Difference between revisions of "Stochastic violence"

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(Created page with "==About== Inductive terrorism is a phenomenon in which, generally speaking, right-wing interests with a lot of money spend it on propaganda suggesting that the rea...")
 
 
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[[thing type::power structure tool]]
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[[form of::demonization]]
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==About==
 
==About==
[[Inductive terrorism]] is a phenomenon in which, generally speaking, [[right-wing]] interests with a lot of money spend it on [[propaganda]] suggesting that the real problem is not right-wing interests with money but some disadvantaged group.
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[[Stochastic violence]] is a form of [[demonization]] in which false and inflammatory [[propaganda]] is [[rage farming|spread]] about a target person or group in such a way that it induces some tiny percentage of [[authoritarian follower|gullible people]] (which is a large demographic, so a tiny percentage is all it takes) to act violently in retribution against the target.
  
This induces some tiny percentage of [[authoritarian follower|gullible people]] (there are lots of these, so a tiny percentage is all it takes) to act violently in retribution against said group.
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This propaganda is usually seeded by powerful interests &ndash; either in overt advertising campaigns or in the [[interpretive framing]] chosen in deliberately biased media presentations &ndash; but may often [[astroturfing|appear to be grassroots-driven]], as individuals become ensnared by the emotional hooks planted in the propaganda and take up the cause as their own.
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'''Vocabulary''': We are now referring to this as [[stochastic violence]] rather than [[stochastic terrorism]], as the latter implies an attempt to influence public policy through said violence. Much stochastic violence is probably also stochastic terrorism, but the important distinguishing feature is its ''stochastic'' nature: the people with the agenda do not have any direct control over those who commit the violence and merely nurture such violence in their target-audience via a combination of false statements and perceived authority, and it is very difficult to predict who in that audience will act or what they will do.
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==Links==
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===to file===
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* '''2019-08-08''' (dictionary.com) [https://www.dictionary.com/e/what-is-stochastic-terrorism/ What Is "Stochastic Terrorism," And Why Is It Trending?]
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===Reference===
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* {{!in|wikipedia}}
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** see {{l/wp|stochastic terrorism}}: as of 2022-11-25, redirects to a section in the {{l/wp|Lone wolf (terrorism)}} article
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* {{!in|rationalwiki}} no mentions as of 2022-11-25
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{{links/smw}}

Latest revision as of 18:00, 25 November 2022

About

Stochastic violence is a form of demonization in which false and inflammatory propaganda is spread about a target person or group in such a way that it induces some tiny percentage of gullible people (which is a large demographic, so a tiny percentage is all it takes) to act violently in retribution against the target.

This propaganda is usually seeded by powerful interests – either in overt advertising campaigns or in the interpretive framing chosen in deliberately biased media presentations – but may often appear to be grassroots-driven, as individuals become ensnared by the emotional hooks planted in the propaganda and take up the cause as their own.

Vocabulary: We are now referring to this as stochastic violence rather than stochastic terrorism, as the latter implies an attempt to influence public policy through said violence. Much stochastic violence is probably also stochastic terrorism, but the important distinguishing feature is its stochastic nature: the people with the agenda do not have any direct control over those who commit the violence and merely nurture such violence in their target-audience via a combination of false statements and perceived authority, and it is very difficult to predict who in that audience will act or what they will do.

Links

to file

Reference