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World Press Freedom Day: Independent Media, Social Justice

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World Press Freedom Day: Independent Media, Social Justice

The Project Censored Show

The Official Project Censored Show

World Press Freedom Day: Independent Media, Social Justice, and the Vox Populi



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This week on the Project Censored Show, in advance of World Press Freedom Day, Mickey talks to media scholar Andrew Kennis about his recent book, Digital Age Resistance: Journalism, Social Movements, and the Media Dependence Model. They talk about how legacy media frame various social movements, applying the “worthy and unworthy victims” analysis from Edward Herman and Noam Chomsky’s Propaganda Model. Kennis also applies the Media Dependence Model to the ongoing propaganda and censorship occurring around the Israel/Hamas/Gaza events in the Middle East, further arguing why we need a truly independent and free press in the public interest. Then, co-host Eleanor Goldfield joins Mickey to discuss the growing protests occurring around the US in opposition to more aid and weapons being sent to Israel for their attacks on Gaza. They address the media framing and censorship around those First Amendment protected events happening on a rapidly increasing number of America’s college campuses, and revisit the echoes of Kent State as we approach the 54th anniversary of those tragic events on May 4th 1970.

 

Video of the Interview with Eleanor and Mickey

Video of the Interview with Dr. Andrew Kennis

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Below is a Rough Transcript of the Interview with Eleanor and Mickey

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Eleanor Goldfield: Thanks everyone for joining us back at the Project Censored Radio Show. We’re very glad right now to bring you another co host segment. I’m Eleanor Goldfield and I’m here with my co host Mickey Huff. Mickey, thank you so much for joining again so that we can hang out and hack our way through some of the propagandized, censored news headlines of the day and talk about, as we do, the news and why it didn’t make the news.

So, Mickey, great to have you with us. We’re gonna be talking about, specifically some of the stuff that’s been going on at college campuses across the United States recently, not only the powerful protests by students, but also the powerful backlash by the police state.

And Mickey, I know that you have some very expert and unique insight into Kent State, which the anniversary of that is May 4th, I believe. Correct?

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Mickey Huff: Yes, it is. It’ll be the 54th year commemorating the massacre at Kent State and the echoes of that historically, Eleanor, are pretty profound, particularly just seeing what’s happening right now around the country. I’m once again reminded of the quip from the late great playwright and often curmudgeonly Gore Vidal, who once quipped that we were the United States of amnesia. Of course, that assumes that we learn things and then forget them. And in many cases, like with some of the stories that we’re going to talk about today, Eleanor, people don’t really learn about them in the 1st place and, or if they do, they learn a distorted, skewed or a-historical, non-contextualized, rote version of it that can sort of be distilled into a soundbite, and attached with that is some exceptionalist establishment narrative viewpoint.

It kind of just goes through osmosis of our curriculum and our educational system and our corporate quote news and so forth. So yeah, it’s always good to be here and talk with you back and forth as co hosts. And, I think we actually cover a lot of interesting ground for folks.

So I’m looking forward to talking with you today about some of these intersections of past to present, and if past is prologue, what we’re looking at right now around the country is very grim.

Eleanor Goldfield: Absolutely, Mickey. As one of my favorites, James Baldwin, put it, the past is not past. So, here we go, and folks might be already aware of this because it actually has wandered into some mainstream reporting, but of course, as you pointed out, Mickey, when it is covered, it is covered from an angle that uplifts and upholds the status quo and uplifts the state line, as opposed to the perspective of the students.

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You know, you see things like anti Israel protests. It’s never pro Palestine or anti genocide or anti apartheid, right?

Mickey Huff: It’s anti Semitic protesters.

Eleanor Goldfield: Right, exactly. But just to give folks an idea, now, we’re recording this on Friday, April 26th, and I’ve put together a non exhaustive list of schools that I’m aware of, that I’ve seen recently, and here are some of them where these protests against the continued genocide in Gaza have taken place, and with that, some very violent backlash, which we’ll discuss.

USC, that’s the University of Southern California in Los Angeles, Columbia in New York, Yale, the University of Texas at Austin, the University of Minnesota, Princeton, Emory, which is in Atlanta, G.W.

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Mickey Huff: Where they’re brutally arresting professors, by the way.

Eleanor Goldfield: Yes, who have been screaming, “I am a professor.”

MIT, Cal Poly, Cornell, Ohio State, Purdue, Harvard, Northwestern, and University of Pennsylvania.

