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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Tuesday, August 28, 2018
Let a hundred WikiLeaks blossom

“Clouds” in all their forms are, of course, presented to us as facilitators of our freedom. After all, they make it possible for me to sit in front of my PC and freely surf with everything out there at our disposal – or so it seems on the surface.
( August 24, 2018, London, Sri Lanka Guardian) When
WikiLeaks exploded onto the scene a decade ago, it briefly seemed like
the internet could create a truly open society. Since then, Big Brother
has fought back.
Every day now, we hear complaints about the growing control of digital
media, often from people who apparently believe the concept was
originally an unregulated free-for-all.
However, let’s remember the origin of internet. Back in the 1960s, the
US Army was thinking about how to maintain communications among
surviving units in the event that a global nuclear war destroyed central
command. Eventually, the idea emerged of laterally connecting these
dispersed units, bypassing the (destroyed) center.
Thus, from the very beginning, the internet contained a democratic
potential since it allowed multiple direct exchanges between individual
units, bypassing central control and coordination – and this inherent
feature presented a threat for those in power. As a result, their
principle reaction was to control the digital “clouds” that mediate communication between individuals.
“Clouds” in
all their forms are, of course, presented to us as facilitators of our
freedom. After all, they make it possible for me to sit in front of my
PC and freely surf with everything out there at our disposal – or so it
seems on the surface. Nevertheless, those who control the clouds also
control the limits of our freedom.
Hiding the remote
The most direct form of this control is, of course, direct exclusion:
individuals and also entire news organizations (TeleSUR, RT, Al Jazeera
etc.) can disappear from social media (or their accessibility is limited
– try to get Al Jazeera on the TV screen in a US hotel!) without any
reasonable explanation being given – usually pure technicalities are
cited.
While in some cases (for instance, direct racist excesses) censorship is
justified, it’s dangerous when it just happens in a non-transparent
way. Because the minimal democratic demand that should apply here is
that such censorship be done in a transparent way, with public
justification. These justifications can also be ambiguous, of course,
concealing the true reasons.
In Russia, you may be sent to jail for publishing things on the internet
of which you actually strongly disapprove. The latest example is of
Eugenia Chudnovets, a kindergarten teacher in Ekaterinburg, who was
sentenced to five months in a penal colony for reposting a video showing
a child being abused in a summer camp. On March 6, 2017, the conviction
was overturned. Chudnovets had been convicted under an article
prohibiting the “spreading, publicly demonstrating or advertising of data or items containing sexually explicit images of underage children,” as
she had reposted a video on a social network, showing a naked kid being
abused in a children’s camp in the town on Kataisk in Kurgan Region.
The teacher herself explained that she could not let the flagrant
incident go unnoticed – and she was right. Because it seems clear that
the true reason for her conviction was not to prevent sexually explicit
images of children, but to cover up the abuse going on in public
institutions that is tolerated by the state.
Historical memory
However, we cannot dismiss this case as something that can only happen
in oppressive Putin’s Russia – we find exactly the same rationale in the
first well-known case of such social media censorship, which occurred
back in September 2016 when Facebook decided to remove the historical
photograph of nine-year-old Kim Phuc running away from a napalm attack.
Days later, following a public outcry, the image was reinstated.
Looking back, it’s interesting to note how Facebook defended its decision to remove the image: “While
we recognize that this photo is iconic, it’s difficult to create a
distinction between allowing a photograph of a nude child in one
instance and not others.” The strategy is clear: the general
neutral moral principle (no nude children) is evoked to censor a
historical reminder of the horrors of napalm bombing in Vietnam. Brought
to extreme, this reasoning could be also used to justify the
prohibition of the films that were shot immediately after the liberation
of Auschwitz and other Nazi camps.
And, incidentally, a similar thing happened to me repeatedly two years
ago when, in my conferences, I described the strange case of Bradley
Barton from Ontario, Canada, who, in March 2015, was found not guilty of
the first-degree murder of Cindy Gladue, an indigenous sex worker who
bled to death at the Yellowhead Inn in Edmonton, having sustained an
11cm wound on her vaginal wall. The defense argued that Barton
accidentally caused Gladue’s death during rough but consensual sex, and
the court agreed.
Yet, this case doesn’t just counteract our basic ethic intuitions – a
man brutally murders a woman during sexual activity, but he walks free
because “he didn’t mean it.” Rather,
the most disturbing aspect of the case is that, conceding to the demand
of the defense, the judge allowed Gladue’s preserved pelvis to be
admitted as evidence. It was brought into court, the lower part of her
torso was displayed for the jurors (incidentally, this is the first time
a portion of a body was presented at a trial in Canada). Why would
hard-copy photos of the wound not be enough?
Speak no evil
But my point here is that I was repeatedly attacked for my report on
this case: the reproach was that by describing the case I reproduced it
and thus repeated it symbolically. Although, I shared it with strong
disapproval, I allegedly secretly enabled my listeners to find perverse
pleasure in it.
And these attacks on me exemplify nicely the “politically correct” need
to protect people from traumatic or disturbing news and images. My
counterpoint to it is that, in order to fight such crimes, one has to
present them in all their horror, and one has to be shocked by them.
In another era, in his preface to ‘Animal Farm,’ George Orwell wrote that if liberty means anything, it means “the right to tell people what they do not want to hear” – THIS is the liberty that we are deprived of when our media are censored and regulated.
We are caught in the progressive digitalization of our lives: most of
our activities (and passivity) are now registered in some digital cloud
that also permanently evaluates us, tracing not only our acts but also
our emotional states. When we experience ourselves as free to the utmost
(surfing the web where everything is available), we are totally “externalized” and subtly manipulated.
So, the digital network gives new meaning to the old slogan “personal is political.” And
it’s not only the control of our intimate lives that is at stake:
everything today is regulated by some digital network, from transport to
health, from electricity to water.
And this is why the web is our most important commons today, and the
struggle for its control is THE struggle of our time. And the enemy is
the combination of privatized and state-controlled entities,
corporations (such as Google and Facebook) and state security agencies
(for example, the NSA).
The digital network that sustains the functioning of our societies, as
well as their control mechanisms, is the ultimate figure of the
technical grid that sustains power, and that’s why regaining control
over it is our first task.
WikiLeaks was just the beginning, and our motto here should be a Maoist one: Let a hundred WikiLeaks blossom.
Slavoj
Žižek is a cultural philosopher. He’s a senior researcher at the
Institute for Sociology and Philosophy at the University of Ljubljana,
Global Distinguished Professor of German at New York University, and
international director of the Birkbeck Institute for the Humanities of
the University of London.
