I can recall when I first heard the words ‘second Holocaust’ in relation to Corbyn’s Labour party. It was a BBC report (of course), a vox pop.
I initially (naively) thought it would immediately be condemned as an outrageously extreme statement. But no, it was incorporated into the discourse without a pause. It was now legitimate to debate whether a Corbyn-led government would occasion a second Holocaust or not.
Emotional manipulation in politics is of course nothing new, it’s very much the stock-in-trade. People are motivated by *feelings* not *facts*, goes the received wisdom, illustrated by Bush V Gore, in which Gore had all the facts and Bush had all the feels, and Bush won. (Kinda.)
But the extremity of this manipulation, the throwing onto the table of this ‘Holocaust card’ as if in a rhetorical poker game with no upper limit on bets, was new, I think.
The deliberate invoking of one of history’s most horrifying episodes to bludgeon your political opponents with marked a new low in what now passes for ‘political debate’.
It’s the equivalent of someone screaming in your face. It’s a form of emotional abuse. It stifles any debate, any argument. It’s a tactic to disarm rational opposition through sheer force of emotional pressure.
It’s coercive and bullying. It demands acquiescence. It forbids dissent. It closes discussion.
The smearing war has used this abusive technique, not because of the glaring lack of evidence, but instead of it. The laughable paucity of evidence is not accidental: evidence could be disputed, but who can dispute a *feeling*, particularly a feeling about the Holocaust?
Evidence is irrelevant. Evidence would lead to debate, and debate is the very last thing the smearing war wishes to happen. Evidence would be disputed. A far more effective, if much cruder, weapon is emotional bludgeoning, and the more extreme the better.
Hence the invocation of one of history’s most desperate chapters in pursuit of a political vendetta. Hence the implacable screaming, the hysterical over-stating, the performative outrage, the performative fear. Emotional theatre, and the audience are cowed into silence by it.
It seems to have worked.
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The most disturbing element of the #GreatSmearingWar, for me, is how easily people were duped by it. People who are, presumably, of good sense and sound judgement in their ordinary lives became wide-eyed, credulous cattle, ready - eager, even - to swallow every scam and fraud.
Just swallow it all down, seemingly without the slightest hesitation. Many touting this conspiracy theory were, of course, merely cynical political operatives, political assassins doing their jobs. But those who believed them should not have believed them, and they did.
A culture in which an obvious scam like this can succeed so effortlessly is a culture in trouble. If large numbers of people can be persuaded so easily of something so obviously false - the exact opposite of the truth, in fact - then they can be depended upon to believe anything.
It’s not clear to me how we proceed now. The antisemitism smearing war has accomplished its aim and only limps on under Starmer’s woeful captaincy, lumbering on more from inertia and paralysis than anything else.
The heady days of Rachel Riley and Margaret Hodge’s suitcase in the hall, and Jon Snow screaming ‘Do you apologise?’ at Jeremy Corbyn seem a long way off, as media attention turns elsewhere and it becomes yesterday’s news.
I’ve lost count of how many Jewish Chronicle stories have been found to be frauds, libels. There’ll be a ‘correction’ and an ‘apology’, which no-one will ever see, and there’ll no doubt be many more as time goes on. It won’t make any difference.
This might be a tad on the long side, for which apologies.
The Great Smearing War of 2015 - present is one of the most successful political campaigns of recent times.
Built out of almost nothing, it grew into a vast conspiracy against the truth, in which there was a race to the bottom as to who could make the most outrageous accusation.
This race was won, handily I’d say, by the Telegraph’s Simon Heffer, who infamously commented on an LBC show that Corbyn ‘wants to open the gates of Auschwitz’.
Mitchell and Webb were, I thought some of the best comedy of recent years. Then they turned into the same tiresome Corbyn-shitters as everyone else, and now I don't feel the same about them, at all.
'This narrative of bias has then been bought into by credulous factions on the left (though, of course, they accuse it of the opposite bias), who somehow haven’t twigged what carnage would be wreaked on their political hopes...
if the media battlefield were surrendered to the Murdochs and Rothermeres.'