The Prof G Pod with Scott Galloway - No Mercy / No Malice: Short-Form War
Episode Date: November 4, 2023As read by George Hahn. https://www.profgalloway.com/short-form-war/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices...
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I'm Scott Galloway, and this is No Mercy, No Malice.
For generations, America has controlled the narrative.
Social media has busted that hegemony.
But the result is not greater truth and transparency.
Short-form war, as read by George Hahn.
51% of Americans aged 18 to 24 believe the Hamas attacks of October 7th can be justified by the grievances of the Palestinians.
That's not how most Americans feel, and the disparity in sentiment is correlated with age. This is not unique to the Hamas attack. The older you are, the more likely you are to be pro-
Israel. In March 2022, 69% of Americans over 65 had a favorable view of Israel, while just 41% of those under 29 did.
Worries about increasing anti-Semitism in the U.S. are similarly correlated. 85% of seniors
say it's growing. 52% of Gen Zers say it's not. Young people are resistant to the views of their elders, and that's a good thing.
As kids enter adolescence, they develop a healthy gag reflex triggered by anything associated with
their parents. This helps them develop their own opinions and beliefs about the world,
and it's also good for the parents, because by the time kids are 18, they can be such assholes that everyone's ready for
them to leave the house. But that doesn't explain students at my employer, NYU, holding up protest
signs reading, quote, keep the world clean, unquote, with images of the Star of David in
trash cans. I'd like to think this is a fringe view, but when 51% of their cohort believe the murder
of 1,200 people is justified, something more serious is happening. Young people's attitudes
about Israel have been hardening for some time. Months before October 7th, a majority of Americans under 43 were more sympathetic to the Palestinians than the Israelis.
Yet during that time, U.S. policy has remained staunchly pro-Israel and American media generally favorable toward Israeli interests.
That gap is widening into a gulf between establishment views and those of young people,
all of which made me think of Dresden.
In 1945, the U.S. and British Air Forces rained 4,000 tons of high-explosive bombs
on the German city of Dresden for 48 hours straight.
The attack was militarily advantageous. It impeded
German troop movement, destroyed a key city center, inflicted heavy German casualties,
and, as the officers of the U.S. Strategic Bombing Survey put it,
left the German people with a solid lesson in the disadvantages of war, unquote. It also destroyed acres of
historical and culturally priceless art and architecture and killed 25,000 citizens.
The Allies considered it such a success that a month later the U.S. repeated the tactic at an
even greater scale on the other side of the globe,
destroying 16 square miles of central Tokyo and killing 100,000 civilians, making March 9,
1945, the deadliest night in human history. Four months after that, Truman ordered the atomic destruction of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
Contemporary assessments and public opinion in the U.S. focused on the military advantage gained from these attacks,
and little mention was made of the horrific human toll.
It had no measured impact on U.S. support for the war or those prosecuting it.
What would have happened if
the people of Dresden had had TikTok? The same TikTok that is serving me dozens of videos from
Gaza, epitomized by a couple taking cover with their innocent child from Israeli bombs.
Around them, only rubble. Heartbreaking. Heartbreaking enough to make you hate those behind the bombs,
whatever their flag or justification. For most of modern history, governments and elites have
had outsized influence on the narrative, especially around foreign affairs. Outright
1984-style control is unnecessary when words, sounds, and images are only accessible through
controlled channels. Corporate ownership of media, access journalism, and bias go a long way
in choosing what stories to cover and how to frame them. The exceptions prove the rule.
When contrary evidence breaks into public awareness,
the impact can be profound.
Just three photos shifted U.S. public opinion
against the Vietnam War,
more than thousands of dead American soldiers or lost battles.
The 1968 image of a South Vietnamese general shooting a prisoner in the head,
the 1970 picture of Marianne Vecchio kneeling over the body of a Kent State classmate,
and the 1972 image of a naked girl fleeing napalm.
If you are over 50, you likely can recall these images just by closing your eyes.
If you are over 70, you don't need to close your eyes.
Regimes that lose control of the narrative lose power soon after.
The shift in American opinion about Vietnam brought down LBJ.
The Gulag archipelago fatally undermined the Soviet Union's historical and moral narrative.
Ayatollah Khomeini's taped sermons brought down the U.S.-backed Shah of Iran.
All governments seek to shape the narrative. Vietnam was called the Living Room War because
media, especially television, brought it home in ways that newsreels never did during World War II or the Korean War.
Today's operation is the frustration of Vietnam in miniature.
There is little doubt that American firepower can win a military victory here.
But to a Vietnamese peasant whose home means a lifetime of back-breaking labor,
it will take more than presidential promises to convince him that we are on his side.
Morley Safer, CBS News, near the village of Cam Nhi.
The lesson the U.S. military took from the experience was a simple one.
It had to regain control of the narrative.
It implemented a system of embedding journalists within military units, which of course meant
what the journalists saw and how it was presented to them fell largely under government control.
Embedding put the genie back in the bottle for a generation, but social media, especially the short-form video format popularized by TikTok,
has shattered the bottle.
Young Americans spend at least 10% of their waking hours on TikTok,
and 76% of 18- to 24-year-old Americans are TikTok users,
compared to 7% of Americans 65 and older.
That's time they are not spending watching CNN or reading the Wall Street Journal.
