Checkpoint March 15, 2025

Submitted by Ben Bache on

The firehosing and resilience targeting continue. Though not always strictly disinformation, the barrage of sometimes contradictory news and announcements about changes to government services and regulations that people rely on has comparable effects. If you haven’t read disinformation researcher Brooke Binkowski’s series on How to Fight Disinformation do yourself a favor and set aside some time to read it. It was written between 2020 and 2022 and its focus is primarily climate-change related, but many of the players and certainly the same techniques make an appearance, and the parallels to the current situation are extensive.

One reason I mention firehosing and resilience targeting is that it is a challenge to choose a topic to focus on in the current information environment. This week the events that probably received the most media attention (news, social, etc.) were the machinations in Congress surrounding the budget.

2024: A Campaign of Disinformation

Submitted by Ben Bache on
This article starts with a sample of disinformation through history, from Roman times to the George W. Bush era. Next is a review of the taxonomy of disinformation, followed by a look at its deployment by the Trump campaign and the political right wing. A survey of recent academic research into the mechanisms of disinformation is next, and we conclude with some questions for the future.

2024 Election as Political Long COVID

Submitted by Ben Bache on

The topic for today’s article comes from reader NP, who suggests that Trump’s ascendancy “is almost entirely attributable to the subjective and objective effects of the COVID years.” These effects, he suggests go beyond economic factors to include

… fearfulness and trauma that Trump tried to deflect to The Other; the hatred of “elites” who were blamed for lockdown, and, of particular import, shutting down schools, which led … to the explosion of “parental control” of schoolboards, curricula, etc., which [in turn] fed anti-trans fever…. [I]t’s no accident … that the online bro-culture, hyper-masculinity, sports and health supplement culture was fertile ground for ivermectin-esque challenges to what “they” were telling you about COVID, including, of course, vaccines (and of which Trump was a prominent part, which explains his current Cabinet appointments, who were people, like him, that the “elites” mocked). There’s also an intersection … with evangelicalism: recall the flurry of cases where public health rules were challenged on religious freedom grounds. And … even though Trump was in power when much of this was going on, he was a conspicuous critic of his own government’s response, thus cementing the paradox of Trump as Outsider while running the government.

So with that framing, let’s begin.