Connect with us

News

Freedom for Julian Assange and Navigating Digital Democracy

Published

on

Freedom for Julian Assange and Navigating Digital Democracy

The Project Censored Show

The Official Project Censored Show

Freedom for Julian Assange and Navigating our Digital Democracy



Loading




Advertisement


/

Advertisement
Advertisement

Independent journalist Kevin Gosztola, author of Guilty of Journalism: The Political Case Against Julian Assange, rejoins the program to discuss Julian Assange’s plea bargain with the US Department of Justice that finally frees the WikiLeaks founder from Britain’s Belmarsh Prison. Assange, who was detained there for more than five years, was returned home to Australia a free man. The Assange legal case may be over, but Gosztola discusses the ongoing implications for press freedom, especially given the details of the deal where Assange was basically found…guilty of journalism? Then Mickey speaks with Project Censored’s Kate Horgan, Reagan Haynie, and Shealeigh Voitl, authors of a new article in the special media literacy issue of The Progressive magazine. The piece, “Navigating the Digital Democracy,” outlines the efforts of government and Big Tech to control or censor social media platforms (often without users’ knowledge), and the countermeasures employed by online communities to maintain open and uncensored communications. The guests discuss how social media can influence the 2024 election and how critically media literate citizens can be more meaningfully, civically engaged.

 

Notes:

Kevin Gosztola is an independent journalist. He has covered the Julian Assange legal proceedings in the UK from their beginning, as well as other press-freedom and whistleblower cases, and has been a frequent guest on the Project Censored Show. His book on the Assange case, Guilty of Journalism, was published in 2023. Gosztola is also the editor of the Dissenter newsletter. Kate Horgan is Website Design & Media Assistant at Project Censored; Reagan Haynie is Social-Media Manager at Project Censored; and Shealeigh Voitl is Digital & Print Editor at Project Censored. Their article, “Navigating the Digital Democracy,” appears in the June/July issue of The Progressive magazine.

Advertisement

 

Video of the Interview with Kate Horgan, Reagan Haynie and Shealeigh Voitl

Video of the Interview with Kevin Gosztola

Below is a Rough Transcript of the Interview with Kevin Gosztola

Mickey Huff: Welcome to the Project Censored Show on Pacifica Radio. I’m your host, Mickey Huff. Today on the program in this first segment, we are excited to bring back Kevin Gosztola, independent reporter at The Dissenter, also author of Guilty of Journalism, The Political Case Against Julian Assange.

Advertisement

And we are delighted to have Kevin on the program today to celebrate the fact that Julian Assange, believe it or not, is a free man. That doesn’t mean that there weren’t costs and consequences. That doesn’t mean that the future of journalism is preserved. We have to be ever vigilant, but Kevin Gosztola has been on this case since its inception.

Kevin has been our go to expert on this, and of course, we’re not alone in this. The late great Daniel Ellsberg said of Kevin and his work that he is a rare journalist who understands the abominable threat that the case against Assange poses to press freedom. Ellsberg said he relied on Kevin’s indispensable reporting not only to stay informed about Assange but to follow developments in the wider war on whistleblowers.

And Kevin Gosztola welcome back to the Project Censored Show for a rare occasion when the two of us can have something good to say about the Julian Assange case, and that’s that it’s come to an end, but not without costs and consequences, not without him apparently pleading guilty to journalism. Kevin Gosztola welcome back to the program.

Kevin Gosztola: Yeah, it’s good to be with you, and let me take a moment to say what I’ve said on multiple shows, which is, It’s unfortunate that Daniel Ellsberg did not live for this moment so he could share in the cheer. There’s so many people who have contacted Julian Assange. And I do want to say up top that the mood is jubilant on the part of the Assange camp, that this is a victory for them.

Advertisement

And in fact, Jeremy Corbyn, who we know as a leading politician in the UK and had contacted Julian Assange and congratulated him on the victory. And Julian Assange said, no, it’s everyone’s victory. And we all share in this. Stella Assange, his lawyers, everyone, they’ve made clear that this was a global movement that created space for plea deal negotiations.

Mickey Huff: Which is absolutely important, very important to remember, and of course, Kevin, you can give us more of a background, too, to remind folks of this long and twisted, torturous case in many ways, but also, you know, let’s just, let’s talk about what, the right now, let’s talk about what, what also just happened, and I know that off air, you and I were talking, we had a clip that we want to share, folks, of Julian Assange, yeah, basically saying that he, he, he’s, he’s in a, in a, in a way disagreeing, of course with the interpretation, but also simultaneously noting that he is in fact guilty of journalism.

Is that, is that an accurate assessment?

Kevin Gosztola: Yeah. And as, as the author of the book, Guilty of Journalism. Mm-Hmm. , I would like to tell you, I had no idea he would sit in a US court one day and say when he was asked to describe his quote unquote crime. That he would say basically he was guilty of journalism.

Advertisement

And so wh- let’s play the clip right here.

Mickey Huff: Right? So let’s play the clip of Assange in the courtroom. Here we go.

Unidentified: At this time, I’m asking you to explain to me what is it that you did that will constitute the crime charge?

Julian Assange: Working as a journalist, I encouraged my source to provide information that was said to be classified in order to publish that information. I believe that the First Amendment protected that activity, but I accept that as written.

Advertisement

It’s a violation of the Espionage Act statute.

Unidentified: So you had certain belief, but you understand what the law actually says as well.

Julian Assange: I believe the First Amendment and the Espionage Act are in contrcontradiction with other. But I accept that that it would be difficult to win such a case in given all the circumstances.

Mickey Huff: and so there’s the voice of Julian Assange in court, essentially, noting that he, he does not see he sees as incongruous or incongruent, the Espionage Act and the First Amendment, but was not prepared to move forward to argue the case, given the circumstances. Kevin Gosztola.

Advertisement

Kevin Gosztola: Oh, exactly. That’s something that, beyond Julian Assange’s freedom, we all have to grapple with.

Anybody who cares about freedom of expression and the standards that the United States tries to set globally, what is being said there accepted by a U. S. judge, and supported by the U. S. prosecutor who’s in the room is that the espionage act and the first amendment are basically incompatible. I mean, essentially under the espionage act, there are no first amendment rights.

So once you violate it, you do not get the claim that the first amendment protects you from prosecution. And so the first amendment says one thing about what’s allowed in the publication of news, and then the espionage act says another, and there’s no settled law. And we live in this kind of actually lawless state at this point until some court actually settles this matter.

The sad part is the only way to settle this matter is to have a case where a journalist is punished for journalism. It won’t be Julian Assange, but there will be a case in the future because the Justice Department will try this again.

Advertisement

Mickey Huff: Well, and we’ve talked about this for years, unfortunately, because the case had gone on for so long, and we’ll talk a little bit more about that, in this segment, but Kevin Gosztola, the punishment was in the process, I mean, and that’s part even, that’s even come out now, he, Assange was, was, agreed to plead guilty to one count, is that right, under the Espionage Act, which was basically five years time served when he got to Australia, So essentially he’s gonna be a convicted He’s convicted of this felony, right?

Yeah. It’ll be on the record, but he is also a free person after many, many years of being tortured, being imprisoned, being surveilled, harassed, and even the subject of a potential CIA assassination campaign. Kevin Gosztola.

Kevin Gosztola: Yeah, though he was welcomed back to his home in Australia as a hero, he got on the phone with the Australian Prime Minister, Anthony Albanese, who has been fighting for his release, lobbying the Biden White House to, end this case.

It’s important for me to note here about the way this plea deal happened, that Julian Assange was released on bail from Belmarsh Prison, which was known as, and still is, known as Britain’s Guantanamo, after enduring harsh confinement conditions in which his health and, his physical and mental health deteriorated significantly.

Advertisement

He hopped on a charter flight. And the Australian High Commissioner. It’s the most senior diplomat in Australia flew with him to, they just had a layover in Bangkok and then they flew onward to a U S territory. I kind of think it’s a colony, but they went to, North Mariana islands in, the Pacific ocean.

And they went into this small courtroom and had this proceeding where it all happened very fast, lightning fast. This typically does unfold over like two or three months. They did the guilty plea and the sentencing all in about an hour and a half. And then he went onward to Australia, where he could rejoin his family, finally.

And, you know, in the, in the, in this hearing, what we heard was that the U. S. could not identify a single victim of these leaks. Oftentimes the government, and they did this in Chelsea Manning’s case, I believe, they’ll seek restitution for individuals who were harmed by the crime. They did not name a single person that Julian Assange had affected.

That tells you that there are zero, and it confirms zero, and it’s a message to the news media that they should stop talking about how WikiLeaks has blood on its hands, and, and, and repeating U. S. propaganda, because even the U. S. government itself could not go before a judge. and prove harm.

Advertisement

Mickey Huff: The establishment press in the U. S. has had they’ve had a real double standard. They’ve been very hypocritical about the Assange case, WikiLeaks case, with major newspapers, both simultaneously using this information to win Pulitzer awards, prizes, but then simultaneously throwing him under the bus or having a real tepid relationship with the support for his case. And you just mentioned that the U. S. government has no case where they were talking about known victims of the leaks of the information. They basically exposed heinous war crimes committed by the United States. Among many other things but still the press has a twisted relationship with Assange, you know some still saying that he should still be punished more. I mean, can you comment on this bizarre, you know kind of state of affairs between the establishment perhaps the fourth estate in the United States and their, their very problematic relationship with whistleblowers, leaks, and Assange in particular. Kevin Gosztola.

Kevin Gosztola: To me, the best way to illustrate the twisted relationship is how, even today, the New York Times will say and claim that Julian Assange was a source and not a partner in working on these documents that came to WikiLeaks from Chelsea Manning. And that was because they wanted to try and insulate themselves from being prosecuted by the U. S. government or else they wanted to act like they were better and different than Julian Assange. But it is a distinction without a difference.

The U. S. Justice Department does not see any difference between Julian Assange and a New York Times editor or reporter who works on previously classified documents from the U. S. government and publishes them. So, it’s on them to recognize that this precedent is severe for the future of journalism, and it’s going to be up to us to reckon with it while Julian Assange is healing, we’re going to have to reform the Espionage Act, get a public interest defense for journalists, or pass a reporter’s shield law that could exist in this country to protect journalists from subpoenas that might offer some kind of, protection from or deterrence from the Justice Department trying to have their way with media organizations.

