Listen to the right people
The presence of Donald Trump emphasised the role of truth in life, not because he persistently exaggerated, or sometimes lied, but because his enemies are guilty of far worse.
Reading through a London court case (one I’ll explore shortly) and coupling certain features of it to the South African story resulted in one of the more unpleasant scenarios I’ve visualised in 2020.
Sometime in the not too distant future Beijing24 is hosting a live audience in Oranjezicht with US Democrat Adam Schiff, one of the most dishonest men in the world. He’s in South Africa for a safari, which explains why he hasn’t taken off his Merrill boots and anti-insect trousers since he arrived (for a certain type of shithead, everything in SA is safari, even Michelin-starred restaurants in Cape Town). Bejing24’s Kommissar, a man whose self-righteousness has disfigured him to the point where he now resembles a villain from Frank Miller’s Sin City, enables the lying to continue on stage - about a former President, Vladimir Putin, Ukraine, etc - each sentence concluded with an approving nod from the editor, the same one he used when the Minister of Police denied there things called farm murders in SA. Sadly, some in the audience are nodding too - they are unwitting members of a groupthink dome. That honking at the back? Oh that’s just Melanie Verwoerd - Mrs. Kumbaya herself - the least talented of Beijing24’s talentless writers, but the most impressive Health & Safety / Covid monitor you’ll encounter.
It could just as easily be Hillary Clinton, with the dreadful EWN as a sponsor. But the point is: this is the commanding narrative left to fester in SA - of Russia destroying Western democracy (despite conclusive evidence proving otherwise), of lockdowns being good and masks being better, that BLM is amazing (and that its kneeling corporate benefactors have somehow atoned) and finally, that Covid-19 is something to be utterly terrified of.
As people depart the venue, nobody cares that these statements are just as false as some of the claims of election fraud in US election of 2020. It’s just that, as lies go, this lot won, and history is documented by the victors.
It would take a strong stomach to deny that such occasions are beyond the realm of possibility. It’s been happening in London for the last four years, until last week, when the journalist behind the contention that Russia was responsible for Brexit (in the same way it was for the election of Donald Trump) removed the “Truth Defence” plea at the 11th hour from a libel case. Carole Cadwalladr, recipient of the 2018 Orwell Prize, finally admitted what everyone (including fellow Guardian and Observer reporters who secretly detest her) always suspected: she is a liar.
Like most other admission of this kind, its hopelessly late. Marianne Thamm habitually reposted her on Facebook, as did Rebecca Davis and other feminist-y writers beyond South Africa. TED gave her a talk; Netflix, a starring role in a documentary. A Swedish author wrote a young adult novel about her and for her case against Banks, she crowdfunded over R3.4m.
But the real damage is that even now - after a legal admission of this magnitude - a ring has assembled around her. Some of these are weirdo tossers who fantasise about vulnerable women. Some are intersectional agitators looking for another skirmish in the cultural war. But the majority are decent people who genuinely believed - on the strength of her reporting - that Russia destroyed their country. As narratives go, it is one of the most destructive.
Of all the events lost in Covid’s fire of 2020, the case of Glenn Greenwald must rank as one of the most startling. He was the journalist who broke the biggest story of his generation, who left the Guardian to establish The Intercept (on the basis that he wanted to perform independent reporting free of corporate/ editorial interference) and has now resigned from the company he co-founded - precisely because its editor and its other reporters were so explicitly partial to US Presidential candidate Joe Biden that they wouldn’t consider investigating the contents of Biden’s son laptop.
Greenwald has joined a few brave podcasters, comedians and independent reporters attempting to wrestle back the story of the American body politick, so that it isn’t weaponised by Adam Schiff, or distorted by Hillary Clinton’s beautiful daughter Chelsea, or violated for commercial expediency by Carole Cadwalladr.
Their adversaries are formidable - and I don’t just mean the size of that dishevelled slob Adam Boulton’s waist. Greenwald is up against a war machine featuring professional killers (John Brennan) alongside a corporate behemoth of powerful lobbyists and donors - all complemented by the most organised and well-funded media infrastructure the world has ever known.
Should he concede, what I’ll miss about Donald Trump is the ease at which he enraged The World’s Most Disgusting people - the legacy media and their outrage porn routines, the corporate social justice / climate scammers, the race hustlers and the useless careerists. Lifting only a few fingers, he exposed these people as lazy, gullible, paranoid and arrogant.
But Trump, frequently economical with the truth, managed to draw attention to the importance of it, not because his opponents are noble or honest, but because they are the extreme opposite. The America that makes its return is the one more to the G W Bush / Obama / Hillary profile - lies to support illegal military campaigns, more aid to Africa to keep peasants dependent and more power outsourced to unelected corporates - all led by a incontinent sleeper and someone who believes pronouns plus complexion are qualifications. In support will be the electrified corpse / one woman vodka wave of Nancy Pelosi.
These are not friends. Being careful with who we absorb our information from will never be more important than it will in 2021.
First published by Biznews.com