Again, that is a non exhaustive list, and by the time folks are listening to this, there will likely be more schools that will be added to this list because it continues to grow and spread. I’ve already heard about some being organized at places that are planned for this coming week. So this is continuing to spread. And with it, of course, the amount of censorship and, at a lot of these schools, specifically pro Palestinian organizations, I’m thinking predominantly of those SJP, that’s students for justice in Palestine, have been outright banned from existing as student organizations.

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And, Mickey, if you can speak to a little bit of what you’ve seen in your tenure as a professor in terms of this crackdown against speech and action for Palestinian rights.

Mickey Huff: Well, it’s pretty extraordinary, Eleanor. And that was a good overview of a lot of the campuses, a cursory one at that.

You know, it doesn’t include a lot of the state colleges. It doesn’t include community colleges. In California we have 115 just community colleges, and there are protests and things happening all over.

There have been speech code violations by administrators. There’s been censorship and crackdowns on some campuses around what faculty and students can even email, which is in accordance with some campus policies. But nevertheless, these rules often are not evenly or equally enforced, if you know what I mean. Certain statements or certain things, you can virtue signal about, but if it actually comes to really saying something profound about something that’s happening that’s affecting a lot of people around the world, not just locally to Gaza. Of course, they’re the most and worst in regards to what’s happening, but that has rippling effects, and through our system. But this is happening all throughout our institutions as you were illustrating.

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What I’d like to point out is, my day job profession with one of the many hats I wear has been under assault for a long time. And the great irony is that in the recent years where we’ve seen higher education and academic freedom under assault, and we see, you know, the right is constantly pointing at the bogeyman of DEI and wokeness and so forth. And so a lot of these right wing governors have been passing laws about academic freedom on campus and why students are allowed to protest.

These are the very places, Governor Abbott in Texas, where they’re calling in state troopers to violently arrest people, and at Columbia, the N.Y.P.D. were called in by the head of the university declaring a quote clear and present danger, riffing on that language, that historical language.

The NYPD get there and they’re like, these people are eating lunch and sitting peacefully and having conversations. This is the NYPD assessment, right? And they’re like, we’re not sure. But they’re of course there to do what they need to do. And there’s theater and there’s worse than theater. There’s real violence.

But this is a real chilling effect, and it’s an unfortunate lesson that the state hasn’t learned, but the students and professors and people on campuses in higher education are, we’re all too familiar with this kind of hypocrisy. We’re all too familiar with this kind of selective enforcement of speech or First Amendment rights, and we’re all too familiar historically with just the complete idiocy of anyone thinking that calling in police or National Guard or militarizing peaceful protests and situations, and somehow that’s not going to end poorly.

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These people know absolutely nothing at all. And they don’t deserve to be in these positions of power. They’re frankly abusing them, and they’re trashing the entire, not only the entire system of higher ed and academic freedom, but they’re trampling roughshod over the Bill of Rights, particularly the First Amendment.

And I know, Eleanor, you noticed a particularly interesting thing about some of the folks that were coming to crack skulls at the University of Texas. You were remarking about how those folks were nowhere to be found when there were shootings in Texas schools.

Eleanor Goldfield: Yeah, absolutely, Mickey. So first, just to point out that again, there have been violent crackdowns at a bunch of different schools, including Cal Poly Humboldt, which is not that far from where you are, relatively speaking to me.

So at Emory, as you pointed out, professors were being violently arrested. A professor was thrown down on the ground with her head on the concrete as she screamed, “I’m a professor.”

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Mickey Huff: Professor of economics, no less.

Eleanor Goldfield: Yeah. I mean, is that better than like a professor of arts?

Mickey Huff: Well, a professor of philosophy was hauled off over, I think it was NYU or Columbia. It’s across the disciplines.

Eleanor Goldfield: I know. A chair. As she was being arrested and dragged away, she said, could you call my department? I’m the chair of the philosophy department.

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Mickey Huff: Yeah, I’m being arrested.

Eleanor Goldfield: I mean, it’s funny because it’s so dark.

It’s like, we’re arresting people whose job it is to teach people.

Mickey Huff: The philosophy professor wrote a book about the importance of demonstrations in the first amendment. I mean, you can’t, like forget the Onion. They’re going to go out of business.

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Eleanor Goldfield: I actually don’t know what the Onion can do anymore.

Mickey Huff: Yeah, I’m not sure. We should ask the New York Times, right?

Eleanor Goldfield: There you go. But I mean, Emory University, I think this is also a really important connection to make, the planned cop city in Atlanta has some of the strongest connections to what’s known as the deadly exchange, which is an exchange between U.S. police forces and Israeli police and military forces, where they share tactics.

