Police Violence and The Black Lives Matters Protests
In some ways, the Black Lives Matter protests show us the flipside of social media. Though horrendous (and some argue unethical) to watch, videos of racist violence and police killings of Black citizens have forced American society to confront the anti-Black structures built into their country from its inception. Furthermore, social media has helped activists to organize demonstrations, increase visibility for marginalized communities, and find affirmation for realities that have long been aggressively ignored. Inasmuch as traditional civil society worked to promote norms and consensus, those norms and consensuses were often racist, sexist, and discriminatory beyond. At its best, social media can work to undo those norms.
However, even there, it is not without its shortcomings. In the BLM movement, for instance, questions arose with the advent of the ‘defund the police’ hashtag. The slogan blew up in online discourse but empirically did not represent the perspective of the Black community in real life, where Gallup polls carried out in August of 2020 showed that eighty-one percent of Black respondents (and eighty-six percent of the population overall) wanted to see the same or increased police presence in their neighbourhoods. Adding to the dissonance, house majority whip, James Clyburn—a democratic veteran and long-time activist in the Black community of his home state—speculated that the slogan had hurt democratic candidates at the polls. It is worth noting, in this, that strong, bipartisan support for police reform existed due largely to the work of BLM activists. The slogan, however galvanizing on social media it was, transferred into real life, was so unpopular that the right was able to weaponize it to their advantage.
Though perhaps a small example, this dispute is arguably emblematic of the problem with social media activism. The reductive, trending, extreme nature of a hashtag, however understandable in light of videos of police violence and murder, does not translate well into practical social change. Video clips and slogans, divorced from any deep history or education, upset viewers justly but also lead them to easy attribution errors. In this case, the idea that the police are the cause, rather than a terrible effect, of systemic, anti-Black racism. It is simpler to overlook the vast structures undergirding systemic anti-Blackness. Reforming the school-to-prison pipeline, historical discrimination in housing, in higher education, in the job market, and in the judicial system (far beyond policing) will take much more than a hashtag and shell game with public funds. And yet, real redress and reform requires on-the-ground work over time, pressure, campaigns, and consulting with communities themselves, not just progressive activists.
This brings us to the universal problem of social media activism: though well-intended, it is still fed through algorithms that favour provocation, punchy slogans, the drama of conflict, call-outs, and cancel culture. Its attention spans are short and thirsty. Reality is nuanced and complex to change. And the modes are poorly received by the audience activists need to persuade. In offline society, forty percent of Americans report being harassed online—shamed, threatened, or even doxed. Sixty percent report witnessing such behaviour. While much of that is down to trolling, the modes of activism online are too often not experienced as enlightenment but as harassment and alienation. As satisfying as calling out does feel, public humiliation is a poor tool of real persuasion. Worse, such methods have no practical effect on actually bad actors. The powerful racists, sexists, and bigots of the world revel more than progressives themselves in this model, correctly deducing that call out and cancel culture will never work on them, and operate, primarily, as a circular firing squad for the woke.
This isn’t the fault of activists. It is prescribed by the business model. The deep goal on social media is not social change but attention-getting and attention-keeping. The great victory for users is going viral, but it is a victory with no reward. The work of educating people, building intimacy, showing humility, mustering generosity might profit society but doesn’t make online platforms money; thus, virtual community members in these profit machines masquerading as communities will always be pushed away from deep relationship-building towards its opposite: the provocation, the simple statement, the harsh judgment. Regardless of intent, when the goal is only approval, and not persuasion, when idealism is used to score points without pragmatism, the result is unlikely to be more than self-congratulation.
If this seems like a screed against technology, it is not. The role of technology in human thriving has been great. This is about nothing more than the sly colonization of civil society by digital businesses, professing to bring us closer while building a world where everything that binds us together is cast into doubt, and the relationships that have brought us through are undermined for likes. Without intervention, that world could become the worst yet.