Friday, February 24, 2017

Trump, Propaganda and Linguistic Imperialism




INTRODUCTION

 To paraphrase the Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis[1], the structure of language has embedded within it, a particular way of looking at the world. In short, the language that we learn shapes our understanding of the world, our rituals, our culture and customs.  In essence, it is our language that helps to shape our reality. It is also the main mechanism by which that reality is socially constructed.  Furthermore, it is the labeling effect that makes the whole notion of the constructivist argument relevant, even possible. Yet, in order to have any of this construction and organization of society, of culture, through language, it is necessary to have a clear understanding and acceptance of what that language means.  This understanding is broadly labeled a collective consciousness, or collective conscience.  This collective interpretation of the world is often the foundation on which there can be academic discourse, civil discussion and cordial disagreements. We are allowed to have a debate over complex critical issues because we’ve agreed that there are certain concrete truths, which act as a foundation for every social interaction, a baseline we all can fruitfully build upon one conversation at a time.  However with the rise of the Trump Administration and the existence and use of fake news, sponsored content and “Alternative Facts”[2] we have lost the collective conscience.  It was murdered in front of us during the campaign in 2016, and now Dead horse beater President Trump has mastered the doublespeak with such precision that it’s positively Orwellian. To unpack how we got to this space, we need to look at the media as a propaganda tool, whom are those who run it, and some examples of the overall fallout of the media’s duplicity. A fact that President Trump has exploited allowing for the myriad of unprecedented executive orders. The least of which is the Government agency gag order the administration enacted within the first 7 days[3]  


THE PROPAGANDA MODEL

As a definition, the Propaganda Model is an analysis of the media by Linguists Noam Chomsky and Edward Herman whom states that The media’s power[4] is in its ability to persuade. It is that manipulation, often rebranded from the common political adjective of charismatic when applied to candidates, that allows for, according to Chomsky, the “ filter[ing] out the news that is fit to print, marginal[izing] dissent, and allow the government and dominant private interests to get their message across to the public (Chomsky 1988)[5]

Propaganda Model: Five filters
1.      Size, Ownership and Profit Orientation- There are only 6 companies[6] that make up over 93% of all media in the United States. The top companies are Disney (Bob Iger), Viacom (Robert Backish), Comcast (Brian Roberts), Time Warner (Jeff Bewkes), News Corp (Rupert Murdock) 20th century Fox ( Jim Gianopulos),  Honorable Mentions: CBS (Leslie Moonvest (male)) Netflix (Reed Hastings) and Amazon (Jeff Bezos). These companies are run by white men, only seeing the world though that prism
2.      Advertising: License to do business- It is through advertising that many companies “Manufacture Desire” for their product in the minds of the populace. It is through advertising that we are sold the aforementioned large quantities of “nothing” and many of the objects and trinkets we by that we don’t need. Advertisers maintain high consumer demand through Consumeristic Philanthropy which inevitably leads to Commodification and Commodity Fetishism[7]
3.      Sourcing Mass Media News- Major media conglomerates have special access to news and the government. Thus they can literally shape the way that people understand what is happening in the world.  This is heightened to an absurd level in the way that a close relationship with the Government can mean the difference between legitimacy or illegitimacy.

An example of this is when The Trump Administration deciding which news organizations are more reputable than others: Decrying others (that do not side with the administration) as Fake News[8]  This lead to the coining of the term Alternative Facts[9]This is a practice known as “Gaslighting[10] which is very effective since it is coming from An Upper Class White Male (with all of the privilege that entails) who also happens to be The President. Another tactic is Dog Whistling[11] Which is a common tactic used against people of color.

4.      Flak and Enforces- This is the use of lawsuits and other bureaucratic means to silence unwanted or unpopular opinions in order to maintain social control of the populace. EX: Trump and the Muslim ban Supreme Court case, The gag order for scientific and other research based organizations, Sean Spicer limiting control of the media by sticking to talking points regardless of “facts”
5.      Anti-Communism/War on Terror This is a major social control mechanism. This is when ideological forces are deployed to support powerful investments based upon soci-cultural beliefs. This could be against Communism, Islam, and supporting Christianity (Chick-fila) and Capitalism (Fox News and Starbucks).
6.      *My Addition another filter that has cropped up in recent years is “sponsored content” otherwise known as Native Advertising[12]  This is stories or articles typically written on the internet that can masquerade as news content. Since a Majority of individuals get their news from online sources[13] or Social media, they are susceptible. Especially because recent reports show that millennials passively consume news through social media[14] not requiring any critical analysis. Ads and News become one in the same.

The result of the propaganda model is the manufacturing of consent[15] from the public. In the political context, this acquiescence manifests itself through voter choices. A clear technique of manufacturing consent is Fear Mongering.

Narrative Techniques of Fear Mongering[16]

1)      Repetition[17] “There is something going on.” “Eminent” “tremendous” “Systematic” and Handful[18]
2)      The Depictions of Isolated incidents as trends “They are bringing drugs, they are bringing crime.”[19]  Logical fallacy of a Hasty Generalization
3)      Misdirection[20] Trump used it when NOT condemning David Duke[21] Sean Spicer talking about the Immigration executive order[22]

Manufacturing Consent (Desire) is also a mechanism of the powerful, to control the non-powerful (This theme we will come back to) but this only happens after the people relinquish their power to those in higher status positions by voting or not voting.   