And one of the tactics that was on full display was a man who is clearly marked as a street medic. These are people who are trained in how to help people at protests, if they need water, if they’re going through some kind of medical emergency or issue, and take care of them until emergency services can get there.

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So, great people whose job it is to just help others. Cops violently arrested this man, a black man, who’s surprised there. And they pinned him down and they had him zip tied. And once he was zip tied and pinned down, they tased him. And this is all on video. And he was clearly zip tied and being pinned down by multiple police officers.

And this is in Atlanta, where again, this is one of the prime areas that is involved in this deadly exchange between Israel and the United States, and it would be boosted if Cop City were to go through.

And with regards to the University of Texas in Austin, you can also see video of this violent police presence. You know, they are in full Rambo gear, or like RoboCop, you know, they’re not walking in there like Andy Griffith. They look like they’re there to bust skulls, and of course they were. And actually Mike Prysner, who has a podcast called Eyes Left and has been on the show before and is an army veteran, shared a screenshot of these state troopers who had, he pointed out several clips that had a hundred plus rounds of AR 15 bullets. Why would you walk onto a campus with that in your vest?

Mickey Huff: Why would you do that? Go ahead, Eleanor.

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Eleanor Goldfield: And these are, and to go back to what you were talking about with the Uvalde school shooting, now this was an elementary school where a gunman just kind of ran roughshod through the entire school while the same law enforcement agency, the Texas state troopers stood outside and did nothing. This was May 24, 2022.

91 of these state troopers were at the school when law enforcement waited over an hour before they breached the classroom where the gunman was. Multiple children died. Now again, this was an elementary school. Now we’re talking about a college when the same law enforcement agency rushes in there again, with these clips of AR 15 weaponry. They’ve got their full riot gear on, and violently attack people who, as the NYPD pointed out, across the nation are just sitting and holding space, protesting peacefully and exercising their First Amendment rights to free speech and free assembly.

And there were actually several, there were a couple of troopers who were found guilty in an internal investigation into the actions of these troopers who were literally just caught on camera, like scrolling through their phones, doing nothing to address the rampage of violence that happened at this elementary school.

So this same law enforcement agency felt that it was okay to allow elementary schoolers to be shot and killed and do nothing about it. And yet a peaceful protest of University of Texas, Austin students decrying a genocide, they need to be met with police brutality. So just watching this, I mean, this is America in two images, right?

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And it’s incredibly dark, but I guess I’d have to say I’m losing the ability to be shocked, but never to be disgusted.

Mickey Huff: Well, there’s a lot to take in there, the professors were at Emory, the philosophy professor and economics professor, Carolyn Follin and Noelle McAfee, that we were mentioning earlier and you made a passing reference to Mike Prysner, and the remarking about, well, why in the world would these people have these kinds of full on combat gear? The irony is weirdo. This is the same kind of weapons, the same kind of weaponization, the same kind of tactics that we see in Occupied Palestine, and the, as you mentioned, the IDF, a lot of US law enforcement people go and get training from IDF and one of the iconic photos we’ve seen from recent times here was snipers positioned on the roof at Ohio State University.

Now that goes back to the state of Ohio, and you mentioned Kent State earlier, and I’ve done a lot of work on Kent State over the years with Laurel Krause, the Kent State Truth Tribunal, I did my graduate work on Kent State, and the historiography of Kent State, and how the powers that be, even 54 years on, have worked diligently to bury the massacre at Kent State.

And when you talked about those live ammo clips, right? The AR 15 or the AK, you know, the assault rifle kind of clips. If you go back to Ohio, two days after Nixon called protesters a bunch of bums, Governor Rhodes, who was in a meeting with Nixon previously that week, sent the National Guard to Kent State University, which was a sleepy rural area about an hour south of Cleveland. It’s not a radical hotbed. And that was, of course, where Nixon realized he was losing the narrative, right? He was losing the young people. He didn’t have a lot of the young people anyway, but he was really losing the narrative about the war, and when he said that they were going to escalate it rather than de escalate it, that’s when things blew up again.

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You mentioned 1968 earlier, this is 1970, and there were more protests going to grow then. But if you take a look back, not just to 68, but 70, a raft of campuses closed down, graduations were cancelled, commencements were cancelled, all that, because there was a massacre at Kent State and Jackson State, right. A predominantly black college where people were shot and killed and that got less coverage, right? Because that was seen as, well, that’s what happens there. Kent State, right, was quote different because it was these sort of sleepy, you know, white middle class students minding their business being shot. By who?

