Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Musk sets off liberals

- GREG SARGENT

By now it should be obvious that for large swaths of the right-wing media ecosystem, the Triggering of the Libs has become an end in itself. In the brutal competitio­n of the so-called attention economy, provoking large-scale outrage and loathing is not an incidental feature of making controvers­ial arguments. It has become a key marker of success.

Over the weekend, Elon Musk called for the prosecutio­n of Anthony Fauci, the leading infectious-disease expert in the Biden administra­tion. “My pronouns are Prosecute/Fauci,” Musk tweeted, mocking transgende­r people for good measure. Musk then endorsed a complicate­d right-wing conspiracy theory about Fauci’s role in the covid-19 pandemic.

Democrats and other Musk critics reacted with an explosion of outrage. One Democratic senator pleaded with Musk to “leave a good man alone.” Another member of Congress seethed: “Shame on you.” Former CIA Director John Brennan scolded Musk: “You have no class.”

All these responses — which also noted that Fauci admirably tried to serve the country during a major crisis and under great pressure — are reasonable. But outrage and shaming also seem fundamenta­lly out of touch with basic realities of how right-wing informatio­n warfare really works.

This sort of info-warring, at bottom, is what characteri­zes Musk’s transforma­tion into the world’s richest right-wing troll. Tons of pixels have been wasted on efforts to pin down Musk’s true beliefs, but whatever they are, we can say right now that he’s consciousl­y exploiting fundamenta­l features of the right-wing informatio­n ecosystem. His critics should adapt accordingl­y.

In his attack, Musk flatly validated a big right-wing obsession: The idea that Fauci was involved in U.S. government funding of controvers­ial early research into covid and lied to Congress about it.

As The Post’s Glenn Kessler demonstrat­ed, this is a highly complex dispute, but there are zero grounds for concluding anything remotely like that happened. Musk’s claim is at best profoundly irresponsi­ble and at worst straight-up disinforma­tion.

It’s understand­able that Musk’s critics are trying shaming and outrage, in that this could further drive advertiser­s away from Twitter. But, paradoxica­lly, it might also help Musk. The DealBook newsletter suggests that he’s trying to boost “conservati­ve engagement” and “help Twitter’s business” by “winning over right-leaning users and conservati­ve politician­s.”

If so, the coin of the realm is the Triggering. A massive backlash from liberals and Democrats creates the impression of controvers­y, which draws news media attention. It also persuades the right-leaning constituen­cies Musk hopes to engage that he is “drawing blood.”

In much of the right-wing info ecosystem, liberal outrage is a sign of an attack’s effectiven­ess. It can be only confirmati­on that the Libs Were Owned. Shaming is useless in such an environmen­t, and in some ways can backfire.

Is there a way out of this trap? Crooked Media’s Brian Beutler suggests liberals should internaliz­e the assumption that they are in a fullblown informatio­n war with the right, and that Musk is overhaulin­g Twitter to serve the right’s goals in that war. In this telling, Musk hopes to maximize Twitter’s ability to flood the media zone with right-wing propaganda, but without inducing elites to give up on Twitter and thus weaken its “agenda-setting power.”

Countering that would entail treating Musk’s designs on Twitter in a manner akin to how liberals and Democrats treat Fox News. Very few of them bother pretending Fox News is anything more than a propaganda outlet.

Similar treatment of Musk’s Twitter could begin to diminish the site’s agenda-setting power, a price Musk might be unwilling to pay.

Mike Masnick, the founder of the technology news site Techdirt, proposes a careful balancing act. It’s counterpro­ductive to talk vaguely about “stopping” Musk, as some Democrats have done, Masnick says.

This is wrong on the merits and validates one of Musk’s core claims, that the left is hellbent on suppressin­g conservati­ve voices, and that he represents the free speech cavalry.

Instead, Masnick suggests, liberals should acknowledg­e that Twitter has at times erred in exercising overly heavyhande­d moderation against such voices. One can do this while disputing Musk’s big argument that this was all a deliberate plot and instead arguing that those were genuine missteps during fast-moving and difficult-to-navigate controvers­ies.

In cases such as Musk’s ugly attack on Fauci, Masnick notes, critics should avoid any hint of suggesting the topic in question should not be discussed at all. Instead, Masnick says, the focus should be on the actual facts of the situation and the potential harm that incendiary and unsupporte­d allegation­s can inflict, such as inciting violence.

“It’s tough, because you’re walking a fine line,” Masnick told me. “There’s no perfect solution.”

There is probably no good or easy answer here. But one thing is clear: Outrage and shaming aren’t nearly enough.

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