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¡¥Jasmine,¡¦ the Internet and ¡¥wild¡¦
democracy
By Hsu Yung-ming ®}¥Ã©ú
The recent ¡§Jasmine Revolution¡¨ and the effect it has had on autocratic
political systems has shown that forces are in place for a new wave of democracy
and that these could erupt at any time. These recent events also show that this
force has a way of reaching areas situated near each other. The Internet has
become a new tool for disseminating information about democracy and this is
something that traditional theories on democratization never foresaw. The middle
class, new social movements and even opposition parties have all fallen into the
background and have been replaced with a new form of mass communication that is
more democratic and decentralized.
In the past, when nations in the developing world were planning political
revolution, they first had to gain control of presidential offices, TV and radio
stations and airports. Of these, TV stations were a crucial factor in
determining whether a revolution would succeed. In the process of consolidating
their power, TV stations were a tool used by authoritarian political systems to
brainwash society. In the now democratized Taiwan, we can still see remnants of
such a past. The recent Jasmine Revolution has proved the possibility of a
bottom-up way of disseminating information about democracy.
This also shows that the strength of mainstream media in controlling politics is
weakening and how the communicative and dissemination forces of new forms of
media like Facebook and YouTube are growing. This explains how politicians now
have no choice but to use such media, as well as providing a test of whether
politicians can get used to the ¡§wilder¡¨ side of democracy that these forms of
media embody.
Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao (·Å®aÄ_) has had no choice but to go online and conduct
discussions with netizens, and we have seen President Ma Ying-jeou (°¨^¤E)
publicizing how he has set up a Facebook account. They have done this because
they have seen that new media forms are a tipping point for politicians. This
shows us the great power new forms of media possess and how traditional methods
of securing power are no longer adequate. Those in power are using such media
not just to win people over, but because these are the new rules dictated by new
media and the way these will gradually become the new battleground for
elections.
The few altercations that have happened in China in their own chapter of the
Jasmine Revolution only involved small numbers of protesters. However, these
incidents caused China¡¦s police and reporters from traditional media outlets to
fight and highlighted how new media forms can disseminate information about
democracy. This changed the originally pessimistic views of other countries that
believed China¡¦s economic development was going to stop the social force of the
Jasmine Revolution there. The Jasmine Revolution in China has shown how new
media have been spreading like wildfire and how they have proven themselves to
be even more unpredictable and harder to control than members of Falun Gong.
Ma claims to have tens of thousands of fans on Facebook, as many as pop stars
and other celebrities. However, his ¡§popularity¡¨ was recently overshadowed by a
YouTube video clip of plainclothes police who surrounded Taiwanese university
students during a protest against the visit of China¡¦s Association for Relations
Across the Taiwan Strait Chairman Chen Yunlin (³¯¶³ªL) to Taiwan. This shows how
political leaders will be exposed if they fail to truly grasp the ¡§wilder¡¨ side
of democracy and merely spend money trying to get new media to work for them.
Hsu Yung-ming is an assistant research fellow at the Sun
Yat-sen Institute for Social Sciences and Philosophy at Academia Sinica.
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