Firehose of falsehood: Difference between revisions

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* [https://twitter.com/PetrSimon_/status/1584282882876768256 Don’t forget the main russian propaganda technique: when spreading their blatant lies, they don’t expect you to believe them. They want you to believe nothing. This makes you apathetic and unable to form firm opinions or take decisive action. Then they can take their own actions.]
* [https://twitter.com/PetrSimon_/status/1584282882876768256 Don’t forget the main russian propaganda technique: when spreading their blatant lies, they don’t expect you to believe them. They want you to believe nothing. This makes you apathetic and unable to form firm opinions or take decisive action. Then they can take their own actions.]
* [https://twitter.com/InfoAgeStrategy/status/1757419239474966998 That's the thing about disinformation campaigns: The facts don't matter. Seriously, they don't. Russia has been the world leader in disinformation campaigns since the 1920s. (That is, by the way, a demonstrable fact -- not just my personal opinion.) The purpose of a disinformation campaign is not to get you to believe the lie; it is to get you to believe no one.]


== [[Bothsidesism]] and [[whataboutism]] ==
== [[Bothsidesism]] and [[whataboutism]] ==

Latest revision as of 10:28, 13 February 2024

Destroy and ridicule the idea of truth

The “firehose of falsehood” works not just by flooding voters with misinformation. It’s a “say anything, but don’t forget to say everything” model. You broadcast so many different messages that at least one will matter a LOT to a given voter. And they can contradict one another.

The Firehose of Falsehood: the Russian style of propaganda for an age of information abundance.

  • High volume and multi-channel approach
  • Shameless in its willingness to broadcast lies
  • No commitment to, or requirement for consistency
  • Rapid, continuous and repetitive messaging
  • Point is not to persuade but to confuse and overwhelm
  • Assumes a low trust environment and lowers it further
  • Number of arguments matters more than their quality
  • Drown out competing messages through sheer volume
— Jay Rosen [1]

Bothsidesism and whataboutism

Lavrov-who-we-are.jpeg

russia is not squeaky clean. russia is what it is. And we are not ashamed of showing who we are.

Sergey Lavrov, “Lavrov: Russia is not squeaky clean and not ashamed”, 17 June 2022

The goal of russian propaganda with the firehose of falsehood is not to prove that russia is right, or that russia are the “good guys”. Indeed, they admit they’re not. The goal is to instill doubt about who the good guys are, or that there can be any, by creating confusion, chaos, complexity. russia might be bad, sure, but what about...

A case in point is the inviting, by russia, of Roger Waters to speak on their behalf at the United Nations. He didn’t deny russian aggression, that would be too obvious, too ridiculous, and would not convince anyone to switch sides anyway. But... let’s add some lies to water it down: “The invasion of Ukraine by the Russian Federation was illegal. I condemn it in the strongest possible terms. Also, the Russian invasion of Ukraine was not unprovoked. So, I also condemn the provocateurs in the strongest possible terms.” See, all of a sudden, the russian invasion of Ukraine is still wrong... but not so bad! (How exactly does someone go about “provoking” a genocidal invasion, “provoking” the bombing of restaurants and shopping centers, “provoking” the rapes and torture chambers? No need to worry about that!)

It might be hard to deny that Wagner are nazis or terrorists, or that russia is a corrupt, dictatorial regime, but what if instead there’s doubt about Ukraine having some issues too? Nobody’s perfect, right? Doesn’t even need to be proved, instilling doubt is enough in order to push for questioning US support for Ukraine. Bothsidesism is much easier to achieve than altering the truth: since no regime is ever flawless, as long as the firehose of falsehood can create reasonable doubt through information overload, why support either side in the conflict? And that’s all that russia needs: not for the West to support russia, but merely for the West to stop helping russia’s victims.

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