And on TikTok, the scale and reach of pro-Palestine content
dramatically outweighs pro-Israel content. As of this week, videos
hashtagged StandWithPalestine have received more than 10 times the views of videos hashtagged
StandWithIsrael. 324 million versus 3.4 billion. One TikTok user reported that his stream turned rabidly anti-Israel
once he started engaging with such posts, and Jewish creators on the platform are reporting
escalating harassment. This is cause and effect. Young Americans, see above, are already drifting away from the attitudes of
their parents' generation, my generation, toward the conflict. Young Americans are more diverse
than older Americans and presumably more sympathetic to non-white groups such as
Palestinians. And if mostly what you know about Israel-Palestine is Gaza post-2006 and bulldozed houses in the
West Bank, your views are likely going to be different from those of someone whose frame
of reference includes the Yom Kippur War and Munich. Young people are more prone to make
pro-Palestinian content, more prone to consume it, and the wheel turns.
Access to more viewpoints and more sources of information is a good thing on balance.
Despots should not be allowed to disappear their people any more than democracy should be able to
firebomb someone else's, and the unflinching testimony of a live stream can help stop them. But an
unbounded information landscape is not an unalloyed good. Because social media does not favor accuracy
or balance or diversity. It favors clicks. The more engaging and enraging the content, the more clicks it receives.
Is the image I get of Gaza on TikTok more accurate or true than what I see on CNN?
In some cases, yes.
But on social media, accuracy is incidental.
This presents, I believe, two profound risks.
Sam Harris said, you become where you spend your time.
We were discussing Twitter on my podcast. I was addicted to it at the time, and I had noticed I'd
become more curt, venal, and reactionary. Also, I was having thoughts in 140 characters. No joke.
He pointed out that humans are more influenced by their environments than
we'd like to think. If I spend 5% of my waking hours getting angry on Twitter, I become a 5%
angrier individual. Same is true if I spend more time with my kids expressing and receiving love.
We become where we spend our time.
Side note, I am no longer using Twitter.
Another side note, still angry and curt.
Just as my addiction to Twitter made me more like what I consumed there,
sputtering angry hot takes,
spending time on the TikTok of hashtag standwith fill in the blank has a predictable effect.
The conflict, generations old and woven into the fabric of global politics,
is reduced to suffering, anger, and violence.
There is a good side and a bad side.
Instinctive tribalism kicks in and young people walk through Washington Square Park with images of the Star of David in the trash, and a six-year-old Muslim boy is stabbed by his landlord.
Social media algorithms identify our politics and then shepherd us into a hermetically sealed bubble,
framing our worldview through a window of rage and extremism.
We know the first risk is real, and it's playing out.
You can see it on your phone and in the street.
Our discourse is more coarse,
our focus increasingly on what divides us.
The second risk is more insidious,
visibly only an outline. But those outlines are coming into sharp
relief. There is a non-zero probability that TikTok is being manipulated and leveraged by the CCP
to sow division in America. That probability is high. It's what we would do and have done. In the Cold War, both the United States and the
Soviet Union engaged in a variety of covert actions aimed at fomenting internal strife.
Radio Free Europe, a CIA-backed initiative, broadcast pro-democracy messaging into the
Eastern Bloc to encourage dissent. During World War II, Nazi
Germany dropped leaflets over American troops that highlighted racial injustices in the U.S.,
hoping to demoralize troops and incite racial tension. Every nation has done or is doing this,
actively. The U.S. itself continues to pursue such tactics to this day.
The U.S. Army's 4th Psychological Operations Group describes itself as follows.
PSYOP forces are masters of influence, the core of information warfare. We conduct influence
activities to target psychological vulnerabilities and create
or intensify fissures, confusion, and doubt in adversary organizations. We use all available
means of dissemination, from sensitive and high-tech to low-tech to no-tech, and methods from overt to clandestine to deception. The CCP has control
over the most powerful yet elegant weapon in the history of propaganda, and the default position
is they, i.e. the CCP, are not using it? I have stated this view before. China cannot beat us kinetically or economically, but it can
beat us by tearing us apart from the inside. TikTok, in my view, has the potential effect of
several carrier strike forces. A 21st century Trojan horse that also generates $100 billion in annual revenue.
I was at the White House this week for an AI summit.
Government officials are not allowed to be on TikTok for security reasons.
This comes at a cost, as I believe they'd be more alarmed at the skew of information.
It's a common misconception that
propaganda is like advertising. A barrage of messaging favoring one side or attacking another.
Uncle Sam telling you to buy war bonds or black and white movies of Aryan youth saluting the
swastika. That's not how China would use, is using, TikTok.
The more elegant strategy is to atomize the enemy, us.
Find small differences of opinion and broaden them.
Carve off slices of support for a longtime ally,
one demographic group at a time. The Nazi propagandist Goebbels wrote that the
purpose of propaganda is to generate, quote, volcanic passions, outbreaks of rage, to set
masses of people on the march, to organize hatred and despair with ice-cold calculation, unquote.
Xi Jinping has described the Internet as, quote,
the main battlefield in the battle for public opinion, unquote.
And in 2013, he said, quote,
online public opinion work should be taken as the top priority of propaganda and ideological work.
Many people, especially young people, do not read mainstream media and get most of their information from the Internet.
We must face up to this fact, increase investment, and seize the initiative on this battlefield of public opinion as soon as possible.
We must become experts in using new means and methods of modern media.
Unquote.
ByteDance employees have confirmed the CCP has backdoor access to American TikTok user data,
which it has used several times.
In addition, the CCP has refused
to let TikTok's parent company, ByteDance,
go public for national security reasons.
FBI officials have themselves stated TikTok
could be used as an aggressive weapon against the U.S. and China's enemies at
large. In sum, the CCP's manipulation of TikTok is hiding in plain sight.
The CCP's Oppenheimer moment was the fusion of TikTok and October 7th.
Or maybe I'm being paranoid and I'm out of touch
with a generation reacting to an Israel that has veered rightward.
Maybe an increasingly non-white population
has an easier time recognizing oppression.
Or maybe we live in a social media era
in which views are ushered to their most extreme on their own, without interference from state actors.
Maybe.
Life is so rich.