As It Happens is a current commentary on international relations and developments in British politics.  It also carries updates on the TPPR Group of companies and associates.  Clients can access  bespoke advice on political, cultural and ideological developments relevant to their specific interests in the form of regular reports, private briefings or research projects. 

Entries in Freedom (4)

Wednesday
Dec162009

KEEP LINKING FREE AND UNFETTERED, DEMANDS NEW INTERNET FREEDOM CAMPAIGN

With all our intellectual and analytical postings, we can sometimes forget to tell you that we have clients and that we do good work directly and in association with Pendry White.

This is the latest campaign that we are promoting and it is well within our libertarian new economy positioning - the Right2Link Campaign. Rather than comment here, you can read the official news release and go direct to the Campaign website where there is an explanatory video.

KEEP LINKING FREE AND UNFETTERED, DEMANDS NEW INTERNET FREEDOM CAMPAIGN

A campaign to ensure that linking remains free to all has been launched today. The Right2Link campaign (www.right2link.org) comes as the Digital Economy Bill and other market developments appear to be threatening the information-sharing freedoms afforded by the World Wide Web.

The campaign is adamant that online copyright is to be respected, but argues that it should not be at the expense of the freedom to create, circulate and follow links to online content.

Linking – referencing someone else’s online intellectual property with a headline, short quote or summary with attribution – is standard practice for users of the Internet.  Email and social networks like Facebook, MySpace, Twitter and LinkedIn are often used to share links among friends, associates and colleagues.

Search engines such as Google, Yahoo, Bing, as well as other new economy businesses that act as portals and link aggregators, occupy a key role in identifying links that are of interest to be read and passed on.  They are a key part of the World Wide Web’s system of circulating information.

According to Right2Link, the free circulation of publicly accessible information is threatened if individuals, businesses and search engines cannot continue to do what they are doing today without restraint.

Recent months have seen a climate developing, in which governments and media owners have articulated an increasingly restrictive and repressive attitude towards Internet freedoms, and in which there have been a number of disturbing developments threatening to restrict the freedom to link.

First, heads of large media corporations, among them Rupert Murdoch of News Corp and Gavin O'Reilly of Independent News & Media, have accused search engines and link aggregators of stealing their content. They have ventured to suggest that publishing headlines and short excerpts, widely accepted as permissible under the law, should be made illegal.

Second, some industry members and commentators have voiced concerns that the Government's new Digital Economy Bill will threaten information sharing freedoms.

Third, the UK's major print media owners have sought to establish a counter-productive precedent by demanding organisations obtain permission to use links to the newspaper websites and for forwarding them on.  The danger in this precedent is that it threatens to give any media organisation or website owner the right to demand that permission be obtained before linking. They would be able to cherry-pick who they would allow to link to their web site and at what price. This would generate a climate of uncertainty about linking that would damage the Internet’s ethos of freedom of information exchange and restrict people’s and organisations' ability to conduct their business  freely.

Opponents of this trend towards restrictions on the freedom to link include online new economy businesses, search engines, portals and aggregators, enlightened new media publishers, members and representatives of the PR industry and organisations who already realise their online freedom on the World Wide Web is under threat.

However, Right2Link warns that any organisation, including charities and government departments, is open to being threatened with legal action or targeted for “license” fees by any website owner if the freedom to link is not enshrined in law and in practice as an Internet right for all.

The founding sponsor of Right2Link is NewsNow, the UK's largest news portal. The campaign is fully supported by others in the sector including Meltwater, Alacra and Zenark.

Ends

[This text is public domain and free of copyright so use it. You can link to this or any other As It Happens page to your heart's content.]

Monday
Nov022009

Anthropology Becomes Important Again ...

Back in the nineteenth century, anthropology was central to the imperialist project. Understanding and categorising all the strange new cultures for whom administrators became responsible was a political necessity, not an 'ivory tower' academic pursuit.

Racism, Science & Imperialism

As the (non-academic) Gyrus (quoting Ellingson), in a recent talk at the October Gallery, has pointed out, power struggles within Britain's Ethnological Society in the 1860s displaced the Quakers whose role in constructing an earlier liberal and tolerant attitude towards other 'races' had been important.

The intellectual triumph of Charles Darwin created a potential new model for social evolution. Racists with 'experience' of colonial administration, such as John Crawfurd, seized on the theory to build a new consensus for racial superiority.

In the years to come, skulls were measured, customs analysed and the primitive contrasted with the civilised. Colonial administrators spread across Africa and South and East Asia. Amerindians were hunted into reservations. Fu Manchu was to epitomise the wily oriental.

