Wikileaks or not to Wikileaks: Is that the Question?
There seems to be a big line in the sand drawn when it comes
to accepting whether total government transparency is a democratic right or
whether it is information that can cause too much chaos. One must ask
him/herself are we better off for knowing about the private world behind the
political curtain or does this information put up bigger walls between countries,
thus increasing the chances of more global hostility? What Wikileaks does is
show the world what politicians and its Defence Force are like when the camera
is off. The people that run the world do not run it as cleanly
as we would hope and I think Wikileaks shows us that. The media, large
corporations and politicians have had a marvellous union over the past 50 odd
years.The media have protected the politicians and the politicians have protected the corporations. As Henry Jenkins
states, “convergence is being shaped top-down by the decisions being made by
massive media conglomerates , but at the same time, convergence is being shaped
bottom-up by the participatory impulses of consumers, who want the ability to
control and shape the flow of media in their lives .“ The powers that be must
be frustrated deeply by the internet and further more angered by digital activism.
Due to the 200,000 odd cables leaked in November 2010, the U.S State and Defence Department are bitter and seeking retribution, the American diplomats are worried
and embarrassed. One thing is for certain, after the leaks, Governments are
answerable to the public more and answerable to themselves less. This is a good
sign.
Remember the Vietnam War? Unlike other wars, journalists had major
access to filming and documenting this war. This back fired for the U.S Government,
as it showed horror and collateral bloodshed, which for the first time gave the
public negative feedback that previous to this was kept classified. Media
theorist, Marshall McLuhanis quoted as saying,”Television brought the brutality of war into the
comfort of the living room. Vietnam was lost in the living rooms of
America--not on the battlefields of Vietnam.” While on the other end Ronald
Reagan arrogantly quips,” We should declare war on North Vietnam. . .
.We could pave the whole country and put parking strips on it, and still be
home by Christmas.” I believe Wikieaks and social media, is what video cameras
were to the Vietnam War. It in essence it shows society what mainstream media
won’t, the ugly side of war and the puppeteers that propagate them. In saying
this, also be weary of the Fifth Estate
as it can be extremely left wing, autonomous and anarchistic at times. Personally
I look at both sides, read between the lines and follow my instincts. The
media, corporations, government and Defence Force have a heavier history of
lies and corruption, so at this stage I believe activists and digital activists
over the plutocrats.
Let’s take the focus off the U.S for a
moment. I think people look at digital activism in a vacuum of sorts. Yes it
can expose corruption and help topple over ruthless dictators, like what was
seen in the Arab Spring. However I think social media and activism needs to
work with governments and corporations, rather than constantly try to undermine
them. After all , Assanges methods, although
ground breaking and informative, are not changing Governments behaviour. They are
giving repressed societies more chutzpah and provocation, but one needs to put
out the coals, not just the fire. Nelson Mandela achieved more working with the
people that imprisoned him for 27 years, than fighting them once he was
released. Bertot, Jaeger and Grimes of Maryland University illustrate this way
of thinking in the Government Information Quarterly by stating”The combination of e-government, social media,
Web-enabled technologies, mobile technologies, transparency policy initiatives,
and citizen desire for open and transparent government are fomenting a new age
of opportunity that has the potential to create open, transparent,efficient, effective,
and user-centered ICT-enabled services. Moreover, governments, development agencies
and organizations, and citizen groups are increasingly linking investment,
governance, and support to the creation
of more open and transparent government. It is rare that there is such an
alignment of policy, technology, practice, and citizen demand exists—all of
which bode well for the creation of technology-enabled government that instills
the trust of citizens in government.” At the moment there are digital activists
and culture jammers, like Julian Assange and Mark Dery in one corner. In the other
corner, Government and Oligopolists like U.S Attorney general Eric Holder and
Rupert Murdoch. If a bridge can be built to remove distaste for each other’s
point of view, the world may be able to heal itself. In my heart of hearts I
find this compromise very unlikely and it comes down to this. The elite have
everything to lose and the proletariat and iconoclastic have too much too gain.Year by year the gap is getting bigger.
The answer to all of this lies with the generations to come. Both sides
are too set in their ways to change their behaviour in the near future. Perhaps ground roots
education and intellectual nourishment of the youth of today needs to be addressed
more wholeheartedly. I agree with Henry Jenkinswhen
he states, “Our schools doubly fail kids — offering them neither the
insights they need to avoid the risks nor the opportunity to exploit the
potentials of this new participatory culture. The up and coming generations
need the right guidance to avoid the temptations of power mongering, consumerism,
materialism and greed. They also need the light shone on how to work with
technology, not for it, be told how to think, not what to think and how face to
face contact supersedes face to screen contact. I think social media is moving
so fast, we haven’t worked out how to tame the beast yet. One thing is for
sure, it is not whether Assange is wrong or right, it is how we all feel about
living in a world where we are having more say, but less resolve with that voice. Increasingly
I feel I am having less say, in what I thought was a democracy. I have to vote out of
two leaders I despise, live in one of the most expensive cities in the world,
squeeze into a small campus next semester, read papers with Murdoch s henchmen’s
views, watch TV full of non-professionals attempting to sing or lose fat, listen
to radio full of YouTube and TV show by-products and watch Australian troops
die in wars for oil and land. But hey, I am supposed to look at the glass half
full…..the question is what is it half full of.......@#$@!!!
Julian Assange speaks to Noam Chomsky and Tariq Ali
References
Bertot, Jaeger and Grimes, 2010, Using ICT's to create a culture of Transparency, Government Information Quarterly, http://www.milthailand.org/phocadownload/2011_Files/11_Nov/transpareny%20government.pdf.
Jenkins, H 2006, Eight Traits of the New Media Landscape, Aca-Fan, http://henryjenkins.org/2006/11/eight_traits_of_the_new_media.html Guy, M 2011, Revealing the Rot, Quinnipiac University, http://www.academia.edu/1030432/Revealing_the_Rot_How_to_use_social_media_to_expose_corruption_and_mismanagement _at_both_local_and_national_levels Fifth estate Wikipedia, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fifth_Estate. Images 1. http://scm-l3.technorati.com/11/05/06/33211/641250-julian-assange-on-time-cover.jpg?t=20110506133747 2. http://academics.wellesley.edu/Polisci/wj/Vietnam/ThreeImages/images/UtphotoL.jpg 3. http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/2/28/Private_Eye_Cover.jpg/230px-Private_Eye_Cover.jpg
You are right about the section on schools, I know from first hand experience.
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