By people roughly the same age who just came from a violent strike that they were at, right? They were making it violent, right? It’s usually the police that make protests and strikes and things violent. Well, these folks, these young people who may have otherwise been in college themselves, but were in the National Guard, many likely, so they didn’t have to go to Vietnam, right? Another way out.

These kids, what they were, were bused from the Akron Teamster strike with no sleep over to this anti war protest where there were provocateurs and other things going on. We mentioned on the show last time about Terry Norman, the FBI informant and provocateur who fired at Kent State and disappeared.

But nevertheless, these are younger people that aren’t really well trained. And why are they going on Kent State campus with loaded M-1 rifles? That’s the connection here, you don’t show up to that kind of an event with that ammunition if you’re not ready to use it. And that’s the problem is they’re ready to use it.

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That’s what they’re trained to do. It’s like calling a firefighter out to go look at a fire and say, well, what are you going to do? The police force is a hammer and every problem is a nail. And it is an absolutely overwhelmingly over the top, inappropriate response to peaceful protests.

And we hear at the Wall Street Journal and in other right leaning media that the rise of anti Semitism on campus is extraordinary. Jews are being threatened left and right. And I’m not going to make light of that. There are some instances where there are very anti Semitic statements and some Jewish students may not feel safe. I am not taking that out of the equation. What I am going to add to the equation, however, is the extraordinary imbalance of the coverage.

The young woman who is a young Zionist who was a reporter for one of the university papers, a student, claims she was stabbed in the eye with a flagpole, and she was on the news and making great hay about it, she was accidentally hit in the eye by someone waving a handheld flag. And again, I am not going to take away from the fact that acts of violence occur and may be occurring in some places.

But for the conservative media to prop these issues up and not show the 34,000 dead people in Gaza and the 77,000 wounded people in Gaza and the 130 reporters plus dead and, not showing prominent author, Ayelet Waldman, married to Michael Chabon in Berkeley, was just arrested right outside of Gaza, marching to the border, calling attention to this issue.

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San Francisco Chronicle covered that because it’s a local angle, but the rest of the corporate media don’t want people to know that the protests against what’s happening are not just from, you know, radical pro Hamas, anti Semitic people. It’s preposterous that that narrative is allowed to live out in the wild without much debunking in the establishment media whatsoever, even though it’s complete nonsense. But this is the challenge of the propaganda we face, is we have to dig through all this fog and issue 50 disclaimers before we can even report something that’s true.

Eleanor Goldfield: I know, and I have to say, it makes me very angry, again, as I’ve said on the show before, as a human and a Jew because this actually leads to legitimate anti semitism when you conflate Jews with Israel, and the issue here also is that foundationally, the corporate media doesn’t care about Jews, like, as a people, as a culture. It doesn’t care, because where are you when there is legitimate anti semitism, like, when people are attacked for being Jewish?

Now, here’s the thing, I’m not saying that people haven’t been attacked because they’re Jewish at some kind of event. I don’t know all of the stories here.

But I do know one thing, that Zionists are not always Jews, and Jews are certainly not always Zionists. And Zionists, and I say this as somebody who’s been to several anti Zionist protests where Zionists have showed up, both Jews and non Jews, they are horrifically confrontational. They come to pick a fight.

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And then they do the kind of British footballer thing where they fall on the ground if somebody dares to step towards them, like, Oh, God, I’m so injured. And I’ve seen this firsthand. So this is not just anecdotal or hearsay.

And so again, there’s this skewed reporting on this. Where is the media when a Muslim is injured or targeted at a protest? Where is the media when Palestinians, which by the way, don’t tell anyone, but there are Palestinian Jews and Christians and atheists and whatever the else there is.

Mickey Huff: Yeah. God forbid. This is getting really complicated.

Eleanor Goldfield: I know it’s so complicated.

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And so there’s this, again, that imbalance that you were talking about, and so we are, as you say, we’re wading through this muck to get to the core, which is these students, which is another problem with the media, they treat these students like they’re idiots, like, oh, these kids don’t know what they’re doing.

Eleanor Goldfield: Actually, they do. They know a lot more than you do. I

Mickey Huff: think that’s part of the problem, is that the students are aware of what’s happening. And the irony of how the institutions that they’re protesting at are supposed to be fostering independent critical thinking. They’re supposed to be looking behind the scenes, challenging power structures, and they’re supposed to be working toward a more just and equitable world, not just for themselves, but for everyone.

