The
West’s War on Free Speech
Tony
Cartalucci
6
June, 2017
With
a name like the “National Democratic Institute” (NDI) one might
expect the US State Department-funded, corporate-financier chaired
front to be the premier proponent of freedom and democracy worldwide.
And although it poses as such, it does precisely the opposite. It
uses principles like free speech, democracy, press freedom, and human
rights as a facade behind which it carries out a politically
motivated agenda on behalf of the special interests that fund and
direct its activities.
In
a recent Tweet, NDI linked to a New York Times article titled, “In
Europe’s Election Season, Tech Vies to Fight Fake News.”
It claimed in the Tweet that the article featured:
A look at some of the projects aiming to use automated algorithms to identify and combat fake news.
The
article itself though, reveals nothing short of a global effort by US
tech-giants Google and Facebook, in collaboration with the Western
media, to censor any and all media that fails to align with
Western-dominated Нnarratives.
The
article itself claims:
The French electorate heads to the polls in the second round of presidential elections on May 7, followed by votes in Britain and Germany in the coming months. Computer scientists, tech giants and start-ups are using sophisticated algorithms and reams of online data to quickly — and automatically — spot fake news faster than traditional fact-checking groups can.
The goal, experts say, is to expand these digital tools across Europe, so the region can counter the fake news that caused so much confusion and anger during the United States presidential election in November, when outright false reports routinely spread like wildfire on Facebook and Twitter.
The
article then explains that once “fake news” is spotted, it is
expunged from the Internet. It reports that:
After criticism of its role in spreading false reports during the United States elections, Facebook introduced a fact-checking tool ahead of the Dutch elections in March and the first round of the French presidential election on April 23. It also removed 30,000 accounts in France that had shared fake news, a small fraction of the approximately 33 million Facebook users in the country.
Were
foreign government-linked tech companies purging tens of thousands of
accounts ahead of elections in say, Thailand or Russia, it is very
likely organizations like NDI and media platforms like the New York
Times would cry foul, depicting it as censorship.
In
determining what is and isn’t “fake news,” the New York Times
offers some clues (emphasis added):
Using a database of verified articles and their artificial intelligence expertise, rival groups — a combination of college teams, independent programmers and groups from existing tech companies — already have been able to accurately predict the veracity of certain claims almost 90 percent of the time, Mr. Pomerleau said. He hopes that figure will rise to the mid-90s before his challenge ends in June.
In
other words, “fake news” is determined by comparing it directly
to narratives presented by establishment media platforms like the New
York Times, the BBC, CNN, MSNBC, Fox News, and others who have
notorious track records of serial deception, false reporting, and
even war propagandizing.
Nowhere
does the New York Times explain how these “verified articles”
have been determined to be factually accurate, and instead, it
appears that all these algorithms are doing is ensuring all media
falls in line with Western narratives.
If
media in question coincides with Western-dominated media platforms,
it is given a pass – if not, it is slated for expunging as
described elsewhere in the New York Times’ piece.
Thus,
the National Democratic Institute, who claims on its website
to “support and strengthen democratic institutions
worldwide through citizen participation, openness and accountability
in government,” finds itself promoting what is essentially
a worldwide agenda of malicious censorship, manipulating the
perception of the globe’s citizenry, not supporting or
strengthening it’s participation in any sort of honest political
process.
To
answer the question as to what the NDI is referring to when it claims
other nations are “censoring” free speech and press freedoms, it
involves defending local fronts funded by the NDI and its parent
organization, the National Endowment for Democracy (NED) who merely
repeat Western propaganda in local languages and with local spins.
When foreign nations attempt to deal with these instances of “fake
news,” US fronts like NDI and NED depict it as censorship.
While
the West poses as the premier champion of free speech, citizen
participation, openness, and accountability, the New York Times
article reveals an unfolding plan to utterly crush any narrative that
deviates from Western media talking points, thus controlling citizen
perception, not encouraging “participation,” and ensuring that
the West alone determines what is “opened” and
held “accountable.”
Big
Brother is a fiction character/leader in George Orwell’s novel,
1984. (Source: Wikimedia Commons)
No
worse scenario can be referenced in human history or even among human
fiction than plans to determine for the world through automatic
algorithms and artificial intelligence almost in real time what is
heard and read and what isn’t. It is even beyond the scope and
scale of George Orwell’s cautionary dystopian “1984” novel.
In
a truly free society, an educated citizenry is capable of deciding
for itself what is “fake news” and what isn’t. Because of the
rise of alternatives to the West’s monopoly over global
information, many people are doing just that – determining that
Western narratives are in fact deceptions. At no other point in
modern history has the Western media faced as many alternatives, and
as much skepticism on this scale, as well as an ebbing of trust
domestically and abroad. It is no surprise then, to find the West
resorting to outright censorship, even if it cushions mention of it
with terms like “fake news.”
Tony
Cartalucci,
Bangkok-based geopolitical researcher and writer, especially for the
online magazine “New
Eastern Outlook”.
Featured
image: New Eastern Outlook
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.