Survival of the fittest developed into a full-blown theory, actually owing more to Lamarck than Darwin, under Herbert Spencer. This fed not only the new ideology of empire but that of capitalism as a progressive force, even infecting Marxism a little on the way.

Anthropology became a central plank in the ideology of Western expansion, reaching its vicious and very unscientific apogee in the Germany of the 1930s and in the distinctly potty late-romantic narratives of the Ahnenerbe and the racial politics of mass murder.

Reform and Reaction

After the horrors of the death camps, a new anthropology emerged, derived from the far more liberal position in America of Franz Boas whose empirical research knocked most a priori racial theory firmly on the head.

Anthropology and political ideology largely separated out. No academic discipline can be called un-ideological and anthropology contributed from the academy to the massive liberalisation of Western culture from the 1960s but it was certainly not a central concern of states or the military.

But this is about to change. Whereas the first phase of the politicisation of anthropology derived from the expansion of empire, this second phase owes its potential to the renewed interest of authority to the preservation of empires under siege from below and from the margins.

There are three factors in this just as there were in the second half of the nineteenth century - shifts in scientific theory, shifts in political concerns and shifts in funding by those with resources that will bias the interests and positions of those working in all the social and cognitive sciences.

The Arrival of the New Cognitive Science

In the first phase, Darwinism kick-started a new vision of humanity as engaged in struggle. Empires actually did struggle and the ideological and moral justification for struggle required that patronage go to those who could service the intellectual needs of an expanding system.

In the latest phase, the underlying scientific theory is a revolution in the cognitive and neuro-sciences where the consensus seems to be, perfectly reasonably, that our minds are not blank slates but that some aspects of ourselves are innate and so genetic.

As far as it goes, this is, as with evolution, unexceptionable. It describes the world as it is and we would do well not to try and work against it. It has the same effect on radical attempts to change humanity through environmental manipulation as evolution had on religion.

The point here is that the new sciences do not posit God nor do they posit the possibility of changing conditions to change humanity but they do posit changing conditions in order to change behaviour in recognition of the general thrust of 'human nature'.

It may not be essentialism as we know it but it is still a form of it. It objectifies us and it posits, and this is important, that those in authority can make reasoned and right judgements about what is in our interest more effectively than we can ourselves.

Scientists & Politicians

This may seem a problem that we might have with the political process rather than with scientists - especially given this week's stand by Professor Nutt against Home Secretary on drugs policy. Surely, scientists will resist any manipulation of their work beyond the evidence available?

But some scientists have a tendency to get too big for their boots and to want to extrapolate their findings into public policy and the wider culture. We see this with the almost comical performance of Richard Dawkins in his campaign against religion but the matter is a deadly serious one.

The elision of evidence-based science into, first, the application of theory to society (as Spencer did) and thence to the use of the theory by the authorities to justify their own interests is often far too easy and smooth. There are always 'intellectuals' hungry for adulation prepared to help this process along.

This process is unchallenged by a cultured but not always very bright media. It is allowed to happen because critical theory about society constantly theorises about itself and relations of power but fails to turn its eye on the worm in its midst - the positivist who is too positive about what he thinks he knows.

Bad policy slips in through the cracks between good science and a self-referential and scientifically-illiterate intelligentsiya. Elsewhere, on a private blog, we have critiqued one such case, Stephen Pinker's claims about social violence in contemporary society, but we do not want to get sidetracked here.

From Liberation to Manipulation

The new cognitive sciences feed into the social senses via psychology. Just as Darwin enabled Spencer, so important new and, in our view, liberatory thinking about the mind is drifting into strategies of 'nudge' and social manipulation that are far from liberatory.

These social applications are emerging at a time of crisis for authority in two separate but linked directions - libertarian mass resistance to authority enabled by globalisation and new technologies and the increased ability of marginal groups, especially in the emerging world, to resist 'empire'.

In another age, the power of law enforcement internally and brutal application of superior military force externally could solve anything but times have changed. Mass global social networking exposes any extreme expedient use of power. Much of the public is no longer trusting or tolerant of authority.

The application of the cognitive sciences to the social sciences provides not merely practical methods for getting people to do what Governments want ('in their own interest', of course) but is the basis for an ideological justification for such actions here and overseas.

It is no accident that Pinker, an experimental psychologist and leading populariser of the attack on the 'blank slate' theory of mind, has weighed into an essentially anthropological debate about violence in tribal and modern societies.