And so, you know, colleges and universities have just bandied around casually those kinds of mission statements for an awful long time. And here’s people practicing those, putting them into practice, taking the very things they learn in classes by heretics like me, right? Taking into account the things they learn about: history and civic engagement and how to really navigate the propagandistic media ecosystems we have in order to try to really understand what’s happening.

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We try to teach students how to deconstruct these meanings and to be a part of their lives and be part of their communities and to stand up when they think something’s wrong and speak out, lo and behold, the students are listening sometimes, right?

Eleanor Goldfield: And I think that’s also really, what you highlighted is really powerful. It scares the establishment because, just like when we hear about the Black Panthers, if we do, oftentimes it’s just like the image of the Black Panthers with guns, like, Oh, there were just violent thugs. But what was very disturbing to the establishment is all of the political education that was going on thanks to the Black Panthers.

Mickey Huff: That’s right. And their 10 point program.

Eleanor Goldfield: Right. And so here’s what I’ve seen. I’ve seen images from campuses where you have these students sitting at these encampments reading Edward Said, and reading, you know, the 100 year war on Palestine, and reading things that contextualize what’s going on far before October 7th, and really let people know the larger picture.

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And that is really, really scary to the establishment because then you start to again realize that, okay, Zionism is not Judaism and Zionism is a colonialist construct. It is a white supremacist ideology. And oh my gosh, what do we do if the bulk of people from 18 to 22 really realize that? Oh, that’s really going to be disastrous. So we have to clamp down on this. And the only way that the United States knows how to push back against something like this is to push back violently.

Mickey Huff: And look, that’s right. And what we’ve seen, and we mentioned before, just more disclaimers, right? Any listener to this program knows that I’m not shy about taking on left wing censorship or left wing litmus testing, and I’m not into the left wing circular firing squad model of dealing with disagreements.

So, that said, it’s again, interesting to me and entirely a 101 sort of primer in hypocrisy that the far right has been trying to attack academic freedom, tried to shut down what’s being taught on campuses, and now when they can’t totally control everything that’s going on on campuses, the free speech warriors on the right, Tom Cotton, Josh Halley are calling to bring in the National Guard.

They’re literally saying to bring the military. You want to shut somebody up? Punch them in the mouth. Arrest them, expel them, ruin their careers before they’re started, scare the ever living hell out of them, however you can, so that they learn young and they learn well, not to speak out against the status quo, not to speak up for justice, to keep their mouths shut or else they’re not going to get jobs and they’re not going to have enjoyable lives.

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And again, there is nothing more anti-Intellectual and nothing more pro-censorious than having a militarized response to intimidate, arrest and commit acts of violence on young peaceful protesters. Period. Full stop.

It was a total unmitigated disaster and crime at Kent State. And what we’re seeing unfold here today is eerily similar, and I hope that people really start to realize the lessons of the past such that we do not repeat such absolutely foolish and unnecessary acts of violence against an entire generation of people really speaking out at this moment in history about the unethical, illegal and horrendous acts that are taking place, not just across the Middle East, but across the world, often with the backing of U.S. taxpayer money and weaponry.

Eleanor Goldfield: Absolutely, Mickey, very well put. And I’m curious with your expertise on the subject to kind of make that comparison, looking at where we were before Kent State happened, and also that people after Kent State happened, when they were polled across the country, thought that it was okay what happened, largely. And today we see a lot of people, particularly those who watch MSNBC or CNN and think that what’s happening in Gaza is just the cost of war.

What do you think the likelihood is that we would see another Kent State happen, and even if not, what do you think the likelihood of these kind of college protests, just like we saw back in the late 60s and early 70s, can help create the political environment that makes this war untenable, that made Vietnam untenable, or that could potentially make this genocide untenable for the U.S. government?

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Mickey Huff: Well, absolutely great framing and contextualization for the conversation that we’re having and for what’s going on and for the conversation that I wish we saw more of in the press. The corporate media is not going to do that. It’s just, it’s too sensational. Covering protests is sensational. It’s a clash, right? And the protesters are violent and unruly, and the police are restoring law and order. It’s eerie how similar the language is now as it was 50 some years ago and the tactics and the playbook and all of it, right?

I hope and think, however, that some of the consciousness of our society has moved past that, a degree to which that we are capable of seeing why the response to what’s happening right now on campuses is not the proper one, it’s not the right one, and it’s not a productive one.

You saw what happened at Columbia. They went in and arrested people and removed people and what happened? Whoop! It just propped back up. It’s like a game of whack a mole. And the state, the more that happens, the more prone the state is to violence. And this is what’s scary about what’s happening right now, is that any of these things could unfold, even before this program airs.

