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Indeed, we must ask: can there be the continuation of war or, indeed, the escalation of war, as we are now witnessing in Afghanistan, without first preparing and structuring the public understanding of what war is, and by attempting to suppress any visual, audible, or narrative accounts of war that might help to break open a popular resistance to war? Television coverage of war positions citizens as visual consumers of a violent conflict that happens elsewhere, at least in the United States where geographical distance from our so-called enemies allows us to wage war without close domestic scrutiny of our actions. It may be that global media operations like CNN actually export the perspective of the US, enforcing a sense of infinite distance from zones of war even for those who live in the midst of violence. But if the framing of what we see challenges the credibility of the claims made about the war, then we fail to be effectively recruited into the war effort by the news.This has implications for a whole lot more than war. If Butler is right, and I think that she is, then where does this framing, this constituting of reality, stop? Does it stop with the formation of categories for understanding war, or does the framing attempt to constitute the consumer's understanding of basically everything else, as well? It seems clear to me, especially in the recent blending of politics and media (Joe Biden's cameos as a friendly in Parks and Rec, for example), that those with the control over frames have much more at their fingertips than mere conceptions of war-waging. It is, whatever the truth may be, worth considering.
Edit: There are, as it happens, avenues through which images can travel, such as social media, which transcend the control of the powers that be. Often these images capture moments - people and places and things - that come from outside the dominant frames, generally make war casualtiy numbers seem real, human. An image of a crying mother over her war-torn family can have an impact. If enough resistant images arise, then the frame can begin to be seen for what it is. Existing as a kind of potential rallying point for the entire globe, the rise of the hashtag phenomenon is perhaps the most powerful revolutionary device to appear on the political scene in quite some time.