The new cognitive scientists are becoming as dynamically engaged in the application to society of their theories of human nature as were those who had received, through Darwin, their revelation about evolution.

Evolution was to go through many years yet of sophisticated development. There is also no necessary relation between evolutionary theory and either social structures or the actual workings of the mind. Leading intellectuals of the late nineteenth and early twentieth century did not understand this.

One suspects that the cognitive sciences will have to learn the same lesson. Evidence-based science is not an absolutely reliable guide to how existence is either experienced or organised. But a lot of personal ambition and vanity might lead to a great deal of damage being done in the meantime.

Military Patronage

This brings into play the third factor in the story - patronage. The first phase represented patronage within a middle class elite where relatively few jobs were circulated amongst a closed group that was embedded in the system. Generational change would conspire with this to construct 'group think'.

After the death camps, academic futures were dictated by academic standards. Social democratic or liberal states respected traditional academic freedoms - basically, taxpayers' money was doled out without very much being asked in return other than that findings be published and students taught.

But there was another source of funding for science with much more direct demands for results - the military and the whole panoply of organisations that covered issues of state security. Investment has tended to be hard science in orientation - guns, rockets, encryption, submarines, energy and so on.

The global public relations, advertising and market research industries were partly midwifed out of the psychological warfare operations of the late 1940s and 1950s but these latter were largely directed at propagandising at the populations of rival systems - and can't be said to have achieved a great deal.

Manipulation within states was largely left to dull public information, private sector marketing and corporate communications and political snake oil sales. Little direct social and political manipulation was required because common cultures, with limited media and state education, tended to be self-correcting.

Big Budgets, Big Changes

Things are now changing fast. The Pentagon, for example, has a massively increased budget and a re-orientation away from big ticket military hardware to counter-insurgency, while 'homeland security' concerns have seen the emergence of significant diversions of funds into social monitoring.

This is where things may get very dodgy indeed.

If States in general have massive resources to apply and academics need resources to undertake research, get tenure, be published and, indeed, not end up unemployed during a general contraction in the domestic economy, then obviously we have a marriage made in heaven ... or hell.

Where might this lead? The cycle of cod-racism that started with Crawfurd's coup in the Ethnological Society ended in the death camps. Even now we are still trying to root out daft racial politics 140 years later in British inner cities and the American backswoods.

The new alliance between frightened authority, the military, ambitious science and hungry academics is unlikely to result in anything so obviously dark but it may end up with its own evils in due course. Let us speculate intelligently.

Universalist Egalitarianism Under Benign Authority

First of all, though, let us remind ourselves that no modern ideologist has any theory of class or racial superiority - on the contrary, they are all almost painfully liberal. Instead, the new ideology treats us all equally, equally recalcitrant, ignorant, victims of blind drives and not knowing our best interests.

Internally within the West this elides naturally into 'third way' or guided democracy models where authority looks on the more overt confucian models of the Chinese and wonders how to reproduce them within a framework of democratic and liberal values - the arrival of 'nudge' is heaven sent.

Externally, the vision is more subtle. Undeveloped, insurgent and native peoples are not inferior as persons (after all we are now all equally inferior and flawed compared to our past cultural aspirations) but their cultures are undeveloped and far less noble than romantics would have them be.

There is no loss in the daft idea of the 'noble savage' but the new ideology sees a process of modernisation as liberatory of persons from cultures, especially from the taboos and constraints that are regarded as oppressive of individual human rights.

Whether they want it or not, non-European peoples are to be 'liberated' to become nearer in status to us ... we are lowered and they are raised into something close to a universal citizen, quite similar to the flawed sinful universalism of Christian ideology.

The Nightmare Society

Some may find this highly attractive but the devil is in the detail - and in the implementation. It is not that 'nudge' and other psychologically-based policies may not work, but that politicians will become impatient.

There will always be the temptation to remove the recalcitrant and to force through conditions to ensure that, as far as the public are concerned, they will always appear to work.

This is the road to hell that is paved with good intentions because, as with all universalist churches (and we include Soviet Marxism in this), the problems of implementation ineluctably lead to the weeding out of heresy and increased pressure on right behaviour, right speech and right thought.

People can be very recalcitrant. As in any species, there is wide variation and this variation includes the eccentric, the dissident, the far-sighted, the highly ethical and the stubborn. 'Nudge' policies tend to promote external 'norms' removing the variation that is central to social and cultural survival.

The nightmare society of 80 years from now (the trajectory from Crawfurd to Auschwitz) is a highly 'normalised' and sclerotic society where lack of conformity means low status and, worse, where free speech, free behaviour and free thought is curtailed to achieve normality.

