Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 21 – The language of
hatred that has infected both sides in the just-completed presidential race in
Ukraine, just like it did in Britain over Brexit and in the US election of
Donald Trump over Hillary Clinton has far more serious consequences because it
represents not traditional populism but rather a new digital variety, Lyubko Deresh
says.
“Traditional populism,” the
Ukrainian writer says, “canb e defined as the desire to please the simplest
demands of the people by operating on their emotions: fear, hope and
dissatisfaction. Digital populism virtually realized this program through the
Internet and in the first instance social networks” (apostrophe.ua/article/society/2019-04-20/natsiya-ledi-i-djentlmenov-ili-pochemu-nam-tak-vajno-sohranit-kulturu/25355).
The digital kind is more powerful
and can unleash in society an emotional reaction in society with destructive
consequences. That is what has happened in many places and appears to have happened
during the presidential campaign in Ukraine, Deresh warns. Ukrainians must understand what has happened
and fight against it.
The campaign, to a degree “unprecedented”
even in comparison with the Maidan, has generated so much hatred that this
hatred has both “drowned out all other messages” and destroyed the public space
of culture that holds a society together.
Once society is destroyed in this way, it is at risk of extreme
fragmentation because “communication becomes impossible.”
“The language of hatred,” Deresh
continues, “is one of the powerful catalyzers which acts to destroy
communication in society.” But it does more than that, it puts the common
culture at risk of being destroyed as well. And that is the risk that Ukraine
along with other countries which have become victims of digital populism now
faces.
One of the signs of this development
is that “the voice of wisdom is assessed as weaker” than those of people
employing the language of hatred, and that makes it difficult if not impossible
to hold things together and reach agreements all can support.
“Culture, as the Japanese say, “allows
for ‘saving face.’ In the absence of culture, the meaning of honor is reduced
to nothing. The bases for gentlemen’s agreements are destroyed, and an
atmosphere of distrust and readiness to fight on all this spreads.”
Communication in the public space dies, and with it culture and the public
space as such.
What can be done? Individuals can
fight this by behaving well themselves towards those near them. That won’t
solve everything but it is a good place to begin, the Ukrainian writer says,
because as Bertrand Russell once observed “a gentleman is someone in the
presence of whom you begin to feel yourself to be a gentleman as well.”
Ukrainians are wounded but “we are
not hopeless,” Deresh says. We must concern ourselves with overcoming the
damage that has been done. Perhaps the best way is if we behave as ladies and
gentlemen, that will “allow others to feel themselves when they are in our
company as ladies and gentlemen as well.”
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