Disinformation: How It
Works
by Brandon Smith, Alt-Market.com
There was a time, not too long ago
(relatively speaking), that governments (and the groups of elites who control
them) did not find it necessary to conscript themselves into wars of
disinformation. Propaganda was relatively straightforward. The
lies were much simpler. The control of information flow was easily directed.
Rules were enforced with the threat of property
confiscation and execution for anyone
who strayed from the rigid socio-political structure. Those who had theological,
metaphysical or scientific information outside of the conventional and scripted
collective world view were tortured and slaughtered. The elites kept the
information to themselves, and removed its remnants from mainstream recognition,
sometimes for centuries before it was rediscovered.
With the advent of anti-feudalism,
and most importantly the success of the American Revolution, elitists were no
longer able to dominate information with the edge of a blade or the barrel of a
gun. The establishment of Republics, with their philosophy of open government
and rule by the people, compelled Aristocratic minorities to plot more subtle
ways of obstructing the truth and thus maintaining their hold over the world
without exposing themselves to retribution from the masses. Thus, the complex
art of disinformation was born.
The technique, the “magic” of the
lie, was refined and perfected. The mechanics of the human mind and the human
soul became an endless obsession for the establishment.
The goal was malicious, but socially
radical; instead of expending the impossible energy needed to dictate the very
form and existence of the truth, they would allow it to drift, obscured in a fog
of contrived data. They would wrap the truth in a Gordian Knot of
misdirection and fabrication so elaborate that they felt certain the majority of
people would surrender, giving up long before they ever finished unraveling the
deceit. The goal was not to destroy the truth, but to hide it in plain
sight.
In modern times, and with carefully
engineered methods, this goal has for the most part been accomplished.
However, these methods also have inherent weaknesses. Lies
are fragile. They require constant attentiveness to keep them alive. The
exposure of a single truth can rip
through an ocean of lies, evaporating
it instantly. In this article, we will examine the methods used to
fertilize and promote the growth of disinformation, as well as how to identify
the roots of disinformation and effectively cut them, starving out the entire
system of fallacies once and for all.
Media Disinformation
Methods
The mainstream media, once tasked
with the job of investigating government corruption and keeping elitists in
line, has now become nothing more than a public relations firm for corrupt
officials and their Globalist handlers. The days of the legitimate
“investigative reporter” are long gone (if they ever existed at all), and
journalism itself has deteriorated into a rancid pool of so
called “TV Editorialists” who treat
their own baseless opinions as supported fact.
The elitist co-opting of news has
been going on in one form or another since the invention of the printing
press. However, the first methods of media disinformation truly
came to fruition under the supervision of newspaper magnate William Randolph
Hearst, who believed the truth was “subjective” and open to his personal
interpretation. Some of the main tactics used by the mainstream media to mislead
the masses are as follows:
Lie Big, Retract Quietly:
Mainstream media sources (especially
newspapers) are notorious for reporting flagrantly dishonest and unsupported
news stories on the front page, then quietly retracting those stories on the
very back page when they are caught. In this case, the point
is
to railroad the lie into the
collective consciousness. Once the lie is finally exposed, it is already too
late, and a large portion of the population will not notice or care when the
truth comes out.
Unconfirmed Or Controlled Sources
As Fact: Cable news venues often cite
information from “unnamed” sources, government sources that have an obvious bias
or agenda, or “expert” sources without providing an alternative “expert” view.
The information provided by these sources is usually backed by nothing more than
blind faith.
Calculated Omission:
Otherwise known as “cherry picking”
data. One simple piece of information or root item of truth can derail an entire
disinfo news story, so instead of trying to gloss over it, they simply pretend
as if it doesn’t exist. When the fact is omitted, the lie can
appear entirely
rational. This tactic is also used extensively when disinformation agents and
crooked journalists engage in open debate.
Distraction, And The Manufacture
Of Relevance: Sometimes
the truth wells up into the public awareness regardless of what the media does
to bury it. When this occurs their only recourse is to attempt to change the
public’s focus and thereby distract them from the truth they were so close to grasping. The
media accomplishes this by “over-reporting” on a subject that has nothing to do
with the more important issues at hand. Ironically, the media can take an
unimportant story, and by reporting on it ad nauseum, cause many Americans to
assume that because the media won’t shut-up about it, it must be
important!
