Truth is hard to come by these days, even when you go looking for it.
In the jargon of the moment, we are overrun with misinformation and disinformation — which I like to call stupidity, lies and propaganda, just to keep things simple.
In that vast darkness of confusion and the animosity it purposefully breeds, a hero has emerged, one whose weapon is truth: Arnold Schwarzenegger.
OK, OK, that's heavy-handed and my screenwriting Oscar isn't coming anytime soon, but I bet you get the point. It's hard not to like the guy at this particular moment, because this week, for the second time in a little over a year, he's offered us powerful veracity and authenticity about current events that are otherwise overrun by lies.
In case you had better things to do than being on Twitter early Thursday, Schwarzenegger released a nine-minute video aimed at the people of Russia, expressing his respect for them while eviscerating Vladimir Putin's state-controlled version of the invasion of Ukraine. By noon, it had been viewed nearly 6 million times on Twitter and 400,000 times on Telegram, a platform still available inside Russia.
He details his love of Russia and its people, beginning with meeting champion weightlifter Yuri Petrovich Vlasov in 1961 when he was 14 and hadn't yet hefted a barbell of note. He talked about his dad being a Nazi, and the guilt and pain it caused the elder Schwarzenegger throughout his life. He lauded protesters and spoke directly to soldiers, telling them the war was illegal, perhaps hoping to inspire a fifth column — a term for groups of internal resisters, open or clandestine. It was good stuff, the kind of plain talk that makes you feel a bit better about the world after watching.
"You see, there are moments like this that are so wrong, and then we have to speak up," he says, referencing the other video he made in the wake of the Jan. 6 insurrection at the U.S. Capitol — which I'll get to, because it holds a different and somewhat depressing lesson.
As Brian Levin, head of the Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism at Cal State San Bernardino, puts it, Schwarzenegger "just spews out sincerity." That's significant because in what Levin describes as "catalytic moments" — like, say, the possible buildup to World War III — people go searching for truth, but often settle for what feels best. Schwarzenegger has a credibility and love inside Russia, especially with the older generation that is more inclined to believe state news, that "transcends nationhood" and could "move the needle," said Levin.