There are two ways that you get people to relinquish their power:
1)      Fear We are living in a tremendous culture of fear that puts us in a constant state of unrest that we will freely give up our civil liberties in order to feel safe again.
2)      Convenience If it means that we can have an easier time day to day. If our needs and desires are satiated faster than before, we are willing to give up our privacy, autonomy and agency. When people are lulled into a state of complacency by the shiny new things and forms of entertainment they have around them, this is a road to social and political apathy



STORIES VS. FACTS

The consent that is achieved through fear mongering tactics polarize people and make the issues not about “facts but about Emotional feelings”. This is compounded by the blurring of the line between factual news stories and editorials thanks to Sponsored content, Donald Trump gained and maintains support regardless of what he says, and no Amount of “facts” will stand in the way of that belief. This is an example of what Sociologist call constructionism

Social Constructionism contends that individuals within society are defining, and therefore creating, the world around them through social interactions as a type of “communal exchange” (Cheung 1997:2).  Therefore, our understanding about the world cannot take place without other people. It is a social process that produces knowledge.

Knowledge, therefore “is developed, transmitted and maintained in social situations” creating a distinct reality (Berger and Luckmann 1966:3) for particular individuals. 
The mantra that is often used to illustrate this in sociology is twofold:
1)      “What is real is real in its consequences” W.I. Thomas
2)      Something has meaning because we (in society) give it meaning  Herbert Blumer    

Media Role in Social Construction

            One mechanism by which we give things meaning is through the media. The media embraces its role as the arbiter of knowledge (what Sociologist call an Agent of socialization) when they are advertising something, they whole heartedly seek to change behavior and self-identity if it means the consumer buys their products. They will clearly link product consumption with emotional fulfillment, gender identity while giving us normalized imagery of Race social class, satisfaction, drive and desire. However, due to the normalization of social media and the rise of hyper subjectivity online (which blurs the line between opinion and evidence) when it comes to politics, many media outlets will give opposing viewpoints, regardless of their scientific or other evidential validity,[23] Or be oddly non-committal in their political analysis thereby passing the buck on the their viewers

What is unfortunate is that a politician who understands this social process (of knowledge production) well, can tap into the emotions of the populace, stoke their flames of fear and ride the tide of tyranny right into office.  Such a politician understands that with a lack of an agreement of what is considered true, belief can TRUMP facts. Yet, the most problematic, and dare I say “deplorable” use of language, is in the obliteration of a group of people and their culture.



LANGUAGE AS IMPERIALISM

According to Michel Foucault, language is a way to organize and is a source of thought (Gutting 2005)[24].  Yet, the type and way we use language produces a different form of knowledge and understanding.  But the very way we use language to produce and organize thought, also limits us; hindering a deeper understanding of the world due to the rules language shackles us with. Thus, the way we construct the world, ultimately leads to our misunderstanding of it.

The existence of any form of inequality is solidified by the absence of language to try and fix it, for more egalitarian language. The American English language’s form of categorization is based on highlighting differences. Because the American value of individualism is embedded in the language that we use.  Therefore, the words that we use to describe our world is based on vagaries of distinction, creating a language that is motivated by separation.  That separation also motivates identity formation, forcing us to define ourselves by what makes us unique, what makes us stand out…the inevitable result of which is a form of toxic competition that fuels the politics of “otherness” (alienation, segregation, discrimination)[25]. Essentially, the language that we use predisposes us to create a structural social system that is unequal.[26] This is then continued on when many people of color teach their child English, rather than their native tongue. This might seem practical given the way that English is accepted and spoken in the world, however this idea can also be reframed as problem. One that sees the learning of English as oppressive and supportive of an unequal racial social structure pacifying people of color through the adoption of white cultural words, words that are given…to oppress people of color rather than uplift them; usually through complacent acquiescence. Thus Language is used as a mechanism of imperialism cultural annihilation and the pacification of the public. There are the all too clear examples of spread English by Christian Missionaries in Non-white countries[27]. The British occupation of India and Australia[28] A practice that is often echoed in the drive for a national language in the United States[29]
 
We are now living in the Upside-Down
CONCLUSION
           
            The Power of the media and language cannot be overlooked, both in its role in the election of Donald Trump or the way he has used it to cast doubt on what objective truth and facts are. For example I do not know if President Trump is personally a racist ( Though there is certainly evidence for it[30]) What is clear though, is that he has been able to tap into the zeitgeist of blue collar white fear, structural racism and xenophobia that has bubbled up to the surface after the election of Barrack Obama.  Since White privilege is invisible to most white people. They believe that their experience, opportunities and access to resources are in line with everyone else, regardless of the truth. This is what is known as the normalization of whiteness (or White Hegemony). Thus, when social movements, the passing of laws and the election of the first “black” president not only makes their whiteness visible, but begins to strip away the privilege they didn’t believe that they had; it creates a backlash that Donald Trump is capitalizing on; which makes him, at the very least, an opportunist. Regardless of his motivations, Trump embodies America in the way that we are only forward thinking not taking the time to look at our past history of genocide, racism, and sexism, while still being racist and sexist through the emulsification of hate into a new subtler aberration; he is the manufactured mirror of our culture that is now clearly visible to all.



[4] Using the Weberian definition of power being “The ability to realize your will even when others resist
[7] the perception of the social relationships involved in production, not as relationships among people, but as economic relationships among the money and commodities exchanged in market trade.
[10] The manipulation of someone by Psychologically causing them to question their Sanity
[11] This is when those in authority use coded language to hide the intention or meaning behind the words that they say. “ urban” meaning people of color “Law and Order” meaning over prosecuting people who attack police, or higher deportation rules “American” meaning white people.
[15] Manufacturing Consent Chomsky Herman
[23] Which can tip their hand to their political leanings
[24] Foucault: A Very Short Introduction
[25] This is different than say other countries that have a more inclusive and communal Cultural heritage that shows up in their language ( Kanji, Mandarin, Russian)
[26] This idea is, in part, an application of Baudrillard’s understanding of meaning based upon difference,  to explain the persistence of systemic structural inequality