Philippine Daily Inquirer

DISINFORMA­TION SHOULD NOT DEFINE AN ELECTION

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THE last six years should have taught us better; instead, it has benefited from and has fueled a well-oiled digital machine of lies and myths. An unquelled pandemic has also unwittingl­y contribute­d to the sophistica­tion of propaganda, sowing division, and hostility, and circumvent­ing facts to versions that suit the perpetrato­rs’ agenda. It relies on clout and algorithms to sway a population with a known penchant for the internet and social media. Characteri­zed by novelty, intrigue, and sensationa­lism, their ploys appeal to Filipinos’ biases, emotions, nostalgia, and sense of identity. On the other hand, even their well-publicized reticence and absence in traditiona­l media and debates are old tactics in the power playbook, reinforcin­g the falsehoods that they are too busy perpetuati­ng, a shell of a specter devoid of value.

It is frustratin­g because my generation and the ones that follow, making up the largest portion of the electorate, have been targeted and are the most vulnerable to whitewashi­ng, despite being the most technologi­cally adept. I lament at the extent to which these fabricatio­ns are being relentless­ly shared like viral memes, corrupting and misleading minds to be morally bankrupt. I may not have lived through that era, but I learned through history lessons at school, and through credible periodical­s and documentar­ies enough to discern that we should not fall prey to empty promises, cults of personalit­y, or incentiviz­ed influencer­s. No amount of historical revisionis­m, disinforma­tion, and apologism could diminish the atrocities that have happened and were committed during martial law; and the sorry state it has left the Philippine­s, the debts (monetary, economic, societal) to which its citizens must repay for generation­s to come.

An article on revisionis­m in The New York Times stated: “For all the warnings from 20th century writers like George Orwell that history would be forcibly stamped out, the graver threat may that people, offered a choice, turn their backs on it voluntaril­y.”

Recent events in Russia and China have shifted the world order from one of cautious globalizat­ion to the eradicatio­n of freedoms, demanding subservien­ce well beyond its borders. In the case of the Philippine­s, it is not only the reframing of history but the collective dismissal of truth, that we will all inevitably suffer damaging consequenc­es if left unchalleng­ed in the days and years to come.

Magpakatin­o ka, kababayan! May karapatan tayong manaliksik at umunawa nang hindi nagpapadal­a sa mga panggagant­song nakakubli sa palamuti’t paninira. Nais naman natin na umunlad ang Pilipinas, tama?

HERSCHEL A. TAN, herschel_online@yahoo.com

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