Instead of the physical death and dispossession of Jews and gypsies, we will have the cultural and existential extinction of creativity and deviance. Fortunately, the invention of the internet has doomed such an enterprise from the start - so long as it remains a free channel.

And Anthropology?

Which brings us back to anthropology which is in danger of shifting from being a science of description, with a determined stance against interference, to a science of intervention in order to pacify recalcitrant communities, deal with 'failed states', undermine enemies and preserve allied elites in power.

There is no doubt that the wave of post-Soviet colour revolutions were partially engineered by Western political scientists and that the failure to overturn the Iranian regime will redouble efforts to find new techniques in what may amount to a sociological arms race.

The US military in particular will soon be flush with cash. There are hungry social scientists, political scientists, neuroscientists and anthropologists eager and willing to please such patrons rather than be thrown on to the job market.

There will be private sector intermediaries keen to sell the latest social science or psychological gizmo. Fortunes may be made on the application of new technologies to prove that academic theory can be made practical 'in the field'. That 'field' may be Waziristan, Somalia, Leeds or Detroit.

By its very nature, this massive investment in social manipulation strategies, domestically and overseas, poses a threat to democracy and to all forms of self-determination - individual, community and national - and leaves us with the question of what 'ideology' will serve it and it serves.

The Threat

Social Darwinism became associated with a now-discredited imperialist mind-set. The new ideology is associated with the primacy of 'good' authority over 'bad' liberty. Just as racist missionaries believed that they acted in the interests of their victims, so do the new ideological liberal 'progressives'.

The nearest analogy that we have for an unprecedented situation is the transfer of power from the ramshackle Roman Republic to the Augustan Empire and, when that started to crumble under its own weight, from a multi-faith world to the hard-line authoritarian Catholic Church under Constantine.

Or at least that is what underpins the thinking of the new authoritarian 'liberals' who are seeing their world crumble under the twin onslaughts of economic correction and new communications and information technologies. They are now relying on weight of cash to turn the situation around.

So, be warned, we are entering a new phase in the West, an attempt to reassert authority over us and over the 'imperial' periphery. Work has started on developing an ideology and a theory of human nature that will help it along. It could yet result in a sclerotic politics and a dead culture.  

Friday
Sep252009

Taking The Security-Industrial Complex Seriously

The radical anarcho-libertarian monitoring organisation Statewatch has, with the social activist Transnational Institute, come up with an extensive report on what it calls the 'neoconopticon'.

In essence, the report claims to expose the emergent European security-industrial complex that mirrors those of the United States and other security-minded 'empires'. This is its own summary of what it tries to do:

Despite the often benign intent behind collaborative European ‘research’ into integrated land, air, maritime, space and cyber-surveillance systems, the EU’s security and R&D policy is coalescing around a high-tech blueprint for a new kind of security. It envisages a future world of red zones and green zones; external borders controlled by military force and internally by a sprawling network of physical and virtual security checkpoints; public spaces, micro-states and ‘mega events’ policed by high-tech surveillance systems and rapid reaction forces; ‘peacekeeping’ and ‘crisis management’ missions that make no operational distinction between the suburbs of Basra or the Banlieue; and the increasing integration of defence and national security functions at home and abroad.

It is not just a case of “sleepwalking into” or “waking up to” a “surveillance society”, as Britain’s Information Commissioner famously warned, it feels more like turning a blind eye to the start of a new kind of arms race, one in which all the weapons are pointing inwards. Welcome to the Neo-ConOpticon.

We have often commented on the siloviki system in Russia but it seems that all states and proto-states (which is what the EU is until the Lisbon Treaty is finally approved) are developing their equivalent structures.

Something very big is going on here. The public are, perhaps, not fully aware of the possible implications in terms of the diversion of taxation and the potential for restrictions on freedoms otherwise taken for granted - or the potential for damage to 'inconvenient' minorities.

Part of the problem here is that those researching these issues tend to be over-enthusiastic political nerds whose sense of outrage puts off most ordinary citizens.

But they are damned if they do and damned if they don't. If they try to get their message across in over-simplified terms, they will be pigeon-holed with the often dim-witted people who go on marches and undertake campaigns that merely elicit a yawn from a bored establishment.

Yet if they do what they are doing now - supplying detailed intelligent argument about the shape of things to come - then they have to rely on a steady drip of understanding working through layers of political self interest until someone finally wakes up to what is happening, probably too late.

