This post originally appeared in the Feb. 29, 2020 edition of the Wilson Times.
Starting in 507 B.C.E. ancient
Athenians created democracy, putting government in the hands of the people (demos in Greek). Democratic principles
that began 2,500 years ago now are being ravaged by new technology that raises
doubts about elections, the basis of democracy.
A generation after Ronald
Reagan declared that democracy was ascendant and that autocrats’ authoritarian
rule would be consigned to “the dust bin of history,” it looks like the
autocrats are winning again. China, shrouded in the Communist Party’s absolute
rule, has become the world’s second largest economy. Russia has recovered from
its post-Soviet collapse and is reclaiming territory the czars had ruled. Authoritarian
regimes only have to raise doubts about elections to delegitimize democracies.
One has to wonder: Can
democracy survive in a world of social media, computer hacking, viral videos
(sometimes faked), robotic social media posts, disinformation and unchallenged
falsehoods?
When American democracy
began in the 18th century, it guaranteed freedom of speech and of
the press. Voters kept up with public issues and candidates through newspapers
and personal contacts. The Athenians’ democracy was direct — each citizen could
present proposals and vote on them. The former British colonists of America
created a representative democracy, a republic, through which the people chose others
to lead the government and make decisions.
The internet and social
media have made it possible for citizens to access nearly limitless information
to help them make decisions, but not all information is accurate or true.
Unscrupulous people and organizations have been quick to take advantage of the
gaps in digital communications and spew misinformation, disinformation and lies
to gullible people whose votes decide which candidates shall run the
government.
U.S. Intelligence officials
have concluded the Russian government used Facebook and other new media to help
sway the 2016 presidential race. Intelligence now says the Russians are
meddling in the 2020 presidential race, and other foreign powers may also be
finagling with our democracy.
Some domestic parties have
decided to adopt the disinformation campaigns of foreign enemies to aid candidates
in elections. In the March issue of The Atlantic, McKay Coppins documents
efforts by the Trump reelection campaign to mislead and misinform voters in
order to sway their votes or to so confuse them that they don’t vote. It seems
increasingly likely that both major parties will adopt disinformation campaigns
using sophisticated data collections to aid their candidates. Falsehoods and
misleading assertions will be part of these campaigns. Newspapers, which had
tried to keep politicians honest by fact-checking their statements and
revealing unethical tactics, are so weakened and the digital universe is so
vast that news organizations cannot keep up. The media and reporters are also
being targeted in campaigns aimed at sowing distrust of news media.
Meanwhile, election
officials are worried that the voting process itself might be compromised.
Touch-screen voting terminals are considered vulnerable to hackers and are
being replaced by machines that produce a paper copy of votes, but even that
might not be sufficient to stop a determined hacker.
If dishonest posts on social
media and potential foreign computer hacking were not enough, our democracy
also must deal with protracted primary campaigns with as many as two-dozen
candidates on one debate stage — another gift of recent technology. Candidates
abandon debate to viciously attack the integrity, morals and qualifications of
other candidates, offering little information about candidates’ policies and
abilities.
In the 2016 GOP debates,
Donald Trump insulted and belittled other candidates, violating unwritten rules
of decorum and decency. The party did nothing to stop his tirades, which were adopted
by other candidates. It appears the Democrats are tolerating the same suicidal
tactics this year.
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