Doctora Malka Older Profile picture
Sep 17, 2020 25 tweets 5 min read Read on X
For @ForeignPolicy, I wrote about the fallacy of public panic in disasters, and why elites keep using it as an excuse even though it isn't true. foreignpolicy.com/2020/09/16/tru…
I honestly had to struggle with this assignment not to write "Don't lie to the public about a pandemic because that is stupid" and send that to the editor as the entire piece BUT there really is a bit more to say so I'm glad I had the opportunity to break it down.
1st of all, this article is largely a synthesis of existing research; I'm not the person who came up with these concepts, nor the only one who has tweeted about them (see @SamLMontano's feed, among others).
But it's important to bring it up again and again because the fallacy keeps coming up - and being used to manipulate public opinion - again and again. So, again: EXTENSIVE research shows that there is no mass panic during disasters.
In fact, reactions tend to be pro-social: people help each other. It's well known in international disaster response that locals are generally the real first responders, and there are studies showing people putting together impressive organizations in isolated, crisis situations.
And when I say "EXTENSIVE research" I mean more than fifty years of disaster studies work, quantitative and qualitative, covering all different kinds of events.
So why do we keep seeing this fallacy come up over and over again? One reason is #NarrativeDisorder - we see public panic represented in disaster movies, and we can start to believe it, to the point where we may almost believe we have experienced it.
But there's another reason, one described by Clarke and Chess (2008) and Tierney (2008) among others: the public doesn't panic, but elites - leaders, politicians, the wealthy - do.
They don't usually panic about the disaster, because they're generally well insulated by that. They panic about the idea of the public panicking, because that might shake the status quo that serves them so well.
So when politicians try to make us believe that the reaction to the disaster is more dangerous than the disaster itself - as in this most recent example - it's partly because they believe it is, for them. It's a way to maintain control in a world that got a little more uncertain.
That's how we get politicians talking about shoot-to-kill orders (Tierney's example from Katrina) against "looters" who are either people trying to get food (that will go bad anyway) or in rarer cases stealing from damaged stores. Yeah, stealing is bad, ok, but shoot-to-kill?
And while the politicians will often say that the "looters" are disrupting aid efforts, as Tierney and others have shown it is the exaggerated rumors of looting and disproportionate retaliation by politicians that is most dangerous for affected people.
As with the recent example of peaceful protest, the real destruction and deviation from law and order comes not from the people, but from the elites and their representatives. It adds insult to injury that these elites use "panic" or "disorder" or "lawlessness" as their excuse.
Again: EXTENSIVE research. I've also seen this myself, when I was responding to disasters internationally.
Now, there are some behaviors that are not panicking, are rational, but can still be problematic when everyone rushes to do them at the same time. Like evacuating: we want people to evacuate! but not to get stuck in traffic jams. Or buying toilet paper ಠ_ಠ
This is where leadership and clear communication are important. One of the unsung successes of Hurricane Katrina was the counterflow evacuation plan. NOT useful for people without cars, but they got people to stage departures and use both lanes of the highway. Worked decently.
BECAUSE people weren't panicking. They were evacuating.
So before during and after a disaster, AS IN OTHER NON-DISASTER TIMES, it is a good idea to work WITH the public. They are one of the most powerful agents of disaster response and mitigation, protecting themselves and helping others. Lying to them is stupid.
Oh I'm going to add one more story even though it's tangential, because I like it and I don't think I got to use it enough in my diss. When I was interviewing people from cities hit by the 2011 Japan tsunami, these people who had run to a high ground school to take shelter along
with about 1000 of their neighbors told me that because the main road was blocked by debris, they sent people over the mountain roads to help guide assistance to where they were. Now, it was March. This is northern Japan. It was cold and freezing and after dark when they did this
They told it to me like nbd, but I was impressed. Because that's how much confidence they had that someone was going to come, and that they were going to come soon. That's the kind of trust that makes it easy to do things like NOT grab all the toilet paper, because you trust
there will be more when you need it, or wait to evacuate on a staggered schedule because you believe that what you're being told makes sense and is there for a reason. How did they build this trust?
They had done drills. But mainly, I think, they just take this kind of disaster very seriously. Japan has a national holiday for disaster drills. Everyone is aware that earthquakes could happen to them. And they believe that the govt, and their neighbors (mutual aid was a BIG
success story in Japan as well as after Katrina), would have their backs.
Was the govt's response in Japan perfect? noooo. See Fukushima. Did everyone in these towns have a positive view of the central govt? No way. But in this one area, they trusted them. And that meant
the community did something pretty above and beyond to connect with that assistance and help it on its way.