There could be provocateurs. We know they’re usually are right. So I think the situation now is very volatile. But what it also suggests, another lesson is that if we would take this opportunity to listen to what the protesters are discussing and discover that a vast majority of them are peaceful. I know there are some radical positions that, considered radical by the right, some of the organizations that have language that talks about how Israel doesn’t have a right to exist and so on. And that language really ruffles establishment feathers.

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But I think that this is the opportunity to have the discussions and if we can’t have impassioned, but still intellectually sober dialogue that’s constructive, not destructive at the very institutions that are designed to teach people how to get through these things and understand them. This is why I mentioned earlier that, you know, my whole profession is under attack. All these institutions are under attack. It’s not just literally the students that are doing it, and it is very literally, of course, the people on the ground in Gaza. But metaphorically, we’re destroying our own means by which to civilly mitigate these differences.

These actions are making it more likely that we’ll become an authoritarian society, not a more democratic one. What’s happening right now in the way that the Democrats, not just Republicans are handling these situations is making it more likely, Eleanor, that we’re going to see something even more tragic happen in coming weeks, and that’s why I really hope people take a moment to think about some of the things, not just that we’re talking about, but to go look into the stories that we’re bringing to attention.

Go look at different media. Look at the independent media. Don’t just look at the corporate media. Look at what the independent media is saying about this.

May 3rd is World Press Freedom Day, and that was proclaimed by the UN General Assembly in December of 1993. And the reason we do this is we need to celebrate, and this is right from the UN, we celebrate the fundamental principles of press freedom.

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We have to access the state of press freedom throughout the world. We have to assess it and see where we are. We have to defend media from attacks on their independence and pay tribute to journalists who have lost their lives in the line of duty, and I will add, or have pretty much been disappeared down the memory hole, like Julian Assange.

And as we approach Press Freedom Day, World Press Freedom Day, we have to remember that it’s the independent media that is often the grassroots voice of the people. It is often the independent press that is operating on ethical standards and principles, and it is the independent press that is reporting in the public interest, not the corporate media.

And if people diversify their news media diets more and get more information from independent outlets as we approach World Press Freedom Day, we really need to think about how to reform and change our media system and really push to have better news reporting, more accurate reporting, more constructive dialogue and more solutions based framing around the challenges we face.

We can use news and media to make a positive difference and we can use our first amendment rights to try to move the needle on important conversations. Part of that means we have to resist this violence and resist this censorship and violence against protesters is a form of censorship.

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Eleanor Goldfield: Very well put, Mickey. And we could spend the next several hours digging deeper into this, but I think that was a powerful way to wrap up this conversation.

Thank you so much. I’m glad that we were able to sit down and dig into this very important issue of censorship and indeed propaganda, which we’ve covered before. They go hand in hand.

And people can also follow more about what’s going on, palestine Action US has listed several of these actions that are happening at universities across the country. Also SJP, as I mentioned, students for justice in Palestine, you could check out their work as well. And of course, we talk about this a lot on project censored. So check out projectcensored.org for more, not just coverage of this, but a deeper dive with regards to articles and other links to things like that.

Mickey, thanks again for taking the time to sit down and dig into this.

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Mickey Huff: Eleanor, it’s always great to have a co host to co host talk about the state of the free press and things happening in the world. So always appreciate it. And certainly thank all of our listeners.

If you enjoyed the show, please support us at Patreon.com/ProjectCensored

 

Below is a Rough Transcript of the Interview with Dr. Andrew Kennis

Mickey Huff: Welcome to the Project Censored Show on Pacifica Radio. I’m your host, Mickey Huff. Today, this week, in the, in this segment of the program, you know, we are coming up on World Press Freedom Day, and at Project Censored, we always call attention to the importance of independent media and a free press, and we also try to connect the importance of that with critical media literacy education.

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And right now, today, in this segment, we are honored to have an extraordinary and expert guest, Dr. Andrew Kennis. We’re gonna talk about his book, Digital-Age Resistance: Journalism, Social Movements, and the Media Dependence Model. Part of the internationalizing media study series over at Rutledge. Let me tell you about Dr. Andrew Kennis and we’ll bring him in and we’re going to have a a very fascinating conversation talking about the propaganda model and also his own media dependence model as applied to social movements. We’ll certainly as ever get around to policy solutions and other things. We won’t just be bemoaning the problems but actually finding solutions and Dr. Andrew Kennis is an expert in both both of those endeavors. He is an invited scholar affiliated with the National Autonomous University of Mexico in Mexico City where he serves as a coordinating member of a research collective based at the College of Political and Social Sciences. Dr. Kennis is also a nationally inducted researcher in a program run under the auspices of Mexico’s National Council on Science and Technology.