But I do think I appreciate the bittersweetness of this, you know, on one hand. We can celebrate that this is a massive defeat, in my view, for the CIA, for the FBI, for the Justice Department’s National Security Division, which I think would have been perfectly comfortable if, through the punishment by process, Julian Assange wound up being pronounced dead at some point in Belmarsh Prison.

Advertisement

They didn’t get that. Instead, he walked out free and boarded an airplane and came home to Australia. On the other hand, Reporters Without Borders, the Committee to Protect Journalists, Freedom of the Press Foundation, various civil liberties organizations, all of us are looking at this going, what happens next?

And, and, and that’s really disturbing.

Mickey Huff: Well, what does happen next? I mean, let’s talk a little bit about some of what, what, what’s been going on here, even just, and I’m speaking with you on Thursday, June 27, the program will air next week. Across the U. S., Kevin Gosztola. It’s also, I believe I learned recently that the U.S. was charging Assange for chartering the plane that took him back to Australia? To the tune of half a million pounds?

Kevin Gosztola: So what it sounds like is they had the Australia government pay for the flight. And then the Australia government said, we’ll get Julian Assange to pay us for the charter flight. I don’t know why they’re putting an ally in that position to begin with.

Advertisement

I would like to just be an anti imperialist for a moment and say the U. S. arrested and charged Julian. They kept him in prison. They’re the ones that lost confidence in their case. They no longer wanted to be as aggressive as they had been and bring him to the U. S. for trial. They got tired. They didn’t want to continue to put up with this fight because Julian Assange did not give up and was actually in a winning position because there was an appeal hearing coming where they were going to argue over the First Amendment and say that if Julian Assange came to the US for a trial, he would ,be prejudiced due to his nationality. Since non us citizens have no first amendment rights.

That was something the high court of justice was taking seriously. It brought the US government back to the negotiating table for a plea deal. And so they should be paying for the flight. They should be putting Julian Assange on the plane, bringing him to a US courtroom and then securing their guilty plea.

But I’ll tell you, in addition to that, one of the things that stunned me is just picking up on little details. I looked at the press release from the justice department that announced this plea deal with Julian Assange and how they had secured a guilty plea to the conspiracy charge under the espionage act.

And I was stunned because there are no statements from any high ranking official celebrating the outcome. Nothing from attorney general Merrick Garland, nothing from the U S attorney in the, Eastern district of Virginia. Nothing from anyone who worked on this case. And it’s also very sloppy and wordy.

Advertisement

It’s a closing argument, basically, like the kind that you would give before you get a verdict from the jury and not a statement of victory. So even today, the announcement of the plea deal, they’re still trying to persuade the world that their actions weren’t corrupt.

Mickey Huff: Yeah, this was pretty amazing. Pretty amazing developments.

Chief among them, of course, is that Julian Assange has been released from Belmarsh prison, pled guilty to one charge under the Espionage Act, but is a free person in, in, now in Australia. . Kevin Gosztola, it’s an election year in the United States. Trump is the one that helped really ramp up charges under the Espionage Act, of Assange.

Biden, of course, and the Democrats, you know, going back to Biden, Obama, you know, they, they persecuted, prosecuted more whistleblowers than any other presidents combined. The Biden administration has not really been friendly to Assange or the Assange case. And look, as much as you and I might like to think, that the Assange case is so important that it’s a burning issue for many Americans.

Advertisement

The reality is, is that it really wasn’t. Many Americans don’t even recall much of who he was and most of what Americans knew seemed to be based on the propaganda and misinformation that kept floating around from our own press, distorting the case, which is again why your book is, really, it’s just fundamental to understanding the case.

If anybody wants to understand the backstory of what happened in this case and what, what, what we were up against in terms of press freedoms, not just the case against Assange, but the press itself. Your book is a primer on this. Your book is a, is a one stop shop, The Guilty of Journalism, Political Case Against Julian Assange.

But Kevin, how much of this do you think was, that this is an election year? I’m, I’m leaning towards not much of it, although it may be some crumbs for some of the First Amendment people on, on some side, on some fence somewhere regarding election 2024, but it seems like that there were other issues that maybe led the government to play this hand.Kevin Gosztola.

Kevin Gosztola: I don’t think that the upcoming election mattered too much. Right. I could see officials in the Biden White House or the wider administration being uncomfortable with the idea of putting a journalist on trial or a publisher on trial. However, Biden called Julian Assange a high tech terrorist when he was vice president.

Advertisement

Yes. And Donald Trump, his only use for WikiLeaks was when he could reference emails from her campaign from Hillary Clinton’s campaign and attack his opponent. But he doesn’t have anything from WikiLeaks to attack Joe Biden this round, he didn’t in 2020, and he had no interest in seeing it through. He told, he apparently told Judge Andrew Napolitano.

That he was going to pardon Edward Snowden and Julian Assange, in the final days of his presidency before Joe Biden was inaugurated. That would have been January, 2021. And then he let people like GOP Senator Marco Rubio and Mitch McConnell get to him and frighten the bejesus out of him that they were going to vote for impeachment.

So then he would have to deal with that. And both Assange and Snowden did not get their pardons. So I don’t believe electoral politics had anything to do with this. It is the appeal hearing. It’s also the pressure of a close ally, Australia, that ultimately gets this done. Kevin Rudd is a former prime minister for Australia, and he traveled to Washington D.

C. not long ago, this is according to Jen Robinson, who was Julian Assange’s Australia attorney, and he was there aggressively demanding that the Biden White House end this case.

Advertisement

Mickey Huff: So that’s extraordinary. Australia, the Australian government ended up playing a pretty key role. I know that there was criticism, Over the years of various parties not seeming to do enough, but a lot of this stuff to Kevin Gstola, happens behind closed doors, right?

And we don’t always get to see or hear the things that are happening. One thing that we, we, we do know is that, the many committed folks, journalists, people who are First Amendment enthusiasts in reality, not just abstractly, People that support for us, press freedoms. I know we had Project Censored have been unwavering in our support for Assange going all the way back to Chelsea Manning days.

And you’ve been covering these issues since then. Kevin Gosztola. What do you think is next for these discussions around the Assange case? Obviously, there needs to be a lot of personal healing and he needs time to be with, with family and reintegrate he’s, he’s suffered immensely over the last five years, Justin Belmarsh, let alone prior to that, what can you say, do you think, moving forward here?

What, what might we see coming, in, in the next month, month or two over summer? And of course, our press freedom groups, you know, really going to rally around this and maybe use some of this momentum. There are there are other journalists and other people and other publishers around the world less high profile than Assange that need need help and support and need need a bigger platform.

Advertisement

So Kevin Gosztola, maybe your thoughts on things moving forward about what we might see out of this case. Positive news.

Kevin Gosztola: Absolutely. Very quickly here, looking ahead, part of the plea deal was the U. S. government making a commitment, and they put this in writing, that there will be no charges brought against Julian Assange going forward for any publications before this plea deal.

So that’s gold. And it means he can’t get in trouble for the Vault 7 materials from the CIA, and it means he also can’t get in trouble for any of the campaign emails the DNC or the Clinton campaign emails that were published if they wanted to say that was a crime. So what I think people should, be focused on is ensuring everyone knows about this history.

I’m pleased to say that I wrote a book that will now be a history book. It’s not something I need to go around waving and warning people of what’s to come. It’s the past. And so people will have to educate themselves on this history and then find a way to use it in a manner that can help prevent a future Assange case, a similar Assange case type case because we need Espionage Act reform.

Advertisement

We need a reporter’s shield law. And I’ll just conclude here. I know I only have like a few seconds, but I just want to quickly roll call and thank the people who gave me a platform regularly to discuss this Assange case. Breakthrough news, Scott Horton’s radio show, status coup with Jordan Sheraton, Project Censored.

And these shows were spaces that I could turn to. There were a lot of progressive media shows that didn’t invite me or welcome me, but these were shows that cared about Assange support, independent media like these shows.

Mickey Huff: Yeah. Thanks. Kevin Gosztola. That’s very important to note because it wasn’t just the establishment press that had a bizarre hypocritical stance on a lot with what’s happening with Assange.

There were even some press freedom groups and there were even progressive outlets that just couldn’t be bothered with Assange because they believe the misinformation. They believed the smear campaigns against him and they wanted to distance themselves from it. But, you know, I think, I think that, the lot of us that supported the First Amendment, that supported press freedom, and supported Julian Assange, I think that we’ve been vindicated here by, by this recent outcome.

Advertisement

And it came at a high cost and a high price. And I want people to know that when we sit here and celebrate, The fact that Julian Assange has been freed from Belmarsh prison and is in Australia and back in his home country. That came at a very steep price. And Kevin, you write about that in your book, Guilty of Journalism.

You write about the many things that Assange endured. And again, without, you know, getting too listy, maybe you can remind, and we have a couple minutes left here, maybe you can remind some of our listeners of, of exactly some of the kind of treatment that Assange, you really withstood. And, and I wanted to end by reminding our listeners about a few really, really important cases and things that we know about because of Julian Assange, Kevin Gosztola.

Kevin Gosztola: Well, yeah. So, Julian Assange was in some form of arbitrary detention for the last 14 years. He spent around seven years in, nearly seven years in the, in prison. London Embassy, Ecuador’s London Embassy, and then he was in Belmarsh prison for five years, and he was in solitary confinement conditions for like 23 hours a day.

He’s had sunlight deprivation, sensory deprivation, essentially. This has done incredible damage to Julian Assange. But then you look, you look at some of the examples of what WikiLeaks brought to us. And it’s, I believe, I’ll just focus on one incredible example that people will understand right now as the United States protects the Israeli government from accountability.

Advertisement

You find in the WikiLeaks cables Examples of the Bush administration and the Obama administration interfering in European courts so that CIA agents and U. S. soldiers are not prosecuted for war crimes, you find cover ups, blocking of investigations into the deaths of people who are journalists or, individuals who were tortured.

And so, that’s something we should take away, is that WikiLeaks was about accountability and justice. I don’t know if WikiLeaks will be functioning again now that Julian Assange is free, if we’ll be seeing more leaks. Leaks on the war on Gaza, leaks on the war in Ukraine, I would love to see those. But whatever might happenyou know, there were these shows like yours that invited me to discuss this case, if I could quickly one, there’s a couple I left out.

So Lee camp has had me on, I need to give credit and, Katie helper and some other people out there were good, at inviting me on their shows. And I just, I just want people who have listened to me, give these updates to know other colleagues of ours that did care about giving space to this regularly.

