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Tackling online propagandists requires a new approach that focuses on their audiences

Social media trolls who successfully whip up their followers with hateful propaganda have created communities that will believe everything they say, no matter how untrue their messages are.

The frightening scenes of far-right extremists clashing with police and even rioting in British towns and cities in recent days have many wondering how to stop the spread of the propaganda that encourages racism, violence and misogyny.

The tough truth is that, in seeking to fact check misinformation and force social media companies to remove hateful content, we are doing it wrong. Another message will simply pop up in place of each one that is removed. The people who plant propaganda are far more advanced in their methods than the people trying to stop them. They are not thinking about messages, but about audience. Hate is clickbait. And social media algorithms put it on steroids.

The unrest started in Southport, England, where a group who claimed to be “protesting” against the deaths of three young girls during a knife attack in the area attacked a mosque. They seemed to believe that the attack was perpetrated by a migrant (which was untrue). More than 50 police officers were injured when they responded to the emergency.

Misleading messages about the Southport attack were posted online, and Reform UK MP Nigel Farage “questioned” whether we were being lied to about the Southport attacker’s identity (although he told the BBC that he had “merely expressed a sense of sadness and concern that is being felt by absolutely everybody I know”).

Out of date

Our working definitions of propaganda are hopelessly outdated because they all focus on message. And message is unimportant because propagandists will say anything to generate clicks, income or power. They will post calls to “build a wall” and “stop the boats”. They will claim “those kids were murdered in the name of Islam”.

Factual accuracy  is not important – what matters is that those who wield online influence identify and target a power base.

If what they say is taken down, they will simply find a different way to say it to the people they are trying to reach. In the meantime, they can claim to be censored victims of the establishment.

They appeal to emotion rather than rationality, and though their messaging is equal parts ludicrous and disturbing to the rest of us, it wins an audience. Therefore, that audience – rather than the messaging – should be our focus.

‘Imagined communities’

The modern propagandist creates what political scientist Benedict Anderson described as imagined communities”. He argued that states and nations (and mass media) are founded by successfully creating a community with its own foundation myths, symbols and history. This chimes with the work of propagandist theorist Jacques Ellul, who argued that myths were central and necessary to successful propaganda.

Some symbols are well known and largely shared among us all – spitfires, the British bobby, royalty. But others, like the “cockroach” immigrant, the loss of national agency and the language of conspiracy theories, are foundational to a community that speaks only to itself.

Worse still, those who don’t share their beliefs are naive and need to “do their own research”. Marianna Spring, the BBC disinformation and social media correspondent, found in her recently published book, Among the Trolls, algorithmic rabbit holes with their own imagined communities.

Such myths are also fundamental in the process of generating “agitation” propaganda. Traditionally, agitation propaganda is the casus belli summoned by states to send people to war. In the same way, the hatred of today’s racist bigot and the misogyny of the incel are both founded in “agitation” propaganda. Influencer Andrew Tate, for example, has made his name summoning an army of men to fight for his cause.

As Ellul would have it, “hate is generally its most profitable resource… Hatred is probably the most spontaneous and common sentiment. It consists of attributing one’s misfortunes and sins to ‘another’… Propaganda of agitation succeeds each time it designates someone as the source of all misery, provided that he is not too powerful.”

Add to this mix social media bots and it brews a poison for our democratic public sphere.

Finding the lost

Fact-checking is not useless, but it doesn’t resolve the central problem. Better to identify the silos, and work with their members.

We could water down the messaging being sent out to the people causing unrest on the streets with other, better sources. We might even block some of the networks that deliver the content.

This is better than playing fake news whack-a-mole. Once we have identified the silos of information, we can target the algorithms that create them, and those being targeted or isolated.

We can then mediate and ameliorate the problem by reaching out to these groups, spending our energies introducing alternative views, new symbols and foundational myths, negating the effects of the algorithm that led them to their silo.

Spring writes of people whose lives have been ruined, of charlatans who create clickbait, but most of all the pathos of those dragged down.

Fact-checking simply convinces the converted that those who don’t share those views have taken the blue pill of blissful ignorance, rather than the red pill of painful knowledge.

Malicious actors are more than prepared to flood the zone with shit, as Donald Trump adviser Steve Bannon puts it. This makes clearing the misinformation impossible. But, by thinking about audience first, we can, maybe, find the lost and lead them through the storm. DM 

First published by The Conversation.

This story first appeared in our weekly Daily Maverick 168 newspaper, which is available countrywide for R35.

 

Comments (5)

Arnold O Managra Aug 12, 2024, 10:10 PM

Hanlons razor - Never attribute to malice that which can be adequately explained by stupidity. We are just dumb apes with an engorged frontal cortex. The problem is not the message, indeed. The problem is our humans' intrinsic nature, flawed as it is. We call that "life".

alastairmgf Aug 13, 2024, 09:03 AM

It’s very easy to simply blame the “far right” for the unrest (who are they anyway?) and ignore the huge unhappiness and distrust of a large portion of the population in the migrants pouring into Britain. Quoting Mariana Spring, is rich seeing she was exposed for lying on her CV.

Rod MacLeod Aug 13, 2024, 12:11 PM

Go back in DM168 to find a Maverick Kids spread on war. In it you will find the most astounding propaganda on an anti-Israel position in that it focusses 80% on the Gaza war, about 15% on Russia's invasion of Ukraine, and the rest on other major wars. Don't go to Britain to find it, start at home.

Cornaymjbester1@gmail.com Aug 13, 2024, 01:30 PM

Dawah clowns

frankdarkday Sep 25, 2024, 08:27 AM

Non-thinking is current societies default setting. We have millions of people who watch shows like Real Housewives of wherever and we wonder why it's so easy to influence people. Catering for the brain lazy is where the big bucks are.