As a pedagogue, Kennis currently teaches graduate level classes at Rutgers University, after having also taught at several other places, including Northwestern University, the University of Texas at El Paso, and more. Dr. Kennis also continues to practice as an international and investigative journalist, having reported from locations ranging across four continents and dozens of countries while residing in Mexico city. Andrew Kennis, we’ve circled each other in media literacy movements and independent journalist movements for a long time. But it is finally great to catch up with you and get you on the Project Censored Show. So welcome Andrew Kennis to the Project Censored Show.

Andrew Kennis: Thank you very much.

It’s an honor to be here. Love your show and it’s a pleasure to be part of it.

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Mickey Huff: So, Andrew, this, this is a, you know, it’s, it’s Tomish in its weight. This is a major dense academic study. This is the product of years of research and writing. The book came out in 2022, but the things that you talked about in the book obviously live well beyond, and the models and theories you have put together.

Based on some previous, other scholars, including Ed Herman, Noam Chomsky, Bob McChesney, who, by the way, gave extraordinarily generous blurbs and introductions to your book. Noam Chomsky, Daniel Chomsky, and also, Bob McChesney, all towering figures in this realm of, of media literacy, media analysis, understanding and deconstructing propaganda.

And so I guess that’s a great place to start. Your book is called Digital-Age Resistance: Journalism, Social Movements, and the Media Dependence Model. I am, we’re particularly honored to have you here, Andrew, because you are the synthesis of the journalist, the scholar, the analyst right you put you you are theory and praxis embodied in a lot of ways and we don’t always see that.

So, what was going back to the propaganda model right going back to 1988. Ed Herman and Noam Chomsky talking about how issues of ownership, advertising, elite sourcing, you know, who’s newsworthy and so forth, newsmakers and shapers. Then we had flack and, you know, boycotts and so on. And finally, ideology used to be anti communism, but could be other forms of ideology.

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You actually, and we’ve done this at Project Censored, we’ve expanded some of the project, some of the propaganda model to allow for social media algorithms, bots and so forth. But you’ve actually taken the propaganda model, and of course, you can say a few things about that. You’ve actually created something called the media dependence model, and then you’ve applied it journalistically to social movements.

So Andrew Kennis, can you please talk a little bit about that and introduce this idea to our listeners?

Andrew Kennis: Absolutely. But just as long as you’re speaking about, feeling honored, it was a huge honor to be introduced by these fantastic scholars by the Chomsky’s and McChesney, but it was actually the 2nd biggest honor.

The 1st biggest honor was to have the, the pleasure, the tremendous opportunity to be in touch with, pretty much all the movements I wrote about intimately, firsthand, as a reporter and as a scholar. It really was, you know, tremendous, opportunity I wanted to capitalize on. That’s what this book was primarily meant to be, was to, like you said, culminate a lot of research, whether on the ground through journalism or scholarship into one work.

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And it was, it’s definitely an honor to be here with you too, Mickey. Thank you so much.

Mickey Huff: Yeah, no, it’s awesome to have you here. So, and there’s so much going on in the book, like you said, about the social movements. You are applying this, you know, across social media. You have a chapter on caged children and Trump’s nuclear option.

You, you have several other chapters that specifically look at the pandemic era and news coverage of certain movements. You talk about how a reality television star won the electoral college, certainly something we’ve written about at length. You talked about the Occupy Wall Street movement. I mean, so I want listeners to know that what you’re getting on in this segment today, in our conversation with Andrew Kennis is a, is a scratching of the surface, an overview of a really deep, thoughtful and important study through a social justice lens.

And so I want to make sure that, that folks follow up on that and maybe follow more of Andrew’s work and maybe even try to get a copy of this book or get a copy of it for your library. Since it’s an academic publication. So Andrew, go ahead and tell us from propaganda model. That’s really dependent. So

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Andrew Kennis: I mentioned social movements and, really the tremendous honor it’s been to cover them because that really is the biggest takeoff, so to speak, from the, the propaganda model.