There’s a lot of progressive media shows that did not follow this case or care what was happening to Julia and Assange.

Advertisement

Mickey Huff: Yeah. And that’s the part that is very unfortunate, but, I think it’s right to call, you know, to call attention to the sources, to the spaces that really were dedicated to this issue, including people at Mint Press News and Menard Adly and Alan McLeod and Loki, obviously to Consortium News, Jolaria, of course, your colleague, John Curiaco.

And others. I mean, there’s there’s a long list of people that supported, Assange. But to me, it’s, it’s again, it was mystifying to see how many were afraid of the case or didn’t get the case. Well, it’s good for us, Kevin, and it’s good for Julian Assange that he is now a free person and the U. S.

government has, has basically, I mean, look, let’s just say it. The, the U. S. government didn’t come out looking great in this case. And, I think they took, they, they took a defeat. They, they, they, they really didn’t win this case. I mean, I know that a lot of damage is done, but it is also true, Kevin Gosztola, that, that the U.

S. government didn’t win this case.

Advertisement

We’ve got an internet connection hiccup, but I’ll let it work itself out. So it is true that the U. S. government is conceding defeat in this case. They did not win this case.

Kevin Gosztola: Yeah, I’ll just quickly say, I don’t think there’s any winners. Yeah. Other than the fact that Julian Assange wins because he still has his life, you know?

He’s not dead. But beyond that, there are no winners. And so perhaps that’s why they were able to reach a plea deal, because in the end, you know, they, they both had a shared interest of finding a way out. You had, you had basically Julian Assange is going to fight for press freedom. United States government is going to fight for the national security agencies that want revenge.

And in the end, they, they basically looked and said, well, for either of us to get those things, it’s going to probably be four or five years from now before we reach that point. So let’s just settle. Let’s just accept that, you know, it was almost like you get to the end of a match and they go, All right, good game.

Advertisement

Let’s just be done here. And then they go their separate ways.

Mickey Huff: Yeah, except they’re playing with people’s lives. They’re playing with major press freedom principles, things that we really, really live by. Kevin Gosztola, it’s always, wonderful to have you on the program for your updates and your great reporting.

And in this case, it was actually, great to have you on to celebrate the freedom of Julian Assange. And I, I know that, I know of few other folks that were as invested in this case as you. And so I know that you’re really. You’re, you’re delighted. I know that he is now free and of course we’ll still be following the case and following what’s going on with Assange.

The chilling effect, Kevin Gosztola, is still out there, right? The chilling effect against people who are leakers and whistleblowers. Even though Assange has now walked free, he paid a heavy price. And I think that people will think that the people will not be ignorant to that. Kevin Gosztola.

Advertisement

Kevin Gosztola: Yeah, this chilling effect is real and people should look at examples that are going to come here in the future of the US government trying to define who is and is not a journalist.

I maintain that it does matter. Julian Assange is a journalist. I open my book, those are the first words. Julian Assange is a journalist. I hear from the civil liberties crowd that it doesn’t matter because the first amendment just protects acts of journalism. But to me, conceding that the US government has some kind of a point that he is not a journalist that he exists in some gray area opened us up to this case in the first place, because we were then pulled into this area where they could claim that their prosecution under the espionage act.

Somehow doesn’t threaten the first amendment because Julian Assange is not a journalist. And so if we had just all agreed that he was a journalist from the beginning, we would have been in a stronger position to fight for Julian Assange. Anyways, we’re here and I’m very pleased and proud that this comes to an end that the saga of 14 years it it ends a chapter in my life But we’re talking about Julian Assange who is the important person here and it brings an important Chapter of his life to an end and now as the judge said to him who I was actually astounded wished him a happy birthday You don’t get that from us judges usually but yeah, she also said I hope peace is restored for you.

Yeah, and so that’s the great thing here that peace has been restored for Julian Assange And he can have whatever life he would like after this it begins with recovery It begins with taking care of his own health and then we’ll see what comes from that I look forward to whatever Julian Assange still has to offer this world

Advertisement

Mickey Huff: That’s the voice of Kevin Gosztola at thedissenter.org, author of Guilty of Journalism, the Political Case Against Julian Assange. Kevin Gosztola, always wonderful to have you on and a pleasure to celebrate Julian Assange’s freedom with you today. Thanks for all of your important work.

Below is a Rough Transcript of the Interview with Kate Horgan, Reagan Haynie, and Shealeigh Voitl

Mickey Huff: Welcome back to the Project Censored Show on Pacifica Radio. I’m your host, Mickey Huff. In this segment of the program, we welcome three authors from Project Censored that have recently contributed to the summer issue of The Progressive magazine. Last week we had on Norman Stockwell, Andy Lee Roth, Mischa Geracoulis.

We talked a lot about the special contents here. It’s really something that such a prominent, political and historical magazine like The Progressive took on the issue of media literacy in the summer of this election year. As you know, folks that listen to this program, we’re always harping about critical media literacy education and what we can do to be more informed, to work, to be more meaningfully, civically engaged.

And, the three people that I have joining me right now pen to stellar piece on “Navigating the Digital Democracy.” We are joined by Kate Horgan website design and media assistant at Project Censored and a member of the Media Revolution Collective co authoring The Media and Me: A Guide to Critical Media Literacy for Young People.

Advertisement

We are also joined by Reagan Haynie Project Censored social media manager. Her work has been featured in the Project’s State of the Free Press Top 25 Censored News Stories list and in the Junk Food News chapters. And last but certainly not least, we’re joined by Shealeigh Voitl again. Welcome back to the program.

Shealeigh is the digital and print editor at Project Censored and her writing has been featured in Truthout, The Progressive, Ms. Magazine, and more. Kate, Reagan, Shealeigh, welcome to the Project Censored Show. Thanks for having us.

Reagan Haynie: Yeah, happy to be here.

Mickey Huff: It’s a delight to have the three of you on. And in addition to having the pleasure of working with you all at the Project on critical media literacy issues, social media issues, so many different things.

Advertisement

You three collaborated for a wonderful piece, a very important piece, called “Navigating the Digital Democracy: Social Media has Power to Influence Voters.” And of course you can learn more at progressive. org, but let’s start with you, Kate Horgan. Maybe, maybe you can give us a little overview, of what this article is about and what some of the main concepts are.

And we’ll, we’ll go around and hear from, from all of you, repeatedly throughout the segment. Kate Horgan.

Kate Horgan: Yeah, absolutely. I think first and foremost, we were really just honored and excited to be a part of this collaboration with the, with The Progressive. You know, I think a lot of this stemmed from a series that we’ve been able to start at Project Censored called Critical Media Literacy in Action, which is a great social media series that kind of takes a critical media literacy lens at headlines and, you know, current media content for, for young people.

That’s where a lot of people are getting their information nowadays. And yeah, we kind of used it as a, a segue to, to write this article. I think Reagan was kind of the mastermind behind critical media literacy in action series, if you want to talk about it a little.

Advertisement

Reagan Haynie: Yeah, so, yeah, as Mickey mentioned, I’m the social media manager at Project Censored, and I really wanted all three of us really wanted to focus our efforts on helping people be able to engage with social media and news in a more productive manner, in a more critical manner, so instead of just interacting with the news through a normal media literacy lens, like enacting with it, through a critical lens.

So, being able to, you know, decipher between good news sources and bad news sources, you know, look beyond just what they’re reporting on, like who is reporting on it, where are they getting their funding, things like that. And, so yeah, since we’ve started the series, we’ve worked with journalists like Alan MacLeod, Kevin Gosztola is going to be in an upcoming episode, but we just, we focus on framing, language, the issue of passive voice, things like that.

And all of that can be found on our social media accounts. So yeah, check it out if you want.

Mickey Huff: And so Shealeigh let’s bring you into the conversation here too. This is an interesting approach. So we, it’s not a protectionist approach to media literacy where we’re fear mongering or finger wagging at the youth, right?

Advertisement

Facebook is dangerous. X is dangerous. It’s a cesspool for hatred. You know, and again, many things can be simultaneously true. The technologies that we have, our tools, they can be used for good. They can be used for not so good. But again, some of the things that you all point out in the article, while, while, while pointing out some of the downsides.

Some of the censorship, things like shadow banning, you all can talk a little bit more about that. You also do focus on the fact that, yeah, well, guess what, particularly among young people, social media platforms are a place where, well, people are getting news and information. I mean, that’s just the reality.

That’s, that’s what’s happening. Those are the behaviors. And so, rather than finger wag and shame people for these practices, maybe it’s a better idea to educate them about how things are happening, why maybe they’re happening, maybe clue people into some of the things that they’re missing that might really matter to them so they understand that media literacy is an issue for them, too.

It’s something for everyone. We need to be teaching everyone these kinds of skills. Shealeigh, talk a little bit about some of that.

Advertisement

Shealeigh Voitl: Yeah, I mean, we use, you know, these apps every day, multiple times a day. But I think many of us don’t even realize why we’re seeing the content we’re seeing, and that’s coming from three digital natives who have used the internet, like, practically our whole lives, so we’re sort of, you know, intuitive about it, so we feel as though, you know, we have full control over the curation of our for you page or our discover page. And, you know, that’s not necessarily the case. You know, social media algorithms are specifically designed to prioritize user engagement to boost advertising revenue. And that means that, you know, extreme political content or sort of controversial topics are more likely to be amplified.

And so when we’re coming up on any election, you know, it’s important that, you know, everyone participating in that system understands why they’re seeing the content they’re seeing on their feeds, and how to make sense of all of that. And, you know, not everything on social media, you know, is inherently untrustworthy, but, there’s always something more to consider, when you’re coming across political content anywhere, but especially on these social media platforms.

Mickey Huff: Yeah, so we need again, I don’t get the quote Ronald Reagan very often, but the trust, but verify, sentiment springs to springs to mind, you know, when even he was seeing things happening in his administration that he didn’t realize or want to acknowledge were true. But in fact, were. Rare, rare instance of presidential apologies around those things, but it has been 40 years.

So, but we have our work cut out for us. Because we have more and more people, particularly young people, getting information on these social media platforms. They’re owned by these private big tech companies for profit that also have contracts with the government for other things, other reasons.

Advertisement

And of course, with the whole lap around fake news and during the Trump years and how that all got off leash and weaponized and, you know, mis and disinformation became a sort of a rallying cry among Democrats again, having these issues being turned into partisan issues is even more problematic.