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More from @m_older

Mar 5, 2023
I'm rereading The Pushcart War for reasons and am reminded again how it is not only science-fiction (set in the future!) and formally inventive, but also is a manual for collective action, resistance, protest, that is very relevant today. So here's a thread:
For those unfamiliar, The Pushcart War is a children's book by Jean Merrill, copyright 1964, with illustrations by Ronni Solbert, who was Merrill's partner for almost 50 years.
It's framed as a history, but the dates of the events recounted are in the future, and they stay in the future, moving forward in time in every edition. This is why I say it is science fiction, or at least speculative fiction: it imagines a possible uprising against oppression
Read 70 tweets
Dec 19, 2022
Also, and I will not stop yelling about this even when I DO like the result: HOLDING A RANDOM POLL WITH NO NOTICE IS NOT A FAIR OR REPRESENTATIVE DECISION-MAKING PROCESS.
Methodology matters. How you phrase the question & possible responses, what times you start and end the poll, how people learn about it, whether everyone has access to it, whether people trust the system (will results be followed? will certain choices lead to repercussions?) -
Change these and you will get a different set of results, even with the same participants. Is an election fair if the ballots aren't blind? Because I think we all assume Twitter can see who votes which way. Is a 12 hour poll fair to a global population?
Read 6 tweets
Dec 18, 2022
someone recently told me it was time I published my take on *all this* and, y'know, I already did, ~350k words in 3 volumes, not to mention a bunch of threads. but one more time and shorter:
Who controls information (and attention) rules.
breaking it down (because I wasn't going to make it THAT much shorter, come on):
- democracy is based on people choosing
- people choose based on what they (think they) know
- control what people know, control what they choose
- "legitimate" (because "democratic") control
this is not a new problem. It was a problem when (religious) authorities had almost sole control of the means of reproducing texts (by copyists and later by printing press). It's been a problem as publishers decided what to publish. It's been a problem as committees decided what
Read 12 tweets
Nov 18, 2022
I've never understood why sports teams have owners (I think I've ranted about this on here before but can't be bothered to crash-test the search function right now). If you've already got a (team of) coach(es) doing the actual sports stuff + a manager dealing with all else...
what is the owner for? what do they do? why, when the team wins, do they get congratulated and go all back-slappy and smug as if they have something to be proud of?
Of course I do understand, really, why we have sports team owners: it's so that someone who's already rich can siphon off excess profit. But it's such an egregious, obvious example of the stupidity of today's form of capitalism - taking these revered, supposedly pure passion
Read 32 tweets
Nov 10, 2022
I was extremely honored and thrilled when I was invited last year [the year before? Idk time is a pre-post-modern concept] to guest edit a fiction issue for @PMC_Journal. As we approach publication in this era of fragmentation and digital ephemera, I am inclined to write my intro
as a thread on a platform that may shortly cease to exist, or transform beyond recognition. It's a stretch to say that the once avant-garde elements of early postmodernism -self-awareness, shifting pov, unreliable narrators, kaleidescope & collage - are now where people live, but
whether the mid-century postmodernists foretold our disconnected future or made it possible, there is an affinity between their careful crafting of unsettling narratives and our smash-cut, multimodal, media surfeit, discoball experience of the world.
Read 19 tweets
Nov 10, 2022
Once we recognize that an individual in control of a major media platform can be a threat to national security, we have to confront that #InformationIsAPublicGood #Infomocracy
And I do mean confront, because I don't expect it to be easy. What are the principles, rules, oversight that protect public information from turning to propaganda? How can we fund it sufficiently while still having public signaling in the way that markets allow? #Infomocracy
How do we encompass a sufficiently wide range of perspectives? How do we find a balance between innovation and continuity?
I don't expect it to be easy. But I do expect it to be better.
#Infomocracy
Read 7 tweets

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