Losing Monopoly on the Narrative: Modi Govt Moves to Throttle Creators, Independent Journalism

These creators are independent individuals on social media who cannot be licensed or regulated in the way that news channels can. That is why the government is moving to gain control over them.

The dictionary defines the word “propaganda” as being “information, especially of a biased or misleading nature, used to promote a political cause or point of view”. In Old India, propaganda was managed by controlling Doordarshan. Or at least that is what political parties assumed. The news segments in the evenings reported on the government and its agenda. The opposition was given no space. This was accepted as being natural.

During elections, however, the opposition would demand to be given as much screen time as the ruling party, especially in delivering their manifestos. Party leaders would read them out in front of the camera, and smaller parties would then ask to be given as much time as the larger ones. With the coming of private news channels a quarter century ago, this changed and instead of Doordarshan, or perhaps along with it at least in the initial years, senior party leaders would come to panels in studios. It seemed that this was the dawn of independence and some of the senior journalists around today are the product of that time, particularly those who were in the old Star News segment which became NDTV.

The phenomenon of “Godi media” beginning in the months before 2014 took us back considerably to propaganda. This time it was worse than in Old India and more damaging. On Doordarshan, the opposition was merely ignored; it was not daily vilified and attacked and called anti-national. On Doordarshan, even when it was in the hands of hypocrites, the minorities were not the constant target and distraction was not the only game. In New India, this became the daily fare of the channels and have remained so for a decade.

But a third shift has now come, and while it is relatively recent it is so fully established that the government is moving to gain control over it. That shift is the rise of independent journalists using the social media to reach large audiences. This includes the set of people known as content creators, who might not necessarily be journalists by background but engage with current affairs through humour, particularly satire.

How large are their audiences? Have a look at the numbers. On YouTube, independent journalists have as much reach as news channels. Punya Prasun Bajpai (47 lakh subscribers), Ajit Anjum (61 lakh), Abhisar Sharma (67 lakh) and Ravish Kumar (1.1 crore) can rival entire news networks. Times Now (53 lakh subscribers), Republic (62 lakh) and India Today (93 lakh) are in the same region.

Dhruv Rathee (2.3 crore subscribers) has as much reach as Zee News (3.6 crore). Indeed, in many ways the reach of the independent voices is more because of the concentration of their content on one specific daily issue.

The average Ravish Kumar video gets over 10 lakh views while the average one from Zee gets a few thousand, because there are so many of them. Distribution of these clips through WhatsApp further amplifies the independent voice’s reach. The sharing of advertising revenue by social media networks like YouTube afford these individuals the opportunity to be able to do their work outside of a corporate space. In addition to the journalists, a set of humourists has risen to comment on our times. They are a product of the stranglehold of the Godi media and the suffocation people have felt of having propaganda inflicted on them. A few names are worthy of mention, like Bhagat Ram, Ms Medusa, Meghnad, Garima, Ranting Gola, Shyam Rangeela and Urvish Kothari, all of whom I follow and greatly admire and whose work I enjoy.

Unfortunately for the government, there are few quality creators on the other side. This is because propaganda and sycophancy are not good ingredients for humour. Godi creators tend to produce content that is sullen and angry and for this reason generally ignored.

It will take an academic paper or a book to examine the effect of the independent voices on our democracy. There is to my mind little doubt that they have managed to loosen the monopoly of the Narendra Modi government on narrative.

It is for this reason that the government has moved to throttle the voices of the creators and independent journalists. This is being done through the broadcast bill, a draft of which is being circulated. Essentially, it seeks to regulate everyone who is on the social media because that is the only way in which the government can interfere, block and ban content it doesn’t want seen. The government is also trying to go after independent websites like The Wire, Scroll, Newslaundry and Newsminute.

Because these creators are independent individuals on social media, they cannot be licensed or regulated in the way that news channels can. This is why the government is attempting to do this with the broadest of definitions that will affect every single person using the social media. The intent might be to use the law in targeted fashion but that will not be how it will turn out. Bad laws produce bad outcomes. Will the Modi government be successful in pushing the regulation through? It will not. This is not the same place we were last year. There are too many obstacles for it and too many points of resistance.

Even if it had been passed in the previous Parliament through brute force, it would have been a total mess in implementation. The Prime Minister and his Cabinet will be compelled to do what governments in other democracies must: listen to criticism from citizens and tolerate it and even learn from it. In doing so, perhaps they can also get a laugh out of the material, as many of us so often do.

Aakar Patel is an author and columnist. 

Dhruv Rathee’s Viral Video Lists ‘4 Stages’ of How Indians Are ‘Being Brainwashed’

Four stages of the “Lies Factory”, says Rathee, are using WhatsApp to spread hate via misinformation. He gives a call, Mission 100, for circulating messages to expose the brainwashing, for eventually dismantling WhatsApp University, saying 1.5 crore motivated people to save India far outweigh paid IT cells. 

New Delhi: Dhruv Rathee in his viral video on the “brainwashing of Indians”, which has close to 12 million views, has put out a four-set methodology through which dark social media or the WhatsApp universe is weaponised and, over time, used to twist narratives.

He first talks about the “WhatsApp Mafia” and how nobody has stopped it, so it has now “become a monster”. This WhatsApp mafia he says “targets Hindus”. The example of Hitler brainwashing “German Aryans”, using Jews and Zia ul Haq using Hindus, Christians, Shia Muslims as bugbears to brainwash Sunni Muslims. 

Rathee is a widely followed and admired YouTube video-maker whose earlier videos on dictatorship have crossed well over 50 million views.

He says “chronology samajhiye

The first ‘department’ he says is “pride”. There is no hate initially, but to ensnare people, it is eulogisation. To speak of exaggerated claims of culture, history etc. 

Department number two he says is “victimisation and self-pity” on how, for centuries, “they” have ruled over us and thwarted our potential greatness and identity. Rathee says this is the breaking point, after which, department number three or “you are in danger” is an easy leap towards, of scaring the cohort. This is where misinformation is used, exaggerated and sharpened. Muslims and Christians are demonised further, then opposition parties are drawn in and the other made larger by throwing in billionaire Soros, Pakistan, China and more to scare people further, as of them being at risk.

After having created enough scare, says Rathee, comes in department number four, which is the Modi cult of personality. The saviour cult is created at this stage, as part of a big systematic campaign of departments 1, 2 and 3. “Modi ji” as answer to “who will save us”, by almost referring to him as an avatar. 

He says that people are deliberately pushed down “an emotional rollercoaster” as happened in Germany in the 1930s, not via WhatsApp then but via other media, films, radio and cinema. 

Rathee has elaborated on how founders of Hindutva, Savarkar and Golwalkar were known admirers of Hitler and Nazi Germany.

Watch this section, here:

Rathee says Indians must vote, save democracy and remember Gandhi, Bose, Bhagat Singh and Dr. Ambedkar as they gear up to defeat lies. 

He has urged all those watching him to become a part of truth-telling via, what he has termed, ‘Mission 100’ and circulate messages to expose the brainwashing, for eventually dismantling ‘WhatsApp University,’ saying 1.5 crore motivated and people committed to save India far outweigh paid IT cells. 

Earlier this year, The World Economic Forum report had said, the risk of false information was the highest in India. There have been several academic studies, other analyses and reports on how misinformation has many sources, but the biggest challenge it poses to Indian democracy is how misinformation is “baked into” the campaign of the ruling party, which dominates the narrative.

Rathee in a special interview with Karan Thapar on April 12 for The Wire, spoke about himself, his childhood and upbringing, his training as a mechanical engineer at the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, and also what motivates him to make videos and the extent of preparation and effort put into each of them. He also to spoke about political issues such as his view of Modi and whether India is becoming a dictatorship. Rathee said that his message to the Indian people is brief and simple: “Vote karne jayen to sarkar ko nikal phenke (When you go to vote, throw out the government).”

Rathee said that he has faith that his 2.5 crore audience will heed his request for each person to share his video with another 100 people who, in turn, will respond to his message to vote out the Modi government.

 

Resisting Dictatorship, One Video at a Time

At a time when big media platforms have deployed all their resources to glorify the government led by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, a video asking if India is headed towards dictatorship getting mass viewership assumes greater significance.