What, what I noticed was that, propaganda model is a great model that encompasses a good deal of what we see in news media performance, in the mainstream media. Especially when talking about military interventions and the big topics, big kind of macro level topics as they call them in my book, but it didn’t discuss enough really what causes the exceptions to the rule and didn’t theorize enough social movements. So that was the big contribution I wanted to make, while playing homage to the, the, the propaganda model itself. And what I found when I took a closer look at social movements that in very similar ways to, victims, individual victims, how they were getting dichotomized into these worthy and unworthy categories where we, you know, hear about, victims, that are, you know, really suffering as a result of U.

S. policy or or their allies. We don’t hear about them so to speak, but we hear almost everything about it when an enemy state is involved when there’s a state that’s hostile to the U. S. So this is the perfect example of that these days is Russia and Ukraine contrasting with Yemen. You know, it’s a huge difference between those two and in terms of coverage, in terms of attention, the US is much more in bed and involved with and responsible for what’s been going on in Yemen for too many years. And it’s not really is involved, although it’s becoming plenty more involved Ukraine at this point, but initially, obviously, it didn’t undertake that invasion and we heard about it right away. I was all over the place.

What I saw was that there was a similar thing going on with social movements. So if there was a social movement opposing US policy in an allied nation or nation that was friendly to US interests, or at least not hostile to them, we didn’t hear about them. If there was a social movement that was opposing, you know, enemy states, states that were hostile to Western interests, and particularly the Pentagon, we would hear about them.

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You know, pretty much everything about them, you know, so this is the contrast between Hong Kong in 2019 that I talk a lot about my book as well as Venezuela and Iran. I mean, these are states that are definitely hostile to Pentagon policies and Washington DC and beltway foreign policies and it contrasted a lot with Chile and Puerto Rico. But, like I said, not only did I want to delve into social movements, I also wanted to delve into the exceptions to the rule, and as I call it, press exceptionalism. So, while we didn’t hear much about Chile and Puerto Rico, and this is all in the same huge year of global resistance, right before the pandemic of 2019.

While we didn’t hear as much about them, we did hear a bit about them. And in past errors, I argue in the book, we sometimes hear nothing about them. These kind of another other movements that are analog analogous to those. So what was the big difference? I argue in the book, social media, social media, and its utilization by grassroots activists have literally sometimes forced the mainstream media to pay attention and public officials for that matter to pay attention to things that normally the mainstream media more easily ignored.

And so, between this mainstream dichotomy between worthy and social, you know, where they don’t where their social movements as well is, there’s sometimes exceptions to the rule that we find more and more often in the digital era. That was the main things I wanted to evolve, you know, from, from the propaganda from the propaganda model with, and I thought it was a more modern day kind of scope, whereby social media, social movement movements matter as much now as as ever before.

But I still wanted to emphasize in the book and I tried hard to do so that while we have many more exceptions, and substantive exceptions, they are not without limits, you know, so while they might have heard some people might have heard about the ruckus in Chile and Puerto Rico and the democratic struggles there in, it didn’t compare still to their worthy social movement counterparts. You’re talking about huge differences and so while that bridge has been gapped to a certain degree by effective utilization of of social media and literally by causing hell. I mean, this is what has to be done to get on the map when you’re an unworthy social movement.

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Well, that has closed the gap, somewhat there still is a significant gap to talk about because for a long time, we don’t hear this as much anymore, but we have these digital utopian folks and kind of, you know, getting idealized in the Internet. And while we can all acknowledge by this point, I think, agree that the Internet has helped social movements in a lot of ways.

It isn’t a panacea, you know, because at the end of the day, we still have the same corporate, mega oligopoly, conglomerate apparatus that owns the mainstream media that owns chat GPT, which regurgitate regurgitates in many ways, the same corporate propaganda we see in mainstream media, that limits these exceptions.

And so, while the exceptions are important, and I, it’s again, kind of the gap I wanted to cover from the, from the propaganda model. I didn’t want folks to get carried to carried away with them either, you know, so yeah, those are the main things I was really trying to accomplish with the book. And I know that later on the segment, we’re going to probably talk about policy as well.

Mickey Huff: Yeah, we’ll definitely get to some solutions. Some policy we’ll also be applying media dependence model to some of the movements going on right now, the anti genocide or pro Palestinian and how that’s being framed in the corporate media, we’ll also talk about maybe some of the student protests that are going on and how those are being framed and that’s talk about worthy and unworthy, you know, movements, you know, riffing on the Herman Chomsky, you know, a big part of that, who’s newsworthy, right?

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And who is not, and which perspectives can we hear and not see? Which victims right which victims matter more than others. All of that is at play here and you use the worthy unworthy labels in that regard riffing from the propaganda model. You also talk here. I was, it worth pointing out. In the beginning, when you’re talking about the media dependence model, