{"title":"“如果有宣战宣言,我们欢迎战争”:Undi-18、TikTok选举和暴力正常化","authors":"Siti Zuliha, Muhamad Luqman Hakim Abdul Hani","doi":"10.17576/sinergi.0202.2022.08","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Malaysia's democracy has come under attack due to the radicalisation of young and first-time voters on social media platforms. The widespread usage of TikTok as a primary campaign battleground by the political parties during the 15th General Election (GE-15) marks the anomaly pattern of first-time youth voters. Moreover, having social media influencers courting youth voters as a pawn in the electoral war is considered an accentuation of provocation of hate speech, endangering the prospect of moderate democracy in Malaysia. This commentary studies such anomalies by interviewing youth from varying socio-economic standing and educational backgrounds across Malaysia. Our research note highlights two crucial areas of unexplored terrain for future research. The first is the immediate need to invest in an emancipatory discourse of civic and political education and unabated expansions of democratic space and rights. Secondly, alarming concerns of electoral terrorism and hate speech via social media unravelled the under-research angles or assumed organic political divisions between analogue generations of corrupted warlords versus digital politics of technocratic youth savvy. Inadvertently, our observation of the 15th GE has discerned an increasing political worrisome pattern of widespread manipulative tendency by politicians, including using Industrial Revolution 4.0 (IR 4.0) technology to predict the voting pattern and understand the population sentiment through social media. We also concluded that tactics employed by the cyber troopers of political parties have significantly manipulated and poisoned the neutrality and perspectives of first-time youth voters.","PeriodicalId":247188,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Strategic Studies & International Affairs","volume":"29 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2022-12-31","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"\\\"If there is a Declaration of War, We Welcome the War\\\": Undi-18, TikTok Election and Normalisation of Violence\",\"authors\":\"Siti Zuliha, Muhamad Luqman Hakim Abdul Hani\",\"doi\":\"10.17576/sinergi.0202.2022.08\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Malaysia's democracy has come under attack due to the radicalisation of young and first-time voters on social media platforms. The widespread usage of TikTok as a primary campaign battleground by the political parties during the 15th General Election (GE-15) marks the anomaly pattern of first-time youth voters. Moreover, having social media influencers courting youth voters as a pawn in the electoral war is considered an accentuation of provocation of hate speech, endangering the prospect of moderate democracy in Malaysia. This commentary studies such anomalies by interviewing youth from varying socio-economic standing and educational backgrounds across Malaysia. Our research note highlights two crucial areas of unexplored terrain for future research. The first is the immediate need to invest in an emancipatory discourse of civic and political education and unabated expansions of democratic space and rights. Secondly, alarming concerns of electoral terrorism and hate speech via social media unravelled the under-research angles or assumed organic political divisions between analogue generations of corrupted warlords versus digital politics of technocratic youth savvy. Inadvertently, our observation of the 15th GE has discerned an increasing political worrisome pattern of widespread manipulative tendency by politicians, including using Industrial Revolution 4.0 (IR 4.0) technology to predict the voting pattern and understand the population sentiment through social media. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
由于社交媒体平台上年轻选民和首次选民的激进化,马来西亚的民主受到了攻击。在第15届议会选举期间,各政党将TikTok广泛用作初选战场,标志着首次参加投票的年轻选民的反常模式。此外,让社交媒体上有影响力的人拉拢年轻选民,作为选举战中的棋子,被认为加剧了仇恨言论的挑衅,危及马来西亚温和民主的前景。这篇评论通过采访马来西亚不同社会经济地位和教育背景的年轻人来研究这些异常现象。我们的研究报告强调了未来研究尚未探索的两个关键领域。首先,迫切需要投资于公民和政治教育的解放话语,以及民主空间和权利的不减扩张。其次,对选举恐怖主义和通过社交媒体发表仇恨言论的担忧,揭示了研究不足的角度,也揭示了腐败军阀的模拟世代与精通技术官僚的年轻人的数字政治之间的有机政治分歧。不经意间,我们对第15届全国大选的观察发现了一种日益令人担忧的政治模式,即政治家普遍存在的操纵倾向,包括使用工业革命4.0 (IR 4.0)技术来预测投票模式,并通过社交媒体了解人口情绪。我们还得出结论,政党的网络部队所采用的策略严重操纵和毒害了首次参加投票的青年选民的中立性和观点。
"If there is a Declaration of War, We Welcome the War": Undi-18, TikTok Election and Normalisation of Violence
Malaysia's democracy has come under attack due to the radicalisation of young and first-time voters on social media platforms. The widespread usage of TikTok as a primary campaign battleground by the political parties during the 15th General Election (GE-15) marks the anomaly pattern of first-time youth voters. Moreover, having social media influencers courting youth voters as a pawn in the electoral war is considered an accentuation of provocation of hate speech, endangering the prospect of moderate democracy in Malaysia. This commentary studies such anomalies by interviewing youth from varying socio-economic standing and educational backgrounds across Malaysia. Our research note highlights two crucial areas of unexplored terrain for future research. The first is the immediate need to invest in an emancipatory discourse of civic and political education and unabated expansions of democratic space and rights. Secondly, alarming concerns of electoral terrorism and hate speech via social media unravelled the under-research angles or assumed organic political divisions between analogue generations of corrupted warlords versus digital politics of technocratic youth savvy. Inadvertently, our observation of the 15th GE has discerned an increasing political worrisome pattern of widespread manipulative tendency by politicians, including using Industrial Revolution 4.0 (IR 4.0) technology to predict the voting pattern and understand the population sentiment through social media. We also concluded that tactics employed by the cyber troopers of political parties have significantly manipulated and poisoned the neutrality and perspectives of first-time youth voters.