repiV
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But then isn't it likely that other power interests - corporate, media, private individuals, workers unions, whatever - will assert influence where government does not? Kind of a damned if you do/don't situation.
Yeah, but those power interests are separate groups that change and evolve, are in competition with each other and which cannot exert unilateral control over the population and which have a somewhat open membership to ordinary people.
These institutions can also only exert soft power on the population - they can encourage, suggest and coerce, but they cannot force.
Government is a closed shop that can dictate orders and acts as a single overpowering force.
The world cannot ever be made fair, as the people making those decisions are as fallible as anyone else and fairness is subjective anyway. The most feasible way to manage freedom is not to manage it. At least the power groups that form are in some way representative of the people by virtue of their being composed of people, and the many disparate groups vying for attention are surely more representative of the people than a government could ever be.
That said, on the subject of 'media brainwashing', it's arguable that as independent methods of quickly and easily broadcasting/accessing information become more commonplace and more powerful, combined with methods of recording - hell, at some point people will be able to use themselves as walking cameras - this can be countered. Will media be better if everyone participates in it? If the principle of the internet is applied?
I think it's somewhat like (and linked) to the idea of sousveillance. Consider: you're never going to be able to stop government or whoever from using security cameras and suchlike against you; you'll never stop them from abusing modern technology to collect every detail of your life.
The answer, then, is surely for everyone to do it back. If every single person had cameras in their eyes, wireless internet in their head, recorders in their ears, then it'd be damn near impossible to stop people from recording anything and everything.
The paradigm of a collaborative media might one day be the most powerful defence against anti-democratic power distortion. I have my doubts, but a man can hope.
I don't like the sound of that world, but I doubt there's much we can do to stop it.