Big lies do sometimes take hold. They could do so even before the internet, as a previous generation of Germans could attest. And no country is immune, no matter how old and secure its democracy may seem.
By Gwynne Dyer
Last Wednesday morning, President Pedro Castillo made an unscheduled broadcast announcing that he was dissolving Congress, suspending the constitution, and would rule the country by decree. But within minutes he was abandoned by his own ministers, in a few hours he was impeached by Congress, and he was in jail by dinner time.
The baby-faced 53-year-old president, who wears his huge white ten-gallon hat everywhere he goes (except, perhaps, in jail), was never a credible occupant of the office. He had no experience of government before being elected two years ago by despairing voters who were willing to try anything new, and he showed no aptitude for his new job either.
Castillo ran as an independent, and his only declared ally was the Marxist-Lenin “Free Peru Party”. Once in office, however, he displayed much skill and enthusiasm in diverting public funds into his own pockets: bribes, fake contracts, selling government jobs, etc.
Even in Peru this is bound to attract public disapproval, and most of the people who joined his government quit again within months. (Five prime ministers in two years.) Moreover, Congress was dominated by hard-right parties, and soon they were trying to impeach him.
By last week they thought they had a majority to start the impeachment process, or at least Castillo thought they did. So he launched his “autogolpe” (“self-coup”), named after the action of a previous Peruvian president who overthrew his own elected government and ruled as a dictator. But where Alberto Fujimori succeeded in 1992, Castillo failed in 2022.
He failed because most of Peru’s 33 million people saw his action as illegitimate. The country is going through a bad patch, but its people have concluded that respect for the constitution is good, while coups and dictators are bad.
Vice President Dina Boluarte took over the presidency smoothly with Congress’s blessing, while Castillo wound up behind bars. Well done, Peru—but there was something even more ridiculous than Castillo’s attempted coup last week.
Due to some sort of intercontinental quantum entanglement, a group of quite respectable German citizens were plotting a coup, and on the very same day they, too, ended up in jail.
Three thousand police carried out 130 raids across Germany and arrested 23 members of this largely Internet-based organisation, as many more people are still being sought. They included doctors, retired army officers, a former member of parliament, an ex-judge, even a celebrity chef—and almost all had guns stashed away.
“We don’t yet have a name for this group,” said a spokeswoman for the federal prosecutor’s office, but the goal was to storm the Bundestag (German parliament), overthrow the government, and revive the German Reich.
All musical-comedy stuff, except that the guns were real. Many of the plotters were also anti-vaxxers, and a leading Swiss newspaper was probably right to dismiss the group as “fifty loons”. Certainly the constitution of the German Federal Republic was never in danger, and we might conclude that “what happens on the Internet stays on the internet”.
That’s true in most places, most of the time. Moreover, when the conspiracy theories do occasionally bleed over into reality, it’s usually horrible but isolated events like school shootings, not massive changes in national politics. However…
However, big lies do sometimes take hold. They could do so even before the Internet, as a previous generation of Germans could attest to. And no country is immune, no matter how old and secure its democracy may seem.
One-third of American voters still believe the Big Lie that Trump really won the 2020 presidential election. And Trump, still firmly wedded to that lie, chose last Wednesday to issued a particularly incendiary post on his own personal Twitter clone, Truth Social.
He said the “mass fraud” that he claims lost him that election “allows for the termination of all rules, regulations, and articles, even those found in the Constitution”.
Trump seems to be talking about suspending or even “terminating” the US constitution in order to reverse the 2020 election, but he’s not really talking about the past. He’s talking about the future
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Gwynne Dyer is an British-Canadian military historian, author, professor, journalist, broadcaster, and retired naval officer. Dyer rose to prominence in the 1980s with the release of his television series War in 1983 and the publication of an accompanying book in 1985. At present is a international journalist based in London. Energiesnet.com does not necessarily share these views.
Editor’s Note: This article was originally published by The Hill Times , on December 18, 2022. All comments posted and published on Petroleumworld, do not reflect either for or against the opinion expressed in the comment as an endorsement of Petroleumworld.
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energiesnet.com 12 22 2022