She feels distraught

because she does not get complete information

what can I do to help him

she depends on me for love,

Every time she knows something incomplete,

or one day she’ll stop asking

Or when she will be reprimanded for asking

one day suddenly some day

taking a deep breath

She will turn her face away quietly.

These are the lines from late poet Raghuvir Sahay’s poem ‘Uska Man’. In the poem, he is talking about a woman. But, as is the case with every great poem, its pronoun can be used in different contexts.

In the context of today’s India, does this pronoun ‘she’ represent the collective noun we know as public? Not getting information can be a reason for being distraught. Just as it is difficult for a woman to survive as an individual without information, information is the lifeline for people in any democracy.

This poem came to my mind when I saw YouTuber Dhruv Rathee’s latest video that is creating a sensation on social media platforms.

When we thought, and not wrongly, that India was sleepwalking into a dictatorship, the news of this video being watched by more than 10 million people came as a shock to many of us. Especially the fact that the video is getting popular among the youth.

At a time when big media platforms have deployed all their resources to glorify this government led by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, when the same name is being chanted everywhere, when all that our top intellectuals say is that in May 2024, Modi will return as the prime minister, when we are told that the die is cast, just then a video appears warning the people that they are offering themselves to a dictator and starts spreading like fire. What does it mean?

Is this a sign that there is still a hunger to know the truth in India? Are the people of India ready to fight to save themselves from being transformed from citizens into subjects? At a time when almost everyone has given up because no one wants to hear anything, what does the extraordinary viewership of this video tell us?

In the video, Dhruv explains, very calmly, why and how dictatorship is gradually taking root in India under the guise of democracy. The point is being made in a logical manner and without any excitement or pompous words. Perhaps this is the reason why this video is being watched. Dhruv is not saying anything new, this analysis has been reported many times and by many people before him. But it should not undermine the significance of the video.

Supporters of the Modi government fear that the viewers of this video might primarily belong to the age group of first and second time voters. This is not an unfounded fear. I heard my wife’s nephew calling from Mumbai asking her to watch this video. He is not a typical Modi detractor. There would be many like him asking their parents and relatives to watch it. That is alarming for the Bhartiya Janata Party (BJP) and Modi.

Another proof of the video’s impact is that the pro-government camp has already pressed some social media influencers into action to counter Rathee. All of a sudden there are also those recalling Rathee’s political inclination, informing us that he has been a supporter of Aam Aadmi Party (AAP), hence there must be an ulterior motive behind this video. There is also an argument that while Rathee is calling Modi a dictator in the video, signs of dictatorship can be found in the politics of Arvind Kejriwal.

Does this prove the point of this video wrong? Do the facts and arguments of this video become false because Rathee’s political sympathies lie with a party which can be potentially dangerous? Should Rathee have also told his viewers that there is a danger of Kejriwal becoming a dictator and only then his analysis of Modi would become credible?

Are we saying that it is pointless to criticise the BJP or Modi because others can also turn out to be the same? If we are looking for a pure democratic leader and party upon whose arrival only should this government be replaced, then we are preparing to push ourselves into an abyss that we will never escape.

Rathee is giving information which is the lifeblood of democracy. It is not surprising that the first thing a dictator wants to do is to clamp down on sources of information. There will be only one source of information and that is the mouth of the dictator. The rest will only be his loudspeakers. Be it Stalin or Mao, Hitler or Mussolini, every dictator wants this. Just his image, just his voice. The leader is the journalist, the economist, the sociologist, the poet, the psychologist and the philosopher. He is the chief priest and he is the king. When one voice continues to be poured day and night in the public’s ears, they gradually lose the ability to listen to other voices.

At such a time, those who understand the value of democracy fulfil their duty of keeping the public’s ears alive, regardless of how many ears are ready for it. Their job is to keep the ears alert. And for that, the nutrition of true information is required.

The popularity of Rathee’s video only means that this is no time to become pessimistic before the inevitability of dictatorship. People want to live. And what should we do if we love these people who want to live? Act like Dhruv Rathee. It is not very difficult.

Apoorvanand is an academic and an author.