The Sun (Lowell)

Woke disinforma­tion more pervasive, strong than Russian disinforma­tion

- By rich lowry

Why do the Russians need to bother spreading disinforma­tion when our own domestic sources do a much better job at it?

We just went through a fouryear national obsession with Kremlin disinforma­tion. It supposedly swayed the 2016 presidenti­al election. It was “sowing divisions” in American society. It accounted for the discovery of Hunter Biden’s laptop during the 2020 election.

Social media companies were excoriated for allegedly letting Russian disinfo poison their networks, and the American mind. There was nothing that some Russian operators — spending a pittance — couldn’t do. The former Time magazine managing editor and Obama state department official Richard Stengel wrote a book called “Informatio­n Wars: How We Lost the Global Battle Against Disinforma­tion and What We Can Do About It.” According to Stengel, the Russians had mounted “an unpreceden­ted attack against the very foundation of our democracy.”

The Russians were amateurs, though. If they really knew what they were doing, they’d spread rank lies about election reforms passed by an American state, make the deceptions so pervasive that the president of the United States would casually repeat them, unjustifia­bly dredge up memories of a terrible period of repression in America, relentless­ly racialize the debate, and intimidate corporate America into thoughtles­sly entering the partisan fight and discrediti­ng itself with a significan­t segment of the population.

No, Russian trolls operating somewhere in St. Petersburg didn’t undertake this highly successful informatio­n operation against the Georgia election law — Stacey Abrams and her allies in media and politics did. If the Russians had the requisite skill, they’d spread the false story that a talented American governor had sold out his citizens by letting a campaign contributi­on distort his distributi­on of COVID-19 vaccines, suppressin­g all facts to the contrary and stoking yet more conspirato­rial thinking about the governor among his political opponents.

The Russians couldn’t pull this off — yet “60 Minutes” did, in a laughably dishonest report over the weekend about Florida Gov. Ron Desantis using the most popular grocery store chain in the state to get the vaccine in the arms of Floridians.

If the Russians were devious enough, they’d take a god-awful mass shooting, ignore all of the evidence about the perpetrato­r’s motives to define it as a crime driven by racial hatred, and undermine faith in the local police and FBI when they presented the facts.

The Russians couldn’t manage this, either — but a veritable army of media commentato­rs and progressiv­e politician­s could. They insisted against the available evidence that the Atlanta spa shooter must have been driven by hatred of

Asians, while Democratic senators openly dissented from the

FBI director’s statement that the shooting wasn’t a hate crime. If the Russians had the power or know-how, they’d spin a story of American law enforcemen­t as a racist occupying force that should be resisted in “largely peaceful” protests all over the country, putting the cops on their back foot and creating an environmen­t of spiraling disorder and violence in some of the most iconic U.S. cities. Of course, the Russians also had nothing to do with this — Black Lives Matter and the media did all of the hard work and have largely managed to ignore the rising tide of crime that is undoing one of the signal America domestic accomplish­ments of the past several decades.

None of this is to dismiss the pernicious influence of Russian informatio­n operations and cyber strikes, especially overseas, or to minimize the hideousnes­s of the Putin regime. But it is galling to see the same people who sounded the klaxons about Russians underminin­g faith in the American system for years themselves spread — or at least casually accept — progressiv­e narratives based on poisonous lies about our own country.

The Russians are never going to stop running their informatio­n campaigns against the West, which date back to the Soviet Union. But they must occasional­ly be tempted to stand back in envy and awe at all that the U.S. promoters of woke narratives have been able to accomplish without them.

Rich Lowry is on Twitter @Richlowry

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