Dishonest Debate Tactics:
Sometimes, men who actually are
concerned with the average American’s pursuit of honesty and legitimate
fact-driven information break through and appear on T.V. However, rarely are
they allowed to share their views or insights without having to
fight through a wall of carefully crafted
deceit and propaganda. Because the media know they will lose credibility if they
do not allow guests with opposing viewpoints every once in a while, they set up
and choreograph specialized T.V. debates in highly restrictive environments
which put the guest on the defensive, and make it difficult for them to clearly
convey their ideas or facts. TV pundits are often trained in what
are commonly called “Alinsky Tactics.” Saul Alinsky was a moral relativist, and
champion of the lie as a tool for the “greater good”; essentially, a modern day
Machiavelli. His Rules for Radicals were supposedly meant for grassroots activists
who opposed the
establishment and emphasized the use of any means necessary to defeat one’s
political opposition. But is it truly possible to defeat an
establishment built on lies, by use of even more elaborate lies, and by
sacrificing one’s ethics? In reality, his strategies are the perfect
format for
corrupt institutions and governments to dissuade dissent from the masses. Today,
Alinsky’s rules are used more often by the establishment than by its
opposition.
Alinsky’s Strategy: Win At Any Cost,
Even If You Have To Lie
Alinsky’s tactics have been adopted
by governments and disinformation specialists across the world, but they are
most visible in TV debate. While Alinsky sermonized about the need for
confrontation in society, his debate tactics are actually designed to circumvent
real and honest confrontation of opposing ideas with slippery tricks and
diversions. Alinsky’s tactics, and their modern usage, can be summarized as
follows:
1) Power is not only what you have,
but what the enemy thinks you have (perception).
We see this tactic in many forms. For
example, presenting your own movement as mainstream, and your opponent’s as
fringe. Convincing your opponent that his fight is futile. Your opposition may
act differently, or even hesitate to act at all, based on their "perception" of
your power. How
often have we heard this line: “The government has predator drones. There is
nothing the people can do now…” This is a projection of exaggerated
invincibility designed to elicit apathy from the masses.
2) Never go outside the experience of
your people, and whenever possible, go outside of the experience of the
enemy.
Don’t get drawn into a debate about a
subject you do not know as well as, or better than, your opposition. If
possible, draw them into such a situation instead. Go off on tangents. Look
for ways to increase insecurity, anxiety and uncertainty in your opposition.
This is commonly used against unwitting interviewees on cable news shows whose positions
are set up to be skewered. The target is blind-sided by seemingly irrelevant
arguments that they are then forced to address. In television and radio, this
also serves to waste broadcast time to prevent the target from
expressing his
own position.
3) Make the enemy live up to their
own book of rules.
The objective is to target the
opponent’s credibility and reputation by accusations of hypocrisy. If the
tactician can catch his opponent in even the smallest misstep, it creates an
opening for further attacks, and distracts away from the broader moral
question.
4) Ridicule is man’s most potent
weapon.
“Ron Paul is a crackpot.” “Gold bugs
are crazy.” “Constitutionalists are fringe extremists.” Baseless
ridicule is almost impossible to counter because it is meant to be
irrational. It infuriates the opposition, which then reacts to your
advantage. It also works as a pressure point to force the enemy into
concessions.
5) A good tactic is one that your
people enjoy.
The popularization of the term
“Teabaggers” is a classic example; it caught on by itself because people seem to
think it’s clever, and enjoy saying it. Keeping your talking points simple and
fun helps your side stay motivated, and helps your tactics spread autonomously,
without instruction or encouragement.
6) A tactic that drags on too long
becomes a drag.
See rule No. 5. Don’t become old
news. If you keep your tactics fresh, it’s easier to keep your people active.
Not all disinformation agents are paid. The “useful idiots” have
to be motivated
by other means. Mainstream disinformation often changes gear from one method to
the next and then back again.
7) Keep the pressure on with
different tactics and actions, and utilize all events of the period for your
purpose.
Keep trying new things to keep the
opposition off balance. As the opposition masters one approach,
hit them from the flank with something new. Never give the target
a chance to rest,
regroup, recover or re-strategize. Take advantage of current events and twist
their implications to support your position. Never let a good crisis go to
waste.
8) The threat is usually more
terrifying than the thing itself.
This goes hand in hand with Rule No.
1. (Perception is reality). Allow your opposition to expend all of its energy
in expectation of an insurmountable scenario. The dire possibilities can easily
poison the mind and result in demoralization.
9) The major premise for tactics is
the development of operations that will maintain a constant pressure upon the
opposition.
The objective of this pressure is to
force the opposition to react and make the mistakes that are necessary for the
ultimate success of your campaign.
10) If you push a negative hard and
deep enough, it will break through into its counterside.
As grassroots activism tools, Alinsky
tactics have historically been used (for example, by labor movements or covert
operations specialists) to force the opposition to react with violence against
activists, which leads to popular sympathy for the activists’ cause. Today,
false (or co-opted) grassroots movements and revolutions use this technique in
debate as well as in planned street actions and rebellions (look at Syria for a
recent example).
