-Caveat Lector-

http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/28/28945.html

"Replicant" theory emerges in US Astroturf scandal
By Andrew Orlowski in San Francisco
Posted: 21/01/2003 at 11:17 GMT


A new theory emerged today to rebuff the "Astroturf" scandal that's the
talk of the web. A week ago a weblogger who calls himself Atrios
discovered that identical letters praising "the leadership of President
Bush" had appeared in dozens of local American newspapers.

Before Christmas, Mr.Atrios - whoever he is - had done much enterprising
research to discomfort, and eventually help depose the Republican Senate
Leader Trent Lott, after Lott's wistful, pro-segregation remarks at a
birthday dinner for centurion racist Strom Thurmond went unnoticed by the
poodle mainstream press, here.

The identical letters appeared in 29 publications - including, oops - The
Financial Times of London, England - and clearly suggested that a
co-ordinated but entirely phony "grassroots" expression of support was
swelling behind the President.

However Declan McCullagh has a brillant alternative, and surely satirical
explanation.

Notified of these occurrences, McClunker very wisely warned us not to jump
to conclusions. Rather than it being an organized campaign, he wrote on
his Politech mailing list, the possibility remained that the phrases could
have emanated from Republican mailing literature.

"I don't think we have nearly enough facts here to make a reasoned
conclusion," he noted.

Upon receiving these mailings, he posits, dozens of Republicans could have
individually made the decision at that very moment, to all walk over to
their computers and write a letter to their local newspaper praising "the
leadership of President Bush:.

Or as he put it:-

"An explanation could be as simple as Republican direct mail efforts using
this phrase, which the recipients echo in letters to the editor."

McClunker's right: this isn't impossible. However it is exceedingly
unusual, and it is a form of behavior - this synchronized groupthink -
that is usually attributed to Zombies, or replicant armies in sci-fi
movies.

Older readers may remember how in The Manchurian Candidate the Frank
Sinatra assassin was "woken" to his mission by the use of subliminal
code-words. So in McClunker's witty satire (we charitably assume he's
being satirical), the direct mail recipients simply parroted what they'd
read in that morning's instructional campaign mail, and responded to the
subliminal signal.

Now, who's foolin' who here here isn't clear.

One important contextual point to note about American politics (for you
overseas readers) is that back in 1995 when Gingrich routed the Congress,
the libertarian talk-radio right thought of itself as "guerillas", and
using imaginative tactics, and wit, to scored easy points against a
complacent and inert centre-right exemplified by the venal President
Pantsdown. Only now, the "guerillas" have their very own man in charge. So
instead of choosing to remain witty or anarchic, they've dropped the
guerilla chic, and now rally around in patterns of extreme predictability,
making it easy for wittier and much more playful and anarchic writers such
as Atrios (or Bob Somerby) to run rings around them.

You don't really have to be clever to shoot down groupthink, but you have
to have balls to call it when you see it, and Sommersby and Atrios are
more than up to task. There's nothing easier than herding sheep.

Not all former guerillas have turned into blogsphere mutton, though.
There's a libertarian writer I respect very much, a contrarian called Gene
Callahan, who's allied with the far-right Mises Institute but who's stayed
consistently funny and fair. (And his social satire is hilarious). But
Callahan's an exception to the groupthink rule.

So you see, you can span alliances of left and right if only you have
right minded, and sufficiently smart and skeptical people. For reasons of
ambition or sheer laziness, many aspire to "conform". For now, though, we
can enjoy such fish out of water flounders that that the tide has left
behind, and McCullagh's powerful testimony to the power of groupthink
ought to leave the rest of us somewhat disturbed. It's too scary to think
about. ®

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