Right, where one party’s claiming that it has the truth on its side and everything else is fake news. I mean, we can get into some of that. But maybe Kate, we can go to you. We can certainly go go around. What are some of the ways that that that whole fake news moral panic was used to usher in these Trojan horses as they might be called ways to curate the ways to curate the information?

We want to squelch disinformation. We want to prevent people from seeing bad information before it goes viral around the world kind of thing, right? So what are some effort, what are some ways that social media companies were surreptitiously trying to squelch in this kind of, these kinds of posts? I know we, you talk about shadow banning and I know you talk about algo speak, you know, algorithmic speak.

Kate, maybe you can talk a little bit about this and we can go around.

Advertisement

Kate Horgan: Yeah, absolutely, Mickey. I think you brought up a great point at, you know, in the era of Trump in the era of misinformation, disinformation, it did ramp up a lot of content moderation online. There’s, you know, all of a sudden a huge volume of content circulating that was spreading a lot of , you know, what was co opted is like fake news in some ways. But this brought about this kind of push for automated content by, moderation, because this is a way for social media platforms to, they don’t have to rely on human beings. They can deal with a large amount of content relatively quickly.

But, you know, this, this is pointing to a lot of different problems because when you have an automated system, that’s owned by big private corporations, they’re dictating what is deemed appropriate or not appropriate, what’s allowed and not allowed online. And we, when we put that power in the hands of a few large private corporations, I think history has shown us that that doesn’t end up very well.

And not only that, but automated content moderation, These are AI. These are, you know, digital technologies that are flawed. They’re made by, they’re made by people, and they’re reflecting the flaws of society at large, and you know, they’re not perfect in detecting what’s appropriate, what’s deemed harmful, you know, they, they have a hard time understanding nuance, they’re, they can be flawed, they’re not always consistent, so, when we’re looking at it in the scope of an election year, that makes it very kind of dicey, for what are we seeing online, this is heavily influenced by, imperfect technology.

Mickey Huff: Yeah, Reagan, you wanted to come in here, Reagan Haynie.

Advertisement

Reagan Haynie: Yeah. I also just wanted to point out that, it’s not just AI that’s monitoring like the disinformation and misinformation. I know the, The Intercept came out a few years ago and reported on the DHS leaks, talking about how the government has direct access to filter what they deemed to be misinformation and disinformation.

And, we also have like Alan MacLeod reported on at, at MintPress, the, the involvement, the direct involvement of, you know, former CIA and Mossad agents at big tech companies like Meta, like Google. So there’s really, there’s, there’s a whole plethora of reasons why, the monitoring of disinformation happens and how it happens.

And yeah, our, our government is certainly involved in that too.

Mickey Huff: And the devil is of course in the details and you all right here. Shealeigh Voitl, you can, maybe you can come in too, and, or anyone, but you also, you specifically write about something, and we’ve done, you know, we’ve covered this at The Project in the past, in 2023, GLAAD, the activist group gave TikTok, Facebook, and Instagram, YouTube and X, formerly Twitter, low or failing scores in its social media safety index, right?

Advertisement

And saying that the platform’s content moderation practices don’t do enough to keep users safe from hate speech or harassment, particularly around LGBTQ plus users. Shealeigh, do you want to jump in here and then we’ll go to Kate?

Shealeigh Voitl: Yeah, you know, I think, yeah, I think that this is where critical media literacy plays a very big, you know, role.

These things are so important to understand how social media platforms are, deliberately sort of, you know, influencing how we interpret not only news stories, but all kinds of information that we see online. So as much as a cool resource as you know, these apps can be for, building community and learning and engaging with things that you may not have previously been exposed to.

It can also fight against that in many ways. And have the opposite effect and I know Kate, has something that she wanted to share as well.

Advertisement

Kate Horgan: Yeah, I mean, I think I was just going to elaborate on that in that we’re seeing a lot of social justice movements, political content. It’s being reflected online, from what we’re seeing in the streets around us.

And that has particular importance when it has to do with marginalized groups. LGBTQ community being one of them. There has been numerous different studies that have come out, the Conversation, put out a piece when they were talking about, automated content moderation disproportionately affects marginalized communities, during the Black Lives Matter movement, there was, TikTok was flagging people for having the word black in their bios or in their content, and the same goes for people in the LGBTQ community, And this kind of this speaks to something that we talked about in the article, I think you mentioned earlier, Mickey of shadow banning, which is this kind of covert way for social media companies to hide pretty much information.

It’s less of an explicit, active censorship, but it’s a way for these organizations to have plausible deniability that they didn’t explicitly delete. But they’re still deeming this content sensitive in a way that is not explicitly violating their con their content violations, but enough for them to kind of push it away.

So, you know, if someone’s scrolling on their For You page, you’re expecting that the algorithm’s going to show you people you’re following, issues that you’re interested in, but the reality is you’re not getting the full picture painted for you from your For You page because there are things that are not explicitly being communicated that they are censoring, in a lot of different ways.

Advertisement

And that does disproportionately affect marginalized communities and marginalized social justice issues.

Mickey Huff: So this is clearly a media literacy, a critical media literacy issue. It’s clearly a teachable moment. Seemingly, we were talking a little bit about shadow banning, excuse me, as one of the ways in which these, tech companies, big tech companies, social media companies, Meta, for example, that owns Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp, how they’re able to, well, sort of throttle down things that people are posting, and the interesting thing about shadow banning is that you may be posting things to social media accounts and be unaware that because of what you’re posting and because of the content that you are algorithmically being Sort of disappeared or rendered more invisible or your reach into that digital space is extraordinarily curtailed unbeknownst to you, right?

That’s the shadow. The shadow part of the banning. Is that many people are unaware that this is happening. And I know Reagan Haynie, you wanted to come in there at the, at the end of the last segment and, and chime in. So please feel free to come in there. And we also want to talk a little bit more about algorithms, algospeak, and, we also want to talk about, well, a few other things. You’ve got quite a number of things in the article. So Reagan, let’s go to you.

Reagan Haynie: Yeah, no, just on the issue of algorithms and the issue of, you know, suppressing information. This issue got so much worse recently this year, right as we were beginning to draft this piece, Meta updated its newsworthy allowance policy, which some of our listeners might remember.

Advertisement

But this was essentially an automatic rollout of this policy where users were not notified. But Meta had automatically adjusted user settings, everybody’s settings, to limit political content from accounts that you were not following. And if anyone uses Instagram or Facebook, you probably know that, you know,

This affects a big percentage of the information that you’re consuming. And again, the timing is not, you know, it’s, it’s particularly suspicious given what’s going on in Gaza and the way in which young people are being radicalized through social media and through learning about what’s happening on the ground in Palestine.

So, and also what’s happening with TikTok. So there’s definitely, it seems like there’s like some underlying intentions and reasoning behind this, this policy. Yeah,

Mickey Huff: You mentioned TikTok and we’re talking about shadow banning and so TikTok has been getting some special attention, right? This year, it’s, it’s owned by a Chinese company, ByteDance.

Advertisement

It was part of legislation that was actually funding arms, to, to some hotspots around the world, where it would be banned by the end of the year if it, if it didn’t divest. The specific attention to TikTok was curious because even as Mitt Romney and others said out loud, the reason they were targeting TikTok was because they couldn’t curate the content about Gaza.

Shealeigh, Shealeigh Voitl, do you want to come in here or Kate have a few things to say about some of that?

Shealeigh Voitl: Yeah, I think this is why, you know, young people are frustrated with the system, you know, we’re getting these messages, and, you know, immediately contradicting these messages, you know, obviously the Biden administration was all for, this bill, but still continues to use TikTok to promote, you know, the campaign, so it’s, you know, it’s frustrating, I think, when you’re getting that content and you feel talked down to in a lot of ways, you know, this is, you know, your connection to, you know, as, as, as, as Kate was mentioning, communities that maybe you aren’t a part of in your real life, that, you know, online spaces are so sacred in that way.

And so being, you know, TikTok being maybe stripped away from you, it’s frustrating because it’s an issue of censorship, but it’s also frustrating when leaders are like, okay, well, you know, in the meantime, we can use it to, you know, promote our, you know, messages that maybe you don’t necessarily agree with anyway.

Advertisement

So, it’s a tricky thing, but, I think, you know, having that you know, where we don’t get that transparency from people, where hopefully with CML in action with this article trying to allow people, the young people, especially the tools to, kind of discern, be discerning consumers of that information.

Mickey Huff: Yeah. And there’s, there’s also certain topics. And again, back to the LGBT community. Q plus, issue, issues. We have a couple, there’s a couple specific things that you write about, you all write about in the article. One is KOSA, the Kids Online Safety Act and the other, of course, we’ve covered the project before the Cyber Security and Infrastructure Security Agency Act or CISA, right?

Can any of you speak a little bit to those? Because again, it’s another effort to seemingly keep people safe or to address safety issues that maybe ends up backfiring or has other consequences? Unintended? Can any of you speak to that?

Reagan Haynie: Yeah, ealeighey also might have something to say about this too. But KOSA is the Kids Online Safety Act.

Advertisement

And, Mickey, you pretty much, described it well. It’s, it was disguised as a policy or a piece of legislation that was being implemented to protect kids online, and to protect them from certain kinds of information, but what that piece of legislation did was, really did was it suppressed content online that was discussing, issue or content related to abortion, LGBTQIA issues, mental health issues, sex education issues.

So, you know, when you hear that, it’s really hard to understand, like, what, what are we protecting kids from? Like, none of this is dangerous information. So yeah, I mean, there’s clearly something else going on here.

Mickey Huff: And you also cite a professor at UCLA Sarah Roberts, basically saying that this this kind of automated content moderation misses nuances.

Right? And so, again, let’s even pretend that there’s noble effort or intent behind protection, right, of, of kids and so forth. That’s, that’s not a, that’s not a light issue. But look, it’s also inadvertently, let’s, I’m, I’m being pretty diplomatic there, but it is having negative consequences. It is having a censorious effect.

Advertisement

The degree to which that people have figured out online that they don’t talk about, they don’t talk about sex work in the way, they don’t call people sex workers, they call them accountants, something. And, and, and Kate, I know you might want to maybe talk to this too. This, this algo speak or algorithm speak, a means by which people try to circumvent the automated sensors or shadow bands.