This is a shame but it may also be a tragedy because what they have to say is of vital importance, whether you agree that they have the full picture or not.

The lack of debate means that unaccountable people are putting in place, without scrutiny or adequate questioning from a supine political class, a complex internal security structure in the interstices of liberal democracy with the eager connivance of private sector interests talking up threat for profit.

This may not surprise us in a communist state like China or a post-communist empire like Russia but both the US (guarded by its Constitution to a great though not certain degree) and the European Union (with a framework now actively being moulded by security interests) purport to be liberal democracies.

The argument for a diversion of tax revenue into internal security, border settlement along the edges of the 'empires' and population management (in effect, intervention from above in the political proces, culture and society) is ostensibly one of citizen protection.

Unfortunately, the rhetoric does not quite match the reality. Citizen protection (essentially, preserving the ability for freedoms to be enjoyed) slides into more complex issues of economic security (especially energy and food security) and then into a very different kettle of fish, state security.

State security and citizen protection are not as perfectly aligned as the theoreticians of the new world order would like to suggest. We don't have to quote chapter and verse on Stalinism but even the most liberal and democratic of republics can elide without scrutiny and debate into:

  • considering radical dissent to be prima facie evidence for radical acts
  • considering radical acts to justify radical counter-measures
  • considering the cover-up of radical counter-measures such as restrictions on freedom of information or torture as essential to their success

Instead of the protection of the rights of each individual citizen being paramount as free individuals, the authoritarian mentality judges individuals by their alignment with social norms that are eventually designed to make the job of security and social control easier.

Every incident of threat or any barrier to easy or cheap security implementation becomes a tool for extending the boundaries of authority through new legislation and regulation demanded of weak legislatures who have been half house-trained through the agency of weak and centralised parties.

The report's title brings together two separate ideological concepts in its 'neoconopticon' neologism. We all think we understand the neocon bit because of recent history but it is a little more complicated than the foreign policy adventuring of Messrs Bush and Blair.

The essence of neoconservatism is not its apparent politics of the Right masked by a revised post-communist progressivism, but the fact that it is the political expression of the authoritarian personality in the West, beyond Left or Right, one that sees liberty as necessarily to be protected by auctoritas.

This is Roman thinking, designed to preserve the boundaries of empire and free trade by politically emasculating all forms of liberty that do not fit with an atomised population that trades, pleasures itself, moves around and chooses from its range of non-threatening lifestyles without politics.

This atomisation of the population, withdrawn from the active politics of locality and tradition (including class, religious and national tradition), creates the very security problems that have encouraged atomisation - organised crime, 'leaderless resistance', the rise of atavistic ethnicisms, terrorism ....

This leads us to the second part of the neologism, a reference to a rational but inhumane attempt to be humane - the panopticon prison system of leading liberal theorist of the late eighteenth century, Jeremy Bentham.

Like the guillotine, the panopticon was supposed to be a reform, an improvement on the cruel disorder of previous systems of social control. Rationalism, perhaps the most anti-human of idealisms, looks down upon creation, thinks it is not up to scratch and invariably comes up with new cruelties.

Bentham's purpose was clear - the system (which ensured that no prisoner was ever free of the gaze of his jailer) was "a new mode of obtaining power of mind over mind, in a quantity hitherto without example."

This impulse can only be considered totalitarian and yet it was also classically liberal. Persons had done wrong and rationally were to be considered as worthy of this treatment because they had stepped over the bounds of a free society based on trust and contract.

Totalitarian, authoritarian and yet liberal, designed to ensure freedoms within the carapace of accepted constitutions by ensuring constant surveillance, paid out of the people's own funds in order to isolate off those who are deemed a threat and still ensure 'right thinking' in the rest.

But wait, consider what crimes might have placed a man under this omniscient system in the 1780s if it had ever been implemented - idleness, poverty (the system was specifically designed to displace the poor laws), poaching, homosexuality, blasphemy.

Now consider what thought-crimes and politically correct expectations in regard to conduct are emerging within the new 'liberal totalitarianism'. Will it become a 'crime' to have the wrong light bulb or give your children too much sugar at meal times? Holocaust denial can get itself a prison sentence already.

The obsessive fears of the paranoid security class, the greed of new industries providing goods and services, the float of security officials between public and private sectors, progressive expectations and nostrums and the instinct for order may all see the 'neoconopticon' develop beyond democratic control.

Statewatch's detailed and interesting report should not just be shelved alongside other radical moans about the State or the ruling order. It is a vital document of political education in a debate that should inform our thinking as voters and of our politicians as our representatives.