11) The price of a successful attack
is a constructive alternative.
Never let the enemy score points
because you’re caught without a solution to the problem. Today, this is often
used offensively against legitimate activists, such as the opponents of the
Federal Reserve. Complain that your opponent is merely “pointing out the
problems.” Demand that they offer not just “a solution”, but THE solution.
Obviously, no one person has “the” solution. When he fails to produce
the miracle you requested, dismiss his entire argument and all the facts he has
presented as pointless.
12) Pick the target, freeze it,
personalize it and polarize it.
Cut off the support network and
isolate the target from sympathy. The target’s supporters will expose
themselves. Go after individual people, not organizations or
institutions. People hurt faster than institutions. The next time
you view an MSM debate, watch the pundits carefully, you will likely see many if
not all of the strategies above used on some unsuspecting individual
attempting to
tell the truth.
Internet Disinformation
Methods
Internet trolls, also known as “paid
posters” or “paid bloggers,” are increasingly and openly being employed by
private corporations as well governments, often for marketing purposes and for
“public relations” (Obama is notorious for this practice). Internet “trolling”
is indeed a fast
growing industry. Trolls use a wide variety of strategies, some of
which are unique to the internet, here are just a few:
1. Make outrageous
comments designed to distract or frustrate: An Alinsky tactic used to make
people emotional, although less effective because of the impersonal nature of
the Web.
2. Pose as a supporter of the truth,
then make comments that discredit the movement: We have seen this even on our
own forums – trolls pose as supporters of the Liberty Movement, then post long,
incoherent diatribes so as to appear either racist or insane. The key to this
tactic is to make
references to common Liberty Movement arguments while at the same time babbling
nonsense, so as to make those otherwise valid arguments seem ludicrous by
association. In extreme cases, these “Trojan Horse Trolls” have been known to
make posts which incite violence – a technique obviously intended to solidify
the false assertions of the think tank propagandists like the SPLC, which
purports that Constitutionalists should be feared as potential domestic terrorists.
3. Dominate Discussions: Trolls often
interject themselves into productive Web discussions in order to throw them off
course and frustrate the people involved.
4. Prewritten Responses: Many trolls
are supplied with a list or database with pre-planned talking points designed as
generalized and deceptive responses to honest arguments. When they post, their
words feel strangely plastic and well rehearsed.
5. False Association: This works hand
in hand with item No. 2, by invoking the stereotypes established by the “Trojan
Horse Troll.” For example: Calling those against the Federal Reserve
“conspiracy theorists” or “lunatics”; deliberately associating anti-globalist
movements with racists and homegrown terrorists, because of the inherent negative
connotations; and using false associations to provoke biases and dissuade people
from examining the evidence objectively.
6. False Moderation: Pretending to be
the “voice of reason” in an argument with obvious and defined sides in an
attempt to move people away from what is clearly true into a “grey area” where
the truth becomes “relative.”
7. Straw Man Arguments: A very common
technique. The troll will accuse his opposition of subscribing to a certain
point of view, even if he does not, and then attacks that point of view. Or,
the troll will put words in the mouth of his opposition, and then rebut those
specific words. Sometimes, these strategies are used by average people with serious
personality disorders. However, if you see someone using these tactics over and
over, or using many of them at the same time, you may be dealing with a paid
internet troll.
Stopping
Disinformation
The best way to disarm disinformation
agents is to know their methods inside and out. This gives us the ability to
point out exactly what they are doing in detail the moment they try to do it.
Immediately exposing a disinformation tactic as it is being used is highly
destructive to the person utilizing it. It makes them look foolish, dishonest
and weak for even making the attempt. Internet trolls most especially do not
know how to handle their methods being deconstructed right in front of their
eyes and usually fold and run from debate when it occurs.
The truth is
precious. It is sad that there are so many in our society
who have lost respect for it; people who have traded in their conscience and
their soul for temporary financial comfort while sacrificing the stability and
balance of the rest of the country in the process. The human
psyche breathes on the air of truth. Without it, humanity cannot survive.
Without it, the species will
collapse, starving from lack of
intellectual and emotional sustenance.
Disinformation does not only threaten
our insight into the workings of our world; it makes us vulnerable to fear,
misunderstanding, and doubt: all things that lead to destruction. It can drive
good people to commit terrible atrocities against others, or even against
themselves. Without a concerted and organized effort to diffuse mass-produced
lies, the future will look bleak indeed.
Brandon Smith is founder of the
Alternative Market Project as well as the head writer and co-founder of
Neithercorp Press. He specializes in macroeconomic analysis as well as studies
in mainstream media disinformation, and is now focusing on the creation of a
national network of barter markets designed to insulate and protect local
economies from the inevitable collapse
of the current unsustainable fiat
system.
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