Kate, can you maybe talk about that? Or, and Shealeigh, you might want to chime in, but go ahead, Kate.

Kate Horgan: Yeah, absolutely. I think it’s really reflective of, you know, also some powerful organizing that’s happened by young people through online communities, currently. I mean, algo speak is really a way to circumvent, like you said, Mickey, these algorithms and words, phrases, topics that might be otherwise flagged, whether they’re told explicitly that they’re flagged or not explicitly.

This is kind of relating back to shadow banning where people might not know if they’re getting, you know, pushed off the algorithm. So they’ve developed ways to communicate with each other and communicate these topics in ways that will actually reach each other. So for example, in the pro Palestine movement currently, a lot of people are using the symbol of a watermelon to discuss Palestine.

Advertisement

And that is a way for them to not have their content censored or policed. If you were talking about sex work people will call themselves accountants, the word lesbian, le$bean was like a, it had like a dollar sign in it, and these are just different, like, phrases, words, ways for people to kind of get around this, but I think this is reflective too of something that’s been around for years, I mean, when we look at the history of the LGBTQ movement, there was a time in history where they had to speak, like, we had to speak to each other in a way of asking, are you a friend of Dorothy?

You know, you couldn’t outright come and come out and ask someone if, you know, they were gay. And so we see this in a lot of different social justice areas where we have to kind of work around these systems to get our messages across, but it’s definitely it’s taking a new form when it’s online and when it’s being, kind of controlled and co opted by these, these few private large organizations.

Mickey Huff: And then, of course, the another issue you bring up is, and again, I mentioned the professor from UCLA, the automated content moderation, she goes on to say that content moderation quote requires linguistic and cultural competencies that machines cannot achieve. That seems to be an extraordinary limitation that many of our tech overlords don’t want to talk about in the open.

You know, I’m reminded of the meme that’s all over online now of the person pressed against the wall with this big tuba, you know, like covering their face and it’s like companies and unwanted AI and they’re just blasting it in your face. It’s like everywhere you turn, you know, your AI is there to help.

Advertisement

You know, but, but again, again, and that’s not to say that there aren’t positive uses for AI. But the critical media literacy default is to be skeptical of some of these things. Shealeigh Voitl, maybe you want to come in and talk a little bit about some of these and related matters?

Shealeigh Voitl: Yeah, I mean, yes, optical is right.

I think that that that is, it’s deserving of our skepticism. And I think also, you know, like even just going back to some of the legislation that’s, you know, seeking to regulate content online, you know, the problem with it is that, you know, it’s vague. And it leads to, you know, censorship of perfectly legal and constitutionally protected speech.

So, so when you see, you know, sort of it getting growing and growing, growing in terms of, you know, what we’re not able to see online, perhaps in the near future, it’s scary. And I think it’s, you know, scary to people to whom obviously these spaces are. As I said before, very, sacred and important spaces for identity, for community, for education, all very, very important things to consider, but yeah, these, these, these, these pieces of legislation in particular are, are, are deliberately vague, and, and that’s a problem.

Advertisement

Mickey Huff: It certainly is and can be and we need to be alert to it. We have only a few minutes left in this segment. Now the time has flown by. So I just want to put it to each of you, Kate, Reagan, Shealeigh, your final thoughts based on some of your work on this article and anything particularly that you, you know, any advice or any particular things you want to point out as some of the things that you’re writing about really pertain to the election year.

I mean, we’re coming up here on another presidential election when people crawl out of the woodwork to pay attention, but the world keeps getting weirder and weirder. In between those presidential elections, and I’m not always sure people keep up in on the media literacy front. So, just here’s some some final thoughts from each of you.

Kate Horgan.

Kate Horgan: Yeah, absolutely. I think using social media as a tool is something that I think we can do more. You know, as we’ve said over and over again, critical media literacy is not about being critical. You know, you can use it also to spread messages. I think algo speak and the things we talked about.

Advertisement

These are great examples of ways that people are able to communicate their messages to spread awareness about political issues, social justice issues that matter. So, you know, just as much as social media and AI is scary. Don’t be afraid to also use it to your advantage to, to interact with your community to, you know, engage in political discourse and, you know, be civically engaged.

I think it’s a powerful tool. We have to recognize that as well.

Mickey Huff: And knowledge certainly is power, particularly the kind of knowledge that one gets from understanding critical media literacy and how these platforms actually work, for whom, which voices may be excluded. I mean, can really spur people to seek out, you know, other kinds of information.

Reagan Haynie, final thoughts from you in this segment?

Advertisement

Reagan Haynie: Yeah, I think, something that I just want to drill in is to just, I know things seem really bleak right now in the world and also online, and I think it’s really, I guess tempting to lose hope and to give up and, you know, there’s so many barriers put into place to prevent, progress and to prevent action, but I think, I think it’s really important that we all, like, hold strong and, and to continue voicing our opinions and to voice our frustrations, especially online, and I was actually just talking to Kate and Shealeigh about this, but I know that there’s a lot of limitations to online activism and that a lot of people feel, are afraid of, you know, the fear of virtue signaling or being performative or whatever, but I think, and there are limitations with online activism, but I also think that there’s so much potential to spread messages and to gain support for issues like, you know, two years ago, no one, no one talked about Palestine.

No one cared about Palestine and look where we are now. You know, people even like centrist people are supporters of Palestine and are frustrated and just seeing, seeing progress happen in real time for, for causes and issues that maybe didn’t have that support later down or earlier in time, I think is, is exciting, and I just hope that people continue to be active online and,, yeah, so.

Mickey Huff: Absolutely. Shealeigh Voitl, some final thoughts from you on the segment?

Shealeigh Voitl: Yeah. Well, I think, you know, both of my colleagues, Kate and Reagan, brought up amazing points about, you know, social media being very empowering. It is. It’s, it’s an amazingly power, empowering tool, that we can use to learn so much about the world around us.

Advertisement

And then on the other side of the coin there, you know, it’s also important to have the tools, additional tools at our disposal. You know, to allow us to see some things that may not be in our best interest. And that involves, you know, learning how these algorithms work and that is unique to each platform.

You know, they’re not all the same. And you know, knowing that you might be caught in these sort of echo chambers and the further you get into that, the harder it can be to get out. Not only to be open to new information, but to find it, you know, on your feeds, you’re just not being exposed to it.

So I think just understanding how that works makes social media even more empowering. And that’s what I think we would really love young people to achieve. And I think they’re already doing that, which I think is awesome and, very inspiring.

Mickey Huff: It is. And the three of you are equally awesome and inspiring.

Advertisement

Your article is “Navigating the Digital Democracy: Social Media has Power to Influence Voters.” Kate Horgan, Reagan Haynie, Shealeigh Voitl. Thank you so much for joining us on the Project Censored Show today. It’s been a delight to talk with you. This article can be found at progressive. org. It is in the special summer issue on media literacy of The Progressive magazine.

And to learn more about our project, Project Censored, and to learn more about critical media literacy in action and our critical media literacy pedagogy and curricula, you can learn more online for free at projectcensored. org. Kate, Reagan, Shealeigh, thanks again for joining us today.

Kate Horgan: Thank you so much.

Thanks, Mickey.

Advertisement

Source link

Continue Reading
Advertisement
Click to comment

You must be logged in to post a comment Login

Leave a Reply

News

Republicans assess potential fallout for Trump from North Carolina bombshell

Published

on

Republicans assess potential fallout for Trump from North Carolina bombshell

Republicans in North Carolina and nationally are assessing the potential fallout for former President Donald Trump from a bombshell report alleging that Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson, the party’s gubernatorial nominee, posted disturbing and inflammatory statements on a forum of a pornographic website.

CNN reported Thursday that Robinson, behind an anonymous username he allegedly used elsewhere, made the comments more than a decade ago, including supporting slavery, calling himself a “black NAZI” and recalling memories of him “peeping” on women in the shower as a 14-year-old.

ABC News has not independently verified the comments were made by Robinson, and he insisted in a video posted to X prior to the story’s publication that “those are not the words of Mark Robinson.”

But Robinson, a Donald Trump ally, already has a history of incendiary remarks about Jews, gay people and others, and elections in North Carolina, one of the nation’s marquee swing states, rest on a knife’s edge, raising questions of how much the latest news will impact his race and other Republicans on the ballot with him — including the former president.

Advertisement

“I think this only heightens the level of toxicity that the Robinson campaign has, and the real question becomes, what’s the radioactive fallout at the top of the ticket along with down the ballot for Republicans here in North Carolina?” asked Michael Bitzer, the Politics Department chair at Catawba College.

“This cannot be something that the voters aren’t going to recognize and probably play more into softening the Republican support. Is it isolated only to Robinson’s campaign, or does it start to impact Trump? Does it impact other statewide executive Republicans as well? We’ll just have to wait and see, but this feels like a pretty significant event in North Carolina politics.”

MORE: Republicans step up effort to change Nebraska’s electoral vote process to benefit Trump

Robinson, who casts himself as a conservative family man and is running for North Carolina’s open governorship against Democratic state Attorney General Josh Stein, is already behind in the polls.

Advertisement
PHOTO: Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson, R-NC., speaking on the first day of the Republican National Convention, July 15, 2024, in Milwaukee. (J. Scott Applewhite/AP)

PHOTO: Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson, R-NC., speaking on the first day of the Republican National Convention, July 15, 2024, in Milwaukee. (J. Scott Applewhite/AP)

While he holds statewide office and has broad name recognition, Robinson boasts a highly controversial record, including calling the Holocaust “hogwash” and homosexuality “filth,” and he drew claims of hypocrisy when he admitted this year that he had paid for his wife to get an abortion, seemingly in contrast with his stated opposition to the procedure, which he’d previously likened to “murder” and “genocide.”

North Carolina’s gubernatorial race is still considered competitive given the state’s tight partisan divide, but Republicans in the state told ABC News they had already viewed him as trailing, and that Thursday’s report won’t help.

“He’s already got a lengthy history of publishing comments like that on the internet. These are perhaps a little more graphic. In terms of does this by itself serve as a guillotine, I don’t know. But it feels like the cumulative weight is starting to add up now,” said one North Carolina GOP strategist. “It flies in the face of everything he presents of himself publicly. So, cumulatively plus the hypocrisy of this, it’s obviously hurtful to him.”

Republicans were more divided on what it means beyond Robinson’s own candidacy.

Advertisement

North Carolina is a must-win state for Trump, and losing it would impose significant pressure on him to perform in other swing states.

