The alt-right's worldwide weaponization of memes

Discussion in 'Elections & Campaigns' started by Space_Time, May 6, 2017.

  1. Space_Time

    Space_Time Well-Known Member

    Joined:
    Dec 24, 2015
    Messages:
    12,492
    Likes Received:
    1,975
    Trophy Points:
    113
    Aren't memes a part of just about any political campaign? With the growth of the internet and the 24/7 news cycle is it that surprising memes could be shared around the world? Does the Left have any memes we should be concerned about?

    https://www.yahoo.com/news/alt-apos-worldwide-weaponization-memes-200323877.html

    World
    The alt-right's worldwide weaponization of memes
    Peter Allen Clark,Mashable Fri, May 5 1:03 PM PDT

    Pepe has made his way to France.

    Of the many wildly unpredictable aspects of the 2016 election, the usage of memes by a fiercely active, populist conservative movement stands alone.

    Using easily shareable and emotionally driven images to promote nationalist conservative politics, internet meme evangelists believe that they had a direct impact on the election, carrying Donald Trump all the way to the White House.

    Six months later, this coordinated movement has taken their Great Meme War overseas to help elect Marine Le Pen, candidate of the far right National Front Party, as the next president of France.

    "This is a global movement because people around the world are being forced to accept a globalist agenda that benefits the few at the expense of our nations, our cultures, and our peoples," the moderators of the subreddit r/The_Donald said about their campaign. "Memes, humor, images, and videos that people come up with ... draw people in... Meme magic works if you have the right message/plan."

    Seemingly emboldened by Trump's electoral win, the weaponization of memes has been codified into something that mirrors the form of a social movement.

    That movement has zeroed in the French election.

    Allons meme!

    France will elect their next president in a run-off election on May 7, when Le Pen β€” currently the face of extreme populism β€” will face Emmanuel Macron, a centrist from the En March! party. Thanks to Brexit, an increase in terrorist attacks throughout France, and the election of Donald Trump, the election is now the center of international attention.

    In the months leading up to the election, American nationalists have taken their brand of online activism across the Atlantic, working hard to spread their message to the people of France. Some have even created best practice guidelines for using virality to push Le Pen to a win, while others have more deviously pretended to be French in order to better spread their partisan memes, as reported by BuzzFeed.

    The American assistance has not been unwelcome. French meme-makers have deftly accepted the baton and are vocal about "Making France Great Again," even offering tips on how best to fight the Great Meme War on French shores. One post in Reddit's r/LePen forum explained that though French people might not be super familiar with Pepe, the oddly-shaped cartoon frog that became a standard bearer for the alt-right, the community should readily use memes with him.

    "There is no doubt that French people will react positively to dank Pepes, the danker the better," the post by TortueGeniale666 read. "No need to hold back, use Pepe the way he is the most efficient: destroy Political Correctness."

    Following this advice, the community has not held back and have focused their attacks on what they see as the immigrant threat to France, and on Macron himself. Images invoking terror attacks, memes of Muslims in France (suggesting an overrun country), and emasculating pictures of Macron have been widely spread on Facebook, Twitter, 4chan, and Reddit. As they did during the 2016 U.S. election, users want these memes to be easily shared, replicated, and provoke an emotional response, enough so to hopefully sway voters.

    This particular meme factory believes that they are spreading the will of a greater population than just their own; crossing international boundaries to do is a matter of duty in the fight as what they perceive to be dominant, malevolent forces like the mainstream media.

    Many right-leaning meme-makers exude confidence, sure that their populism knows no global boundaries β€” memes, to them, are just an extremely effective tool to harness a movement and center it on a target.

    "There exists a massive internet subculture devoted to creating these masterpieces and distributing them," Reddit user DecoySlug said. "This means that the idea of meme magic is not confined to a specific region but is rather spread over the world. An example is the French who are now using memes to support Le Pen."

    The memes have indeed shown support for Le Pen and trashed her opponents, and the community was rewarded when Le Pen thanked her fans for the internet bravado, much as Trump did when he visited r/The_Donald for an AMA last summer, back when he was merely a presidential candidate.


    "At the end of the first round, I thank the Internet activists of the #patriosphere, mobilized since the beginning of this campaign," her tweet read, referring to the alt-right nationalist movement that supports her.

    The message added confidence to the web's alt-right activists, who feel that they are not only helping to elect Le Pen, but are actively involved with educating the masses in a hope for their future. All this, through memes.

    "The goal of weaponizing memes is to get a message across to as many people as possible," DecoySlug said. "With a well-made meme, a poignant point can be made in a format that allows it to be shared and distributed throughout the internet. In this way, these memes can have an actual and profound effect on people."

    James Cohen, Program Director and Assistant Professor of New Media at Molloy College had a different take on the message that was being spread through the alt-right channels. He believes that the meme-makers ultimately want to disrupt conventional thinking and create more noise so that signals like traditional media and establishment governmental messages are distorted. The alt-right hope their reactionary ideas will grow dominant through their self-created static.

    "It’s less about the message being delivered than about the obfuscation of the message," Cohen said. "The heavier the obfuscation, the less time there will be to do critical thinking. If they can do that, they believe the populism will prevail, because only those with clarity will be able to make the right decision. But the thing is, no one will be clear."



    For many supporters of Trump, Le Pen, and memes, the goal is simple and universal: nationalism.

    A Reddit user named Spartharios, who said they lived in Bulgaria, had a basic outlook for what the community should use memes to accomplish.

