Obama Advisor Promotes ‘Cognitive Infiltration’
Cass Sunstein is President Obama’s Harvard Law School
friend, and recently appointed Administrator of the White House Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs.
In a recent scholarly article, he and coauthor Adrian
Vermeule take up the question of “Conspiracy Theories: Causes and Cures.” (J.
Political Philosophy, 7 (2009), 202-227). This is a man with the president’s
ear. This is a man who would process information and regulate things. What does
he here propose?
[W]e suggest a distinctive tactic for breaking up the hard
core of extremists who supply conspiracy theories: cognitive infiltration of
extremist groups, whereby government agents or their allies (acting either
virtually or in real space, and either openly or anonymously) will undermine the
crippled epistemology of believers by planting doubts about the theories and
stylized facts that circulate within such groups, thereby introducing beneficial
cognitive diversity. (Page 219.)
Read this paragraph again. Unpack it. Work your way through
the language and the intent. Imagine the application. What do we learn?
•It is “extremists” who “supply” “conspiracy theories.”
•Their “hard core” must be “broken up” with distinctive
tactics. What tactics?
•“Infiltration” (“cognitive”) of groups with questions
about official explanations or obfuscations or lies. Who is to infiltrate?
•“Government agents or their allies,” virtually (i.e.
on-line) or in “real-space” (as at meetings), and “either openly or
anonymously,” though “infiltration” would imply the latter. What will these
agents do?
•Undermine “crippled epistemology” — one’s theory and
technique of knowledge. How will they do this?
•By “planting doubts” which will “circulate.” Will these
doubts be beneficial?
•Certainly. Because they will introduce “cognitive
diversity.”
Put into English, what Sunstein is proposing is government
infiltration of groups opposing prevailing policy. Palestinian Liberation? 9/11
Truth? Anti-nuclear power? Stop the wars? End the Fed? Support Nader? Eat the
Rich?
It’s easy to destroy groups with “cognitive diversity.” You
just take up meeting time with arguments to the point where people don’t come
back. You make protest signs which alienate 90% of colleagues. You demand
revolutionary violence from pacifist groups.
We expect such tactics from undercover cops, or FBI. There
the agents are called “provocateurs” — even if only “cognitive.” One learns to
smell or deal with them in a group, or recognize trolling online. But even
suspicion or partial exposure can “sow uncertainty and distrust within
conspiratorial groups [now conflated with conspiracy theory discussion groups]
and among their members,” and “raise the costs of organization and
communication” — which Sunstein applauds as “desirable.” “[N]ew recruits will be
suspect and participants in the group’s virtual networks will doubt each other’s
bona fides.” (p.225).
And are we now expected to applaud such tactics frankly
proposed in a scholarly journal by a high-level presidential advisor?