Trump is already running ahead of Robinson — while polls show Robinson trailing, they also show a neck-and-neck race in the state between the former president and Vice President Kamala Harris. The main question now is whether the news depresses Republican turnout in a state where even a small nudge in turnout one way or the other can make decide the victor.

“[Robinson] was already toast. The question is if it hurts Trump, something the campaign is very worried about,” said Doug Heye, a veteran GOP strategist with experience working in North Carolina. “It doesn’t directly cost him voters, but his endorsed pick continues to be a big distraction and has no money to drive out the vote.”

“He’s a baby blue anchor around Trump’s chances in the Tar Heel State,” added Trump donor Dan Eberhart. “This is not good news for Trump’s campaign at all.”

Advertisement
PHOTO: North Carolina Lieutenant Governor Mark Robinson speaks at the Faith and Freedom Road to Majority conference at the Washington Hilton on June 21, 2024 in Washington, D.C. (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images, FILE)

PHOTO: North Carolina Lieutenant Governor Mark Robinson speaks at the Faith and Freedom Road to Majority conference at the Washington Hilton on June 21, 2024 in Washington, D.C. (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images, FILE)

Democrats are already seizing on the news to try to connect Robinson to Trump, who has repeatedly praised him, even calling him at one point “Martin Luther King on steroids.”

Kamala HQ, an X page that serves as one of the Harris campaign’s rapid response tools, posted a slate of videos featuring Trump speaking positively about Robinson.

“His campaign was toast before this story, so the real impact is on all of the Republicans who have endorsed and campaigned alongside him,” said Bruce Thompson, a North Carolina Democratic fundraiser.

However, Trump has been able to navigate his own headwinds, including felony convictions in New York, questioning Harris’ race and more to remain the leader of his party and a viable presidential candidate, leading some Republicans to doubt that Robinson’s struggles will impact the presidential campaign.

Advertisement

MORE: Uncommitted movement declines to endorse Harris, but encourages against Trump, third-party votes

“Doubt it impacts at all down-ballot,” said Dave Carney, a GOP strategist who chairs a pro-Trump super PAC.

“I don’t think it helps, but it won’t hurt,” added Sean Spicer, Trump’s first White House press secretary.

PHOTO: Mark Robinson, Lt. Governor of N.C. and candidate for Governor, delivers remarks prior to Republican presidential nominee former President Trump speaking at a campaign event at Harrah's Cherokee Center on Aug. 14, 2024 in Asheville, N.C. (Grant Baldwin/Getty Images)

PHOTO: Mark Robinson, Lt. Governor of N.C. and candidate for Governor, delivers remarks prior to Republican presidential nominee former President Trump speaking at a campaign event at Harrah’s Cherokee Center on Aug. 14, 2024 in Asheville, N.C. (Grant Baldwin/Getty Images)

Trump campaign spokesperson Karoline Leavitt sounded a confident note, saying in a statement that the former president’s team would “not take our eye off the ball.”

Advertisement

“President Trump’s campaign is focused on winning the White House and saving this country. North Carolina is a vital part of that plan. We are confident that as voters compare the Trump record of a strong economy, low inflation, a secure border, and safe streets, with the failures of Biden-Harris, then President Trump will win the Tarheel State once again,” she said.”

Still, sources familiar with the matter said the Trump campaign was bracing for a story to come out about Robinson and is planning on putting more distance between the former president and the embattled nominee Robinson — but initially did not have plans to call on him to drop out.

“He seems to not be impacted by what’s going on down-ballot underneath him,” the North Carolina Republican strategist said of Trump. “There’s no way it helps him. But does it hurt him? I don’t know, I think that’s an open question.”

Republicans assess potential fallout for Trump from North Carolina bombshell originally appeared on abcnews.go.com

Advertisement

Source link

Continue Reading

News

A Global Crackdown on Freedom of Expression

Published

on

By Robin Andersen, Nolan Higdon, and Steve Macek

According to a 2022 report by Article 19, an international organization that documents and champions freedom of expression, 80 percent of the world’s population lives with less freedom of expression today than did ten years ago. The eradication of basic freedoms and rights is partly due to the pervasive normalization of censorship. Across media platforms, news outlets, schools, universities, libraries, museums, and public and private spaces, governments, powerful corporations, and influential pressure groups are suppressing freedom of expression and censoring viewpoints deemed to be unpopular or dangerous. Unfortunately, physical assaults, legal restrictions, and retaliation against journalists, students, and faculty alike have become all too common, resulting in the suppression of dissenting voices and, more broadly, the muffling and disappearance of critical information, controversial topics, and alternative narratives from public discourse.

We collaborated with an accomplished group of international scholars and journalists to document this disturbing trend in Censorship, Digital Media and the Global Crackdown on Freedom of Expression (Peter Lang 2024). Our collective work analyzed contemporary and historical methods of censorship and anti-democratic impulses that threaten civil society, human rights, and freedoms of information and expression around the world today. The collection explains how a rising tide of political tyranny coupled with the expansion of corporate power is stifling dissent, online expression, news reporting, political debate, and academic freedom from the United States and Europe to the Global South.

Advertisement

The Assault on Press Freedom

Our volume reveals an epidemic of censorship and attacks on journalists and free speech around the globe. Although completed prior to the horrifying atrocities of October 7, 2023, in Israel, the text provides context for understanding that Israeli violence against Palestinians since October 7, including the murder of journalists, has been decades in the making. This strategy initially took hold with the assassination of the veteran Al Jazeera reporter Shireen Abu Akleh, a Palestinian-American, as she documented Israel’s occupation of Jenin. The world has now witnessed the full flowering of the Israeli-state aggression against Palestinians that led to her murder. To date, Israel has killed more than 100 media workers in Gaza, raising the concern and outrage of numerous press freedom organizations and seventy UN member states that have now called for international investigations into each one of the murders. As the International Federation of Journalists reported, “Killing journalists is a war crime that undermines the most basic human rights.”

Journalists around the globe are repeatedly targeted because their profession, which is protected constitutionally in many nations, exists to draw attention to abuses of power. Thus, it is no surprise that the rise in global censorship has entailed the targeting of journalists with violence, imprisonment, and harassment. In Russia, journalists are jailed and die in custody, as they do in Egypt, Saudi Arabia, China, and Hong Kong. In Mexico, there are “silenced zones,” controlled by a deadly collaboration between drug gangs and government corruption, where journalists are routinely killed. In 2022, Mexico was the most dangerous country for journalists outside of a war zone.

The assault on press freedom has also been normalized in self-proclaimed democracies such as the United Kingdom, where WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange has been imprisoned for more than five years, and in the United States, which has targeted Assange with espionage charges simply for promoting freedom of information. Although US presidents and other national figures often refer to the United States as “the leader of the free world,” the United States now ranks 55th in the world on the Reporters without Borders 2024 World Press Freedom Index.

Advertisement

Repression of Artists and Academics

News outlets and their workers are not the only targets of the current wave of repression. Hollywood has long been shaped—and censored—by government and corporate power. For example, our book includes a chapter on the Pentagon’s long-standing influence on Hollywood, which has resulted in the film industry abandoning production of hundreds of films deemed unacceptable by the military.

In addition to media, educators and academics are increasingly subject to repressive measures that muzzle freedom of information and expression. Scholars and institutions of higher education sometimes produce research that challenges the myths and propaganda perpetuated by those in power. And even when they don’t, autonomy from micromanagement by government authorities and private funders is a prerequisite for the integrity of scholarly research and teaching, which tends to make elites exceedingly nervous. This is why universities and academic freedom are increasingly under siege by autocratic regimes and right-wing activists from Hungary to Brazil and from India to Florida.

Alarmingly, the latest Academic Freedom Index found that more than 45 percent of the world’s population now lives in countries with an almost complete lack of academic freedom (more than at any time since the 1970s). In Brazil, the government of right-wing president Jair Bolsonaro attempted to ban education about gender and sexuality,  slashed budgets for the country’s universities, and threatened to defund the disciplines of philosophy and sociology. In 2018, Hungary’s conservative Fidesz government shut down graduate programs in gender studies, forced the country’s most prestigious university, the Central European University, to relocate to Austria, and sparked months of protests at the University of Theater and Film Arts in Budapest by making unpopular changes to the school’s board of trustees. Something similar happened in Turkey, where, since 2016, the ruling regime has suspended thousands of professors and administrators from their university posts for alleged ties to the outlawed Gülen movement and shut down upwards of 3,000 schools and universities. Meanwhile, in the United States, several Republican-controlled state legislatures have enacted draconian laws prohibiting or severely limiting teaching about race, sexuality, and gender in college classrooms. Under the influence of its arch-conservative governor, Ron DeSantis, Florida eliminated sociology as a core general education course at all of its public universities.

Advertisement

Big Tech Censorship

Censorship is nothing new, but the pervasive influence of the internet and the development of so-called artificial intelligence (AI) have created new, more nefarious opportunities to crack down on freedoms around the globe. So-called smart platforms and tools have created new forms of Big Tech control and content moderation, such as shadowbanning and algorithmic bias. Regimes have set up a form of quid pro quo with tech companies, demanding certain concessions such as removing unfavorable content in exchange for government access to otherwise private information about tech platforms’ users. For example, in the United States, tech companies depend on large government contracts and, as a result, often work with government officials directly and indirectly to censor content. Nor do they block only false or misleading content. Social media platforms have also been found to censor perfectly valid scientific speculation about the possible origin of COVID-19 and instances of obvious political satire.

These restrictive practices are at odds with Big Tech PR campaigns that trumpet the platforms’ capacity to empower users. Despite this hype, critical examination reveals that privately controlled platforms seldom function as spaces where genuine freedom of information and intellectual exchange flourish. In reality, Big Tech works with numerous national regimes to extend existing forms of control over citizens’ behaviors and expression into the digital realm. People are not ignorant of these abuses and have taken action to promote freedom across the globe. However, they have largely been met by more censorship. For example, as social media users took to TikTok to challenge US and Israeli messaging on Gaza, the US government took steps to ban the platform. Relatedly, Israel raided Al Jazeeras office in East Jerusalem, confiscated its equipment, shuttered its office, and closed down its website.

Our book also details the complex history and structures of censorship in Myanmar, Uganda, and the Philippines, and popular resistance to this oppression. To this catalog of examples, we can add India’s periodic internet shutdowns aimed at stifling protests by farmers, the blocking of websites in Egypt, and the right-wing strongman Jair Bolsonaro’s persecution of journalists in Brazil. Each of these cases is best understood as a direct result of a rise in faux populist, right-wing authoritarian politicians and political movements, whose popularity has been fostered by reactionary responses to decades of neo-liberal rule.

Advertisement

What Is to Be Done? 

Censorship is being driven not only by governments but also by an array of political and corporate actors across the ideological spectrum, from right-wing autocrats and MAGA activists to Big Tech oligarchs and self-professed liberals. Indeed, when it comes to censorship, a focus on any one country’s ideology, set of practices, or justifications for restricting expression risks missing the forest for the trees. The global community is best served when we collectively reject all attempts to suppress basic freedoms, regardless of where they emerge or how they are implemented.

To counter increasing restrictions on public discourse and the muzzling of activists, journalists, artists, and scholars, we need global agreements that protect press freedom, the right to protest, and accountability for attacks on journalists. Protection of freedom of expression and the press should be a central plank of US foreign policy. We need aggressive antitrust enforcement to break up giant media companies that today wield the power to unilaterally control what the public sees, hears, and reads. We also need to create awareness and public knowledge to help pass legislation, such as the PRESS Act, that will guarantee journalists’ right to protect their sources’ confidentiality and prevent authorities from collecting information about their activities from third parties like phone companies and internet service providers.

Moreover, widespread surveillance by social media platforms and search engines, supposedly necessary to improve efficiency and convenience, ought to be abandoned. All of us should have the right to control any non-newsworthy personal data that websites and apps have gathered about us and to ask that such data be deleted, a right that Californians will enjoy starting in 2026.

Advertisement

In addition, we should all support the efforts of organizations such as the American Association of University Professors, Article 19, and many others to fight back against encroachments on academic and intellectual freedom.

Supporters of free expression should also vigilantly oppose the ideologically motivated content moderation schemes Big Tech companies so often impose on their users.

Rather than trusting Big Tech to curate our news feeds, or putting faith in laws that would attempt to criminalize misinformation, we need greater investment in media literacy education, including education about the central importance of expressive rights and vigorous, open debate to a functioning democracy. The era of the internet and AI demonstrates the urgent need for education and fundamental knowledge in critical media literacy to ensure that everyone has the necessary skills to act as digital citizens, capable of understanding and evaluating the media we consume.

Advertisement

Source link

Continue Reading

Business

How the EU can reset foreign policy for the western Balkans

Published

on

Steven Everts makes numerous important and laudable points on the need for the EU to seriously recalibrate both its capacities and posture in foreign policy (Opinion, September 12).

It’s worth adding that in a foreign policy area on the bloc’s very borders, the EU has led the west into a dead end of failure, in which official pronouncements have never been more at variance with the on-the-ground reality.

The western Balkans is the only region in which the US consistently defers to a democratic partner’s leadership — that of the EU.

Nowhere else does the west, if united, wield greater leverage or have a wider array of policy instruments. Yet for far too long, the EU has addressed the region almost solely through its enlargement process, neglecting its foreign policy commitments — including a deterrent force in Bosnia and Herzegovina mandated by the Dayton Peace Agreement and authorised under Chapter 7 by the UN Security Council.

Advertisement

This force remains well below the brigade-strength required to pose a credible deterrent to threats to the peace and territorial integrity. In addition, the EU states it will support local authorities, who have primary responsibility to maintain a secure environment — defying the reason the mandate exists to begin with: namely to thwart attempts by local authorities to upend the peace.

The desire to maintain the fiction that the Belgrade-Pristina Dialogue is still alive compels the EU into all sorts

of contortions which in effect reward Serbia, despite allegations of Serbian involvement in recent violence, and periodic (and ongoing) threats of invasion. By straying from its original declared purpose to achieve mutual recognition between Serbia and Kosovo, as well as serving as a shield for Serbia’s authoritarian president, Aleksandar Vučić, the dialogue serves as a diversion from genuine problem- solving.

Incoming EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas has demonstrated leadership and vision for Europe and the wider west as Estonia’s prime minister, particularly with regard to the response to Russia’s war of aggression against Ukraine.

Advertisement

One hopes she will undertake the overdue task of making the policies of the EU and the wider west more consistent with the values of democracy and human dignity we proclaim to hold dear. She can begin by leading the west to a restoration of credible deterrence in the Balkans, and start to counter the backsliding of democracy long visible there.

Kurt Bassuener
Co-Founder and Senior Associate, Democratization Policy Council, Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

News

An Amazing Site With Rich History

Published

on

man

It’s early summer in Moldova, and the cherries are already ripe. Fellow journalist Marian Männi and I pick and pop them into our mouths as we follow our chosen tour guide up a hill. We are exploring Old Orhei, a famous Moldovan landmark and archaeological site. It consists of three villages: Trebujeni to the north, Butuceni to the west and Morovaia to the east. The area is built on a green field, and the Răut River runs through it.

Following the guide’s lead, we climb a hill to find one of many cave monasteries. This one is rather hidden, so most tourists miss it entirely. 

My guide showcases a cave monastery above the Răut River, where tourists rarely find their way. Author’s photo.

A picture from the inside of the cave looking out. Author’s photo.

Advertisement

The surrounding area is an unusual sight. The sloping bank of the Răut River emerges from a perfectly flat field, looking almost man-made. However, it is a natural reminder of how landscapes evolve. You can find perfect seashells on the limestone bank in a country with no coastline, much like on a sandy beach. Millions of years ago, the Răut River was part of the ancient Sarmatian Sea, just like the lands of today’s Moldova.

Scenic views of Old Orhei. One can barely see the river under the hill. Author’s photo.

My guide, Professor Sergiu Musteață, knows this site incredibly well. He is a renowned historian from Moldova and a professor at the Faculty of Philology and History at “Ion Creangă” State Pedagogical University. He has worked to educate locals about the history of Old Orhei and how to develop tourism businesses. He has also guided them in creating guesthouses and writing proposals for funding to build flushing toilets in their homes.

Old Orhei has been one of the main subjects of his research since 1996. “I know everyone in Orheiul Vechi [the Romanian version of the name]!” he laughs. He also knows all of the approximately 300 caves in the area and has personally researched many of them.

Advertisement

Professor Sergiu Musteață says that people working in Moldovan tourism need to understand that the basis of it is history and heritage. Author’s photo.

A scenic journey through unknown sites

Musteață leads us along a hidden path lined with cherry trees from an old student’s base. Researchers have been excavating this area for decades, as the unique landscape reveals layers of settlements dating back to prehistoric times.

“When we come here with students, we usually clean the neighborhood and cut the grass first,” Musteață says, pushing branches away from the path. If only tourists knew about this shortcut hidden in nature.

Professor Musteață peers through a rustic gate. Author’s photo.

Advertisement

“We have organized 20 years of summer camps for the locals during the excavations, including summer schools for local kids. Lots of students, both locals and internationals, participated!” he states emphatically.

Despite many efforts, only a few locals have made a name for themselves in the tourism sector. “I don’t know why. There is not so much interest. It should be the most prominent place among tourists,” Musteață comments.

Unlike other visitors, we walk past the Peștera cave monastery, the main tourist attraction of Old Orhei. The current underground tunnels date back to 1820. However, the caves in these limestone hills have existed since the 14th century. Orthodox monks found solitude and a place for spiritual retreat in this isolation.

“There is another cave monastery here. Locals know about it, but only a few tourists will visit it,” says Musteață. This is where we are heading.

Advertisement

We walk past the Peștera cave monastery and head off-road to find another lesser-known monastery. Author’s photo.

We walk on the bank, passing through the Church of Ascension of St. Mary. The view of the valley and fields is breathtaking. Turning left, the professor leads us onto an almost unrecognizable road downhill from the bank. Our slippers aren’t ideal footwear for this leg of the journey, but nevertheless, we climb down the limestone bank to a land of grazing cows.

Musteață guides us onto a new path, leading down the limestone bank. Author’s photo.

After walking, we climb again to another obscure cave monastery of Old Orhei, built above the Răut’s waters. There isn’t a single soul up here now, but historically, monks isolated themselves in this cave. As a result, the monastery is covered in signs of human habitation.

The church’s facade is engraved with Slavonian writing: “This church was built by the slave of Bosie, pircalab (Chief Magistrate) of Orhei, together with his wife and his children, to cherish God, to forgive his sins.”

Advertisement

The professor shows us around. We see where the monks would sleep and where they built their fireplace. All the caves are in remarkably good shape, with few signs of dripping rocks.

We view the monastery’s exterior, which has endured for centuries. Author’s photo.

This structure often goes unexplored by tourists. “It’s a bit too far and difficult to access. That’s why people don’t know much about it and wouldn’t end up here,” Musteață explains.

Musteață teaches us about the monastery. Author’s photo.

Advertisement

On the whole, Old Orhei is a fascinating, history site. And its antiquity is richer than one might expect.

Mankind has loved this region since ancient times

The surroundings have been populated since the Paleolithic era due to good location — the river protects Old Orhei from three sides. The land is suitable for agriculture and flowing water is nearby.

Archaeological findings suggest that the Getians built some fortresses and settlements in this region during the 4th to 3rd centuries BCE, taking advantage of the natural fortifications provided by the rocky outcroppings and riverbanks.

In the 14th century CE, Old Orhei became part of the medieval state of Moldova (Țara Moldovei) after the collapse of the Golden Horde, a Mongol-Tatar state that controlled this territory as well.

Advertisement

After the Tatar period in the 12th to 14th centuries, an Orthodox Christian community developed during medieval times. Political stability and the protective embrace of nature made Old Orhei an important center. Moldovan hero and ruler Stephen the Great, whose rule lasted from 1457 to 1504, appointed his uncle, Peter III Aaron, to rule there. The area was fortified with strong defensive walls and towers.

Life in Old Orhei slowly faded in the 17th century. The administration moved to neighboring New Orhei, and gradually, the monastic community began to disappear. The last monks are believed to have left Old Orhei at the beginning of the 19th century. By this time, many monastic communities in the region faced significant challenges due to political changes, invasions and pressures from the expanding Ottoman Empire. The decline in monastic life at Old Orhei was part of a broader trend affecting many religious sites in the region.

At the beginning of the 20th century, a new Virgin Mary Church was built atop the bank near a cave monastery to revitalize the area’s spiritual significance. It serves as a symbol of Old Orhei’s continued religious heritage, even after the original monastic community dispersed.

Though the region’s religiosity remains, Old Orhei’s authenticity, unfortunately, has recently declined.

Advertisement

The loss of authenticity in a historic land

Many historical sites in Old Orhei face the problem of random preservation efforts, which are not concerned with preserving the site’s authentic look.

In 2023, the road from Butuceni village in the Cultural-Natural Reserve was asphalted, which led to an investigation by the Ministry of Culture. It ruined the village’s authenticity but gave locals more logistical freedom.

Climbing on the bank, we notice a brand-new red-roofed dwelling that, from a logical viewpoint, should not have been built in the reserve. But there it is, like the newly constructed path to the Peștera cave monastery and the asphalted road in Butuceni village.

This modern tampering is one thing preventing Moldova from having its first United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) World Heritage Site.

Advertisement

“There is too much industrialization in a place where authenticity is worshiped,” Musteață laments. The Old Orhei Reserve has been on the UNESCO tentative list for years but is not moving forward any time soon. “I don’t think there is much hope at the moment,” Musteață admits honestly.

The situation saddens him. He and other researchers have worked for years to put this site on the world map as a part of humanity’s historical cradle, to no avail.

“The landscape and the density of settlements since prehistory is special. You can see the changes in this part of the world, moving from East to West. The Golden Horde, the Islamic period, Christians — there is a huge variety of artifacts describing how people lived in this area,” Musteață explains.

Life has moved on from this relic. The Orthodox Church still holds significant power in the small country of Moldova, but only traces of the glory the church once had in Old Orhei remain. In the 1940s, the Soviet Union started excavations in the region, which also disrupted the old sites; they built a new road through the Golden Horde citadel and cut it in half.

Advertisement

“A historic road should go around the citadel. It’s completely doable,” Musteață says.

The professor feels that many of Moldova’s stories remain untold, even that of such a landmark as Old Orhei. “It is frustrating. We need to tell our story!” Musteață suggests.

He thinks the country itself should put Orhei at the top of the list of tourist destinations in Moldova. After all, it’s the most important tourist site in the country. “It should be declared a state priority, a national strategy,” he says. “People working in this field in Moldova need to understand that the basis of tourism is history and heritage.”

That is another reason why Moldova’s Old Orhei is not on the UNESCO list. “Our country overall is underrepresented,” Musteață believes.

Advertisement

According to UNESCO, the organization is not in a position to comment on what is missing for Old Orhei to receive its World Heritage Site title. Moldova first proposed the area as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2008 but withdrew its nomination the following year.

In September 2015, Moldova submitted a new version of the nomination dossier as “Orheiul Vechi Archaeological Landscape,” a cultural site. Following the evaluation process and a recommendation by the International Council on Monuments and Sites, Moldova withdrew the nomination again.

Luckily, Moldova appears on the UNESCO list as part of a group of countries with the Struve Geodetic Arc, a chain of survey triangulations spanning ten countries and over 2,820 kilometers. This chain reaches from the world’s northernmost city — Hammerfest, Norway — to the Black Sea. The listed site includes 34 points across all ten countries, one of which is in Moldova. The country is eager to earn its very own World Heritage Site title, even if it isn’t Old Orhei.

[Lee Thompson-Kolar edited this piece.]

Advertisement

The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect Fair Observer’s editorial policy.

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Business

Illegal settlements have been encouraged for years

Published

on

Neri Zilber’s piece “Far-right minister accused of politicising Israeli police” (Report, September 17) eloquently describes the crisis in the West Bank. Israel’s current government and its unsavoury allies in the settler movement stand accused, but in truth every government since 1967 has favoured illegal settlement.

The first settlements — the so-called Nahal settlements — in September 1967 were supposedly military and so did not, Israel argued, contravene international law. The west did nothing, so Israel then went ahead with brazen colonisation. When the first Oslo Accord was signed in 1993, there were in the order of 110,000 settlers in the West Bank.

A central principle of Oslo was that neither party would takes steps that would prejudice final status talks five years later. But Israel’s so-called moderate leaders, Yitzhak Rabin and Shimon Peres, immediately inaugurated the most intensive phase of settlement to date. By January 1996 settlers numbered 140,000. Rabin told his electorate not to worry — the Palestinians would not get a state. Meanwhile, Rabin and Peres accepted the Nobel Peace Prize. Butter wouldn’t melt in their mouths. The west did nothing. The Palestinians knew they had been stitched up.

So we should be under no illusions. This isn’t simply Benjamin Netanyahu and his associates, it is the long-standing thrust of the majority of Israelis across the political spectrum. Western governments have known this all along and even now appear unwilling to ensure respect for international humanitarian law as they have undertaken to do.

Advertisement

The UN General Assembly is likely to agree that the July 19 advisory opinion of the International Court of Justice, which spells out Israel’s lawbreaking in detail, must be applied.

If it isn’t, in the Middle East the killing will continue while in New York the UN may face an impasse given the unwillingness of the US and its allies to uphold the international order they themselves helped put in place.

David McDowall
London TW10, UK

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

News

The History of the Kaffiyeh

Published

on

The History of the Kaffiyeh

Once used for sun protection from the blistering sun in Southwest Asia and North Africa, the kaffiyeh’s function, and symbolism, has undeniably transformed over time. It’s been spotted on high-fashion Palestinian supermodel Bella Hadid, on the necks of students at college encampments, and covering the faces of activists at pro-Palestinian marches. It’s been sold on the shelves of Urban Outfitters and Louis Vuitton, and subject to bans by the Australian state of Victoria, which barred legislators from wearing the scarf in parliament because of its “political” nature.

And in recent decades it has become widely recognized as a symbol of Palestinian nationalism and resistance. The link far predates the Israel-Hamas War, which has taken the lives of more than 40,000 Palestinians since Oct. 7, when 200 Israelis were taken hostage and more than 1,000 were killed on the night. Just last week, the Noguchi Museum in New York City fired three employees for wearing it to work, banning clothing associated with “political messages, slogans or symbols.”

For Palestinians, the symbolism of the kaffiyeh can also be deeply personal. “I embroidered my kaffiyeh with tatriz, which is the word for embroidery in Arabic, to express my connection to my homeland, not just as a symbol of resistance to what is happening today in the Israeli occupation, but as an expression of myself,” says Wafa Ghnaim, a Palestinian dress historian and researcher.

What is the kaffiyeh?

The kaffiyeh is a square-shaped hand-woven checkered scarf with a wavy motif around the border– representing olive leaves—and oftentimes tassels along opposite sides. (Olive trees, which have been growing in Gaza and the West Bank for centuries, are a pivotal part of both Palestinian culture and the local economy.)

Advertisement

Though historically an Arab male headdress, today the kaffiyeh is worn by people of all races and genders across Southwest Asia, Northern Africa and beyond. “There used to be many different patterns, sometimes different colors and designs. But the idea was having a scarf that was useful within a hotter climate,” says Haitham Kuraishi, a tour guide at the Museum of the Palestinian People.  

The black-and-white kaffiyeh is the one most commonly worn by Palestinians and those who wear the scarf in solidarity with the people living under tumult in the Gaza Strip. But other predominant colors of the kaffiyeh are popular in other territories. The red kaffiyeh, for instance, is more popular in Jordan, suggests Kuraishi. 

A clothing item that dates back centuries 

Kaffiyehs were first worn by Sumerians, part of an ancient civilization dating back to 4500 BCE, in what was then-known as Mesopotamia, according to Kuraishi. The scarf then took off among Bedouins, indigenous people in the desert regions of the Arabian Peninsula, partly due to its practical uses. “If you were trudging through the desert, you could also use that scarf to cover your mouth from a dust storm, or a sandstorm, and [it was] also a way of just having shade,” says Kuraishi. Until the early 20th century, kaffiyehs were primarily worn by Bedouins, to distinguish nomadic men from the villagers and townsmen, according to Ghnaim. 

That changed after World War I when the League of Nations issued the British Mandate for Palestine, which was drawn up in 1920 and granted Britain responsibility for the territory that then comprised Palestine. That mandate also called for the establishment of a “national home for the Jewish people,” according to the document. The resulting tumult broiled into the Arab Revolt of 1936-1939, which marked the first “sustained violent uprising of Palestinian Arabs in more than a century,” in a call for Palestinian sovereignty and independence, says Kuraishi. 

Advertisement

“Palestinian men put on the kaffiyah, and not just on their head, around their neck, as almost a uniform,” adds Ghnaim. The kaffiyeh thus became a symbol of solidarity uniting working class Palestinians with the upper-class, who would typically also wear a fez.

Other prominent figures also popularized the scarf in the years to follow. Former President of the Palestinian Authority Yasser Arafat, who once graced the cover of TIME magazine with the kaffiyeh in 1968, was well-known for wearing the scarf on his head in a triangular shape that mimicked the shape of Palestine, Ghnaim says. In the 1960s, Leila Khaled, a “freedom fighter” and leader of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine—which the U.S. designated a terrorist group—also wore the kaffiyeh. “That move of wearing [the kaffiyeh] on her head as a woman, like a hijab, garnered a lot of attention [and] widespread popularity around the world, but also in the Palestinian community [and] diaspora,” adds Ghnaim.

Recent adoption

The scarf has resurged in the fashion world several times in recent decades. In 1988, the same year that the Palestine National Council announced the establishment of the State of Palestine following a staged uprising against Israel, TIME wrote about the scarves’ adoption by the American public. Then, TIME reporter Jay Cocks argued that the kaffiyeh, once a “garment of choice among the political protesters and antimissile advocates of the ‘70s and early ‘80s” had become “politically neutral.” 

That connotation doesn’t remain true today. In 2007, the New York Times reported that kaffiyehs were marketed as “antiwar” scarves by Urban Outfitters, though they were later pulled from stores “due to the sensitive nature of this item.”

Advertisement

Today, many Palestinians recognize that while the checkered scarf is a symbol of resistance, it’s still undeniably tied with their own cultural heritage. 

“While other Arabic-speaking nations might have a similar pattern or design, [the kaffiyeh] doesn’t have that added meaning of resistance against occupation and invasion that it does amongst Palestinians,” says Kuraishi. “Palestinians will wear it for weddings or graduations, not just protests—so good times and bad.”

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright © 2017 Zox News Theme. Theme by MVP Themes, powered by WordPress.