    "Ultimately, the goal of the whole culture of memes and 'meme magic' is to spread our political message, which is nationalism and a right to self-determination of all peoples," Spartharios said simply.

    However, Florian Cramer, lecturer in 21st century visual culture at Rotterdam University in the Netherlands, doesn't believe that the overseas attempt to harness a community into action has an easy path to victory.

    "There's, however, one major obstacle for image meme campaigns in France and the rest of continental Europe," he said. "mageboard and meme culture is a very specifically American phenomenon. Its popular cultural references and humor are incomprehensible to most Europeans."

    That lack of translation has not, and most likely, will not stop them from trying.

    But can a meme really move mountains?

    Of course, if you live outside of the realm of meme magic, you may have skepticism around memes and their effectiveness when it comes to changing the course of an election. How, you may ask yourself, could some weird frog and text on images really sway anyone's political leanings?

    And it's true, measuring memes ain't easy. Gauging the IRL effect of a community spreading images around social media is not an easy task. Cohen called it a "very hard question" and said it was an ongoing focus of studies as they try to understand if it had any actual political impact. The New York Times' analysis actually said that American memes do not translate well to the French population.

    However, online alt-right communities have no doubt that memes are successful.

    "The whole concept of memes is that they spread from person to person, and there is literally no way of measuring that," Andrew Anglin, editor and founder of the neo-Nazi blog The Daily Stormer, said over email. "But there is no question in my mind as to the fact that memes elected Donald Trump. A lot of things elected Donald Trump, mainly Hillary Clinton, but without the memes it wouldn't have happened. That's not hyperbole."

    While Cohen acknowledged that it's somewhat difficult to tell how effective memes may be at shaping a political climate, he did concede that the current global technological network, combined with the sense of anonymity that comes with joining a large, active group, is capable of imbuing its members with a real feeling of agency.

    "When someone understands the power of anonymity, we return ourselves to that guerrilla technique of power of masks, power without faces," Cohen said. "That one anonymous face could be one person or it could be all people. When you can create five memes per member... If you can show that a meme has power, that power can seem immense."

    And, in fact, Cramer said that any meme movement thrives on the fact that no one can really tell if it is effective or not.
     
    Last edited: May 6, 2017
  2. For Topical Use Only

    For Topical Use Only Well-Known Member

    Joined:
    Sep 21, 2011
    Messages:
    8,308
    Likes Received:
    2,290
    Trophy Points:
    113
    There's nothing conservative about these pathetic neo nazi losers and their giftless memes and lingo.
     
  3. IMMensaMind

    IMMensaMind Banned

    Joined:
    Apr 29, 2017
    Messages:
    3,659
    Likes Received:
    1,970
    Trophy Points:
    113
    Gender:
    Male
    Leftists seem to have become as accomplished at manufacturing Nazis as they are racists.
     
  4. Just_a_Citizen

    Just_a_Citizen Well-Known Member Past Donor

    Joined:
    Oct 18, 2016
    Messages:
    9,298
    Likes Received:
    4,133
    Trophy Points:
    113
    Gender:
    Male
    LAWLS!

    Yeah, it's the AltR's!

    You mean those chubby Carpe Diem Basement Dwelling KeySack Warriors?!
     
  5. AmericanNationalist

    AmericanNationalist Well-Known Member

    Joined:
    Aug 28, 2013
    Messages:
    41,180
    Likes Received:
    20,957
    Trophy Points:
    113
    Gender:
    Male
    And so, this is the Left counter. Not only to delegitimize the POTUS by any means, but to delegitimize the voters thereby. Well, the propaganda against either Leave voters or American Voters has not changed. But that doesn't make the propaganda any less sickening. It will nevertheless not prevail. You're wasting your time.

    The left system of IV Programs has failed all developed nations, and that is the connecting point. Not a tech company or two. This revolution would have happened at any rate even if Trump didn't exist, or if I didn't exist. Because the Left still failed the civilized nations they were elected to govern.

    They failed no less 100 years ago, and brought about the first syndicalist revolution. And even with a world war and everything else, syndicalism is STILL ideal to the false democratic hope. That has to be the greatest indictment on democracy ever.

    Let me repeat it even simpler: There is no turning back from this, no more belief in false democracy. Your own success is your greatest pitfall. If Democracy can be given unlimited time and opportunity, why not syndicalism?

    So it's easy to replace Trump with a pure syndicalist/nationalist. But the world will never replace it with democracy. That time of our lives is over, for good. Humanity has moved beyond it.
     
  6. For Topical Use Only

    For Topical Use Only Well-Known Member

    Joined:
    Sep 21, 2011
    Messages:
    8,308
    Likes Received:
    2,290
    Trophy Points:
    113

    I'd call it investigative journalism and leave it at that so I don't then have to that whole overwrought thing.
     
  7. alexa

    alexa Well-Known Member Past Donor

    Joined:
    Nov 10, 2008
    Messages:
    18,965
    Likes Received:
    3,421
    Trophy Points:
    113
    Gender:
    Female
    early exit polls. Macron 65% Le Penn 35%. Apparently better than expected result.
     
    Last edited: May 7, 2017
  8. Lil Mike

    Lil Mike Well-Known Member

    Joined:
    Aug 4, 2011
    Messages:
    51,629
    Likes Received:
    22,935
    Trophy Points:
    113
  9. Durandal

    Durandal Well-Known Member Donor

    Joined:
    May 25, 2012
    Messages:
    55,668
    Likes Received:
    27,204
    Trophy Points:
    113
    Gender:
    Male
    Weaponize the meme meme. New weapon nullified.
     

Share This Page