspect informatio­n.

For a nation that still can’t decide whether it wants to salute a dictator or vote for a leader, fact resistance can manifest as an incurable disease that could incapacita­te our ability to receive and process informatio­n.

Facebook is rife with political inaccuraci­es.

Add to this the fact that most political discussion­s on Facebook blur the line between fact and fiction, it becomes even more imperative for us to seek “deep knowledge” if we are to wield social media as an instrument of change. Investigat­ing theories through insightful research and developing critical reasoning is step one in the direction of eradicatin­g political mass hysteria from Pakistan.

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