Social media is the most powerful weapon in modern warfare
- Eleanor Bradford


From the original article on March 14, 2022. Author: Eleanor Bradford.

There has been much talk about weapons lately: the anti-tank missiles we are supplying to Ukraine, the pros and cons of a no-fly zone, and the dangers of being drawn into a nuclear conflict.

This discussion focuses on armaments but, in the Ukrainian conflict, there is one weapon which has been employed from the very beginning, to great effect, and we are all the targets. It is the weapon of information.

We have seen the emergence of an expert communicator in the Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelensky, whose social media posts have shown the greatest world leaders how it is done.

He abandoned press conferences in favour of quick videos from the streets, in military clothing, showing Western audiences exactly what was happening in his country via the most popular media platforms.

The message? We are like you. This could be you.

Social media posts as powerful as any bomb

This former comedian and TV star is operating on gut instinct and driving the agenda. He is using his location to dispel rumours. His appeals have prompted army veterans from other countries to join the fight, as well as mobilising his own population.

When he told the US president that he needed “ammunition, not a ride”, he summed up his country’s plight in a perfect, four-word soundbite. There are leaders with teams of spin doctors who don’t have that level of insight.

It is, of course, patronising to praise the communication skills of a man who is fighting for his country as well as his life. The stakes could not be higher. But we should not forget that Mr. Zelensky’s social media posts are a weapon just as powerful as any bomb.

Contrast that with Russia’s Vladimir Putin, whose diplomatic receptions at an extraordinarily long oval table looked medieval and ridiculous. We mocked it in the West, but these optics can’t have been lost on his home audiences.

His manner is stiff and controlled, his locations are sanitised and old school. Whilst he sits in his neutral, white palace, his citizens are seeing their economy nosedive, Western brands pull out of their high streets, and even favourite TV shows going off-air. It’s as if the stagnation of the image at the top reflects the future of their economy.

We don’t know exactly what the average Russian is thinking but, having worked with social media specialists around the world, I am always surprised by how similar online feeds are, no matter where you live.

Whether they are in China, Russia or the UK, young users prefer authenticity and unfiltered honesty. Amongst the younger generations, Zelensky versus Putin on mass media is the future versus the past.

The power of the media has not been lost on those deploying weapons, now and throughout history

It is no coincidence that one of the first targets in Putin’s assault was a media tower. In 1999, the tables were turned and it was Nato who bombed a Yugoslavian TV station, killing 16 employees including technicians and make-up artists. Nato’s argument was that the TV station was part of the “propaganda” war.

Only four years later, coalition forces decided Iraq’s TV station was a legitimate target and bombed that, in what Amnesty International said could be a breach of the Geneva convention.

Media centres are now as much of a target as a military airbase.

Media influences the deadly weapon of public opinion

The media is using its own weapons to hit back. An entire programme team walked off set before being shut down, and even the BBC issued guidance for Russian audiences on how to get around media blocks using the dark web. The advice was issued just after the broadcaster withdrew all its journalists from Russia for their own safety.

The media is a weapon because it influences the most powerful weapon of all: public opinion.

The videos and posts being shared every day by ordinary people are winning hearts and minds better than any army. Their victory may not be in the short-term, but it will win out in the end.

My young son, who takes no interest in the news, told me this evening about a video he’d seen on TikTok. It was of a woman who confronted heavily armed soldiers and gave them sunflower seeds so that “at least there will be sunflowers when they die”.

When a 12-year-old is informed about a conflict hundreds of miles away via social media, you know who has the deadliest weapons in their army.

Eleanor Bradford is a former BBC Scotland health correspondent and now works in communications in the education sector.


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Article list

Software - Privacy

How to choose a browser for everyday use?
Lifting the veil - how to test browsers for spyware
Essential privacy (or other) addons
Forum Classification Project - which forums (don't) get in your way?
E-mail providers - which one to choose?
Claws Mail configuration guide (incl. PGP)
Fake privacy / security initiatives
Mozilla - Devil Incarnate
Search Engines - which one to choose?
Ninja's guide to the Internet
Bypassing the privacy chase
XMPP clients - usage and mitigation
Mitigating malicious websites
Darknet setup in Slackware-based distros
How and why to VPNize your entire traffic

Software - Other

Useful Linux software you might not know about
Salix OS - a hidden gem among Linux distributions
Principles of bad software design
Linux Essentials
Backing up and restoring operating systems

Society

Avoiding "The Botnet" - impossible?
Technological slavery
Capitalism will die - but will it take us with it?
How money and the profit motive destroy everything
The Enemy Who Surpasses The Law
Refuting Libertarianism
Coronavirus scare and the blueprint for slavery
The toxic schooling system
Contrarian Party
Dirty tricks of conspiracy deniers

Video games

Sid Meier's Pirates - game recommendation
Short video game reviews
Favorite Video Game Soundtracks
Exterminacja - full playthrough

Reviews

MP3 players - buyer's guide
Juicer comparisons plus their marketing
Seeds of Deception (book review)

Other

Nutrition tidbits
Formula 216 - exposing the fraud
Wikipedia is the Ministry of Truth
List of plants by juice yield
Smoleńsk / Warsaw massacre - the Polish 9 / 11

Community sites

These are sites belonging to members of the now-dead MUC, or other people I know:

Spyware Watchdog (clearnet) and onion || Eldritch Data (clearnet) and onion || Shadow Wiki (onion), I2P and clearnet || oreamnos (gopher) || Duion || trbl || Verisimilitudes || shokara || Bornfree || Executing Reality (clearnet), onion and I2P || puffy || laure (gemini) || kolya || Awaru || Take Back Our Tech || Evil (clearnet - CF) and onion || Chadnet || Diego || Sprinkled Nights || TOM (Nuegia) || Casuistry || 12bytes || TheAnonymouseJoker

Other sites I like

It can be hard to find treasure in the junkyard known as the Internet, so I will catalogue the ones I've encountered here:

Alternative theories

Debunking Skeptics - Probably my favorite site on the Internet (except my own, of course ^_^). I was reading it religiously as a teenager, and it provided strong support towards my questioning of mainstream theories and their devout defenders; without that site, there would likely be no Dig Deeper. If you liked my Mozilla or Coronavirus reports, you will feel right at home on Debunking Skeptics. Covers many fringe topics, such as conspiracies, extrasensory perception, and life after death. Mostly famous for its total destruction of the so-called "rational skeptics", pretty much making them look like total idiots. Sadly hasn't been updated in a long time, but all the reports in there are still very relevant today.

Eugene McCarthy - Are humans the hybrids of chimpanzees and pigs? Finally, we have a scientific explanation for humanity's existence that fits the pieces extremely well together without all the pitfalls of mainstream theories. Take the pigpill!

Miles Mathis - This guy has some nice papers exposing staged / fake events (check out his Stephen Hawking report, for example - and prepare to have your mind blown to pieces), relying on photo analysis, genealogies, and general logic. He also covers many different topics, and has a kind of high-level understanding of the world that I think is rare; most articles have some kind of insight stuck in them. So I recommend keeping an eye on this guy.

Nutrition

Ray Peat - Writings of biologist Raymond Peat, mostly covering human physiology and nutrition, but drifting into other related topics (including relevant conspiracies) sometimes. Extremely well thought-out and researched; compared to regular nutrition sites, it's in another stratosphere. Articles also available at Chadnet, just in case his goes down after his departure.

Vitamin D Wiki - An absolutely insane life project of a single guy (?). The amount of admiration I have for this site cannot be put in words. Everything you have ever wanted to know about Vitamin D - the most important nutrient for human biology - is here. And then ten times that, if you are still hungry :D. Beautifully presented and fully referenced, even includes a bunch of charts, graphs, etc for pretty much every relevant issue. Hey, Vit D Wiki even works without JavaScript at all. S tier site, a true gem.

YouTube channels

FalKKonE - High quality video game remixes. Includes some of my favorite franchises like Pokemon, Ace Attorney, and Undertale.

Services

Sci-hub - Just in case someone doesn't know about it, it allows you to read scientific papers without paying, subscribing, etc. It's piracy, but for non-entertainment purposes :D. Hey, without it, my corona report probably wouldn't exist. Don't feel bad about using it; governments / medical institutions are basing some decisions on the paid studies - and you have the right to know just how solid they are. To download a study, you usually just need its PMID number.

Technology

Ciphers by Ritter - Best cryptography resource out there, by a mile. Explains the basics thoroughly and in a way that's easy to understand. Debunks myths and covers stuff that other sites don't dare to touch. Clearly, the author has a deep understanding of the topic.

Unix Sheikh || sadgrl || Aral Balkan || sysdfree || Udonya || Wrongthink || Koshka || ijver

Others

The Cave of Dragonflies - Look at the beautiful, old-school design! And the lovely style switcher! Imagine the effort, which has to be appreciated in the age of soydevism. Also, maintaining a Pokemon site for 20 (!) years is really impressive. Though it also has other useful content like HTML tutorials. And yet, the site hasn't managed to rack up even 10 million views during its entire existence. Sad.

Button for linking to my site. The hooded guy's face cannot be seen, as it is too dark. And he lacks scary ghostly flashy eyes because the lazy designer refused to draw them.