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[Cory Doctorowās] [Little Brother] is a powerful book. Go, read it, it will be time well spent ā if you have any reason to trust my recommendation at all.
However, it is really a bit too simplistic and black and white, which might be fitting the āyoung adultā age group he wrote this one for, but is actually another case of lies-to-students. The reality is much more complex. Let me summarize the plot a little, itās not really a spoiler since no step in it is a real surprise:
1. Terrorist attack blows up a bridge in San Francisco.
2. The hero, a school-teenager, gets captured by [Department of Homeland Security], illegally detained, and later mysteriously released.
3. He starts a teenage movement aimed at overloading the automated parts of the [security theater], which has great success.
4. Escalation of countermeasures results in a double-agent in the movement leaking video of DHS officials conspiring to do _something_ ā itās not quite clear what the something is, just that itās Evil and goes against the US Constitution, as everything else the DHS does really.
5. The whole thing gets written up by an investigative reporter, which results in further countermeasures.
6. State government decides enough was enough and stops the activity of DHS in the state of California.
7. After a short public trial everything gets quietly shuffled under the carpet and the hero starts working on the election to vote the current federal administration out of office.
Department of Homeland Security
Does anybody else see something wrong with that picture? Hereās my list:
ā ļø The assumption that any organization is explicitly āEvilā is simply wrong, even if good for propaganda, whether Doctorow created this assumption intentionally or not. Organizations just donāt work that way. Whatever reason DHS really has for instituting security theater, it is a very safe bet that a large number of its members arenāt _thinking_ theyāre up to anything evil, and most of the organization even genuinely thinks what theyāre doing is making people safer.
Whatās even more likely is that the individual agents arenāt thinking _at all_, but instead reacting reflexively, not realizing what are they doing. They are just in such a position that peer pressure, which exists pretty much independently from any single one of them, incites them to forgo any and all restraint on doing ājusticeā as they see it. Itās very likely even the bosses have no clue. The phenomenon is called āsensitivizationā and is the normal part of a [moral panic]. The [Stanford Prison Experiment] plainly shows how this can quickly degenerate into violence and torture.
I have no privilege of knowing Stanley Cohen personally, but I can bet heās banging his head on his table right now, figuratively speaking, for not being more vocal about it when he had a chanceā¦ or maybe heās writing another book. Normally, the moral panics donāt last ten years, but this one was, apparently, deliberately, turned into a state campaign.
ā ļø The assumption that one investigative reporter for a newspaper still has the power to turn the whole thing around is, well, too optimistic in my opinion. Can it really happen? Really, truly?
ā ļø The assumption that election process still works when all these things can actually occur is just a manifestation of the traditional American belief that it always does. [Copious evidence exists that it doesnāt already.] Most importantly, if the DHS has the power of unrestricted surveillance, the amount of people who need to be detained to skew the election whichever way they want is minimal. Yet, Doctorow still cannot imagine a proper real revolution that would reinstate the Constitution ā or any truly mass dissent.
Copious evidence exists that it doesnāt already.
The real question, which the book doesnāt pose but which should really be thought about, is, can such truly mass dissent even happen, anywhere in the so-called ādeveloped countriesāā¦ particularly ones which have TV networks, without which moral panics wouldnāt really be possible.
Then again, Cohenās research shows that when moral panics happen, people _assume a priori_ that the media reports are exaggerated, yet they still cave in. This poses a few very interesting questions on what trust in the media _really_ means in this day and age.
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