The Scotsman

Could Russia’s lies topple the West?

-

On Tuesday of this week, Scotland’s First Minister stood up at Holyrood to announce her programme for government for 2018-19. It was an unremarkab­le speech, without the visionary drive of last year’s announceme­nt on a just, prosperous and sustainabl­e 21st century Scotland; yet for opponents and supporters alike, it was a speech full of the decent, ordinary stuff of government, and of the day-to-day effort to set priorities among all the possible claims on the public purse.

Despite obvious weaknesses in some areas, it offered more money for mental health services, some real moves to protect the rights of EU citizens in Scotland, and a raft of other measures that might, if well implemente­d, actually improve the lives of tens of thousands of people living in Scotland, and arguably of us all.

Despite the Scottish Government’s best efforts, though, the First Minister’s speech for 2018-19 seems destined to be the policy announceme­nt that time forgot. It attracted little coverage in the Scottish media, and almost none elsewhere; and most commentato­rs barely gave it a second glance before returning to the “big stories” of the hour – the UK Government’s ongoing Brexit meltdown, and the response to recent accusation­s against Alex Salmond.

It’s arguable, of course, that politics and political journalism have ever been thus – preoccupie­d with the rise and fall of big personalit­ies, preferably laced with financial or sexual scandal. Yet there’s something about the clickbait age we live in that seems to have made the constant purveying of rumour, scandal, and hate, often at the expense of serious political coverage, even more pervasive and influentia­l than it was in the heyday of the yellow press.

And beyond that, there is something else again; the possibilit­y that there are now organised political forces around which are seriously adept at manipulati­ng online rumour and sensationa­l material for their own ends – ends which have nothing to do with the kind of patient, ameliorati­ve politics still being practised by rational government­s everywhere, and everything to do with destabilis­ation and disruption, and the general underminin­g of any systems of justice or government that might limit the power of autocrats and oligarchs to do as they damn well please.

Now at this point, of course, we enter the Russian email addresses. If there is such an organised campaign of destabilis­ation, it would of course have had little chance of success if it hadn’t been for the glaring weaknesses of post-crash Western liberal societies; there’s something almost witty about how some of these campaigns act to exploit the popular anger, anxiety and disillusio­n caused by a combinatio­n of extreme and socially illiterate neoliberal economics, and the kind of arrogant “expert opinion” that assured us the 2008 crash could never happen.

Yet smart though the online bots and those who design them may be, we should remain in no doubt that they have nothing better to offer us than our existing Western democracy already provides, with all its flaws. That the West needs to end its flirtation with extreme market economics, and return to a more civilised balance between the power of markets and the needs of people, is now almost unarguable.

Each one of us, though, as a citizen and an individual, has a duty to get wise to those forces that are trying to exploit this crisis only in order to make matters worse; a duty to stop drinking the Kool-aid, to make efforts to become our own researcher­s and fact-checkers, and to resist the avalanche of online lies through which such people – whatever their origin or motivation – try to influence our votes.

For what we observe, in the current chaotic politics of Britain and the United States, is what happens when weak or opportunis­tic politician­s try to take actions based on lies rather than facts.

Britain’s botched attempts at a Brexit that can never deliver what was claimed for it are almost comic in their ineptitude; but we should be in no doubt about the deadly serious damage this decision will inflict on ordinary British people and their lifechance­s, for decades to come. Nor should we doubt the presence of the much darker demons that now lurk just behind; those that would license hatred, bigotry and militant inhumanity as a legitimate form of politics once again, and lead us straight down a path which we all know leads only to bloodshed, and to the nightmare of war and chaos Europe once briefly dreamed of leaving behind, for good.

 ??  ?? 0 Under Vladimir Putin, Russia stands accused of interferin­g in elections and spreading vaccine scare stories
0 Under Vladimir Putin, Russia stands accused of interferin­g in elections and spreading vaccine scare stories

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom