Ever see those cars plastered with stickers all over the
back? Not the ones with an amusing quip
about your favorite pastime, spoiling your grandkids, supporting a favorite
team or being proud of your kid who made the honor role, but the
political/cultural ones that supposedly communicate a simple but profound
concept that even a child could understand if he wasn’t an idiot with differing
political views. “Books Not Bombs” is
an example that makes us scratch our heads, but not in the way the driver
intended when he slapped it on his car. When has anyone had to choose one or the
other? Could we have expected the same
outcome to WW2 or Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait if we dropped thousands of
dictionaries out of B52s?
Along the same lines, consider “Give Peace a Chance”, as if
this John Lennon proverb never occurred to world leaders, who start wars as a
first option to satisfy bloodlust rather than a last option when all else
fails. ‘After reading the bumper sticker,
I had the epiphany that maybe we shouldn’t be fighting people trying to kill
us’. Because common sense says if
America disbands their armed forces every other country will too.
Or the classic “Bush Lied, People Died”, which is an
admission that ‘the dumbest President in history’ managed to dupe the entire world
- including your favorite congressman and the United Nations - into believing a
made-up threat was real so he could wage war because he felt grouchy. Is that easier than admitting your Senator saw
the same data and reached the same conclusions?
Or that your Senator knew better but didn’t have the balls to speak up?
I suppose it seems clever to some to encapsulate an entire world
philosophy into a collection of 8 inch stickers, but maybe that says something
about the depth of thinking that goes generates them. “If it
can’t be said in less than 5 words it’s too complex for the electorate
to grasp”. Kind of insulting, no?
But it doesn’t have to actually be a bumper sticker to fit
the 4-5 word rule. The most popular 3... (OK, 4) word phrase for the
past 20 months has been “Russia Hacked the Election”. I’m bewildered how people think this
communicates anything of substance, but it is a splendid meme to vent but disguise
animus. Let’s break it down:
Russia: The
same people who scream racism at any suggestion of a border policy with Mexico or
a government agency to enforce immigration laws are willing to brand the entire
country of Russia as criminals. Not just
Vladimir Putin or some bad actors with a political agenda, nope –anyone whose
last name ends with the letters ‘sky’ is guilty. Those evil Russians are the spawn of Satan
and share a common identity. Isn’t
xenophobia a Russian word anyway? Well
it should be!
Hacked: I
wouldn’t classify myself as a cyber security expert but I have learned
something about the topic in my 30 years in the computer and communications
industry. The word ‘hacked’ can be used
in many contexts. You can hack a
security system, meaning you found a way through the safeguards implemented to
keep you out. This is usually illegal
because you access something you aren’t authorized to access, but it doesn’t
necessarily mean you have altered anything or stolen data.
You can ‘hack’ a database, which usually refers to stealing
information that was intended to be kept secure. This happens more often than you realize
because large institutions like banks don’t advertise that they paid money to extortionists
who threaten to expose their security vulnerabilities.
You can ‘hack’ another’s program to do something
self-serving like deposit a bank’s daily
rounding change into your account, erase your parking tickets or fix your high
school grade like Ferris Bueller, although these stories are usually
apocryphal.
In the legitimate software industry, a ‘hack’ is a quick and
dirty way to fix a program but lacks the elegance or rigorous testing required
to make it production worthy. Hacks are
not necessarily bad. In fact Facebook has made ‘hackathons’ much anticipated
events to attract developers, offering prizes to the ‘hackers’ that produce
solutions to complex problems in a short time frame.
Perhaps the most sinister definition of ‘hack’ implies
bypassing security AND altering data, usually going undetected until much
damage has been done. In the ‘Russians
Hacked the Election’ bumper sticker context we presume this is the implied definition,
although any generally harmful connotation seems to be acceptable. Synonyms in this context include Ruined,
Rigged, Invalidated, Corrupted, Delegitimized, Stole and a host of other
despicable terms.
The Election:
Again, ambiguity is a friend to the simple minded. The obvious suggestion is that the US 2016
presidential election results were altered by those nasty Russians,
illegitimately awarding Donald Trump the most powerful office in the world. But
what does this mean – the (entire world population of) Russians insidiously infiltrated
US voting machines and punched ballots remotely? Or maybe they messed with the ballot counting
machines and fiddled with the vote counts?
Or did they just intercept information on the US National Election
Results Network to change the numbers while in transit to ‘the mainframe’? Never mind there is absolutely no evidence
that a single vote was changed, in fact every investigation shows this is not
even possible because the voting machines are not electronically
connected. Or is the argument that
Russian actors disseminated fake news that altered perspectives on the
candidates? Heaven forbid!! Does this mean we can no longer blindly
believe everything we read on social media like we do on broadcast and cable
new outlets? It’s getting so voters
almost have to exercise some discernment to filter information and form a
position. What’s America coming to?
So what is the profundity of ‘Russia Hacked the
Election’? Is the outrage about ensuring
integrity of our democratic process? If
so we see far more evidence of voter fraud influencing results in every
election cycle. But resistance is strong against voter ID measures to stop it,
some branding as racist the notion that voters should have to show some form of
identification to participate in US elections (unless they sound Russian, in
which case they should be imprisoned and immediately and water boarded
continuously until they give us some juicy details about Trump). It
begs the question whether there really is a policy concern here or just another
desperate effort to invalidate election results that didn’t go as
expected.
The 4 word phrase makes no sense. But apparently that is not
a prerequisite to wallpapering your car with simple minded phrases to justify
your hatred.