Von der Leyen proposes ‘vaccines’ for minds and a ‘shield’ for democracy
By: Rachel Marsden
The European Commission president‘s campaign features an unprecedented preventive crackdown on wrongthink
One of the hallmarks of the European Union is that if something sounds too
good to be true, it usually is. In fact, it often means the exact opposite.
Take, for instance, the idea that Ursula Von der Leyen, the European Commission
president, is running for re-election when in reality she’s just publicly
squabbling with a few other establishment hacks to be handpicked and confirmed
by the establishment itself, not by popular vote. But that hasn’t stopped her
from cosplaying as an actual democratic candidate. It’s not like she didn’t have
the opportunity to actually be one rather than just play one, but when her
German colleagues asked her to run for an elected EU seat in Germany to
establish some democratic credibility, she reportedly declined the
inconvenience.
But that hasn’t stopped her from posting “campaign” ads on social media, as
though she’s actually trying to appeal to voters. In one such video, she
promises that if she’s re-coronated, er, “re-elected,” she’ll defend Europe with
a “Democracy Shield.” The whole idea, she says, is to “detect disinformation and
malign interference... remove content, including [artificial intelligence]
deepfakes, [and] to make our societies more resilient.” Nothing about defending
Europe’s democracy from unelected bureaucrats wielding excessive power though, I
guess?
Ever since billionaire tech entrepreneur, Elon Musk, took over Twitter, renamed
the social media platform ‘X’, and publicly shamed all the Western government
authorities that tried to exploit the platform directly for their own propaganda
purposes, his “community notes” feature has allowed users to react directly and
in real time to content, including deep fake videos, and has proven that the
antidote to inaccuracy is more free and democratic speech, not less.
“Democracy,” in the case of this “Democracy Shield” is really just a euphemism
for censorship. Because what does this “shield” really protect Europe from, that
more free speech can’t achieve, other than inconvenient facts? Or from Queen
Ursula and the rest of the European establishment having to defend their own
ideological lunacy and explain to citizens why the narratives they peddle often
don’t jibe with reality.
Apparently, they figure that democracy would be better off if everything and
everyone that didn’t fit their top agenda narratives could just be whacked over
the head and dragged off into the shadows by the online Gestapo serving von der
Leyen’s online “Democracy Shield.”
But maybe characterizing the Democracy Shield as little more than a “propaganda
shield” is unfair. After all, it’s not like the EU or Ursula actually say that
they’re interested in doing propaganda. No, instead she says that she just wants
to do a little “pre-bunking,” which totally doesn’t sound like propaganda at
all.
Speaking at the Copenhagen Democracy Summit earlier this month, von der Leyen
explained that “research has shown that pre-bunking is more successful than
de-bunking. Pre-bunking is the opposite of de-bunking. In short, prevention is
preferable to cure. Think of information manipulation as a virus. Instead of
treating an infection once it has taken hold, that’s the de-bunking, it is
better to vaccinate, so that our body is inoculated. Pre-bunking is the same
approach.”
Yeah, folks, just think of free debate and discussion as a nasty virus that
could get really messy. May provoke verbal diarrhea. Ugly stuff. Wouldn’t it
just be better if the EU could inject its narratives like a vaccine straight
into the minds of citizens to eliminate any risk of messy opposing views or
information?
What if the pre-bunk narrative IS the disinformation, though? Of course that
never happens, right? Everything that the EU and Western governments say is
always the total and complete objective truth and anyone questioning it is some
kind of foreign agent.
By the way, von der Leyen’s “societal resilience” here really just means
compliance – that everyone piles into the clown car on command so these bozos
can take everyone on a joyride down Dystopian Highway towards wherever fresh
Hell their hidden special interests dictate at any given time.
But perhaps Queen Ursula should be given the benefit of the doubt here,
though. Maybe she really does just want to deploy her Democracy Shield against
armies of annoying online bots and not on the political playing field to quash
dissent?
“It’s not just fakes or fabricated content,” von der Leyen argued in announcing
the Shield. “It’s also buying influence and causing chaos. We have seen
far-right politicians and lead candidates from AfD in Germany in the pockets of
Russia. They are selling their souls on Russian propaganda outlets and videos.”
Well, if she puts it that way… doubt benefit erased.
Want to smear a political opponent because they happen to enjoy free speech on a
variety of platforms? Sounds like a job for Queen Ursula’s Democracy Shield,
which, like NATO, is totally defensive and does not ever do offensive operations
and actively snuff out opponents on the political landscape. The EU already
tried to pick off entire media outlets that it didn’t like, censoring Russian
platforms like RT and Sputnik at the supranational level and imposing that ban
on all member states of the entire bloc in the absence of sovereign and
democratic due process. The justification? That they were spreading “distortion
of facts” that threatened the EU democratic order. Nothing better for credible
journalism than governments arguing that they’re the ultimate arbiters of
truthful information.
It turns out that blanket censorship didn’t quite knock everyone into line, so
von der Leyen says in her ad that the Democracy Shield will “track down
information manipulation and coordinate with national agencies.” Hunting down
wrong-speakers on the informational landscape? Sounds super democratic. So does
the idea of “national agencies” deciding what qualifies as news.
Is this authoritarian Democracy Shield going to require any independent
oversight? Because von der Leyen, back when she was German defense minister
under Chancellor Angela Merkel, wasn’t really into that kind of thing. Western
press reports were rife with details of her underwhelming performance, with the
Washington Post, for instance, citing a shortage of military equipment and
promises to rectify the situation that were never fulfilled. They also said that
the troops used broomsticks instead of machine guns for NATO exercises. Guess
she had lots of those at her disposal.
We know from her stonewalling of the committee demanding to see her text
messages with Pfizer brass over her vaccine deals that Queen Ursula really isn’t
into transparency, either. Who needs actual democratic values though, when you
have a Democracy Shield? Maybe we can see it deployed in real time in a sort of
test. If it was truly doing its job of shielding democracy, it would mow down
von der Leyen’s propaganda first, then just blow itself up.
COPYRIGHT 2024 RACHEL MARSDEN