Those who mistakenly thought 2016 was an anomaly, a series of unprecedented events, should have few remaining doubts. Marine Le Pen may have stuttered but still picked up almost 11 million votes. Her opponent, the normal candidate, was leader of a party only one year old. The ongoing terror attacks, fake news panic, Trumps tweets and James Comey: last year never really ended, it just carried straight on into this one.After decades of exaggerated prediction, the internet is finally transforming politics, but not in the way the digital prophets expected. The 90s, you may recall, were awash with optimism about our online future: limitless information and total connection would make us more informed, less bigoted and kinder citizens. But the internet is an overwhelming mess of competing facts, claims, blogs, data, propaganda, misinformation, investigative journalism, charts, different charts, commentary and reportage. Its not the slow and careful politicians who have thrived in this busy environment, its the people with the shareable cut-through messages. Donald Trump might very well be the first truly social-media politician: his emotion-filled, simplistic blasts are perfect for the medium.
Källa: Forget far-right populism crypto-anarchists are the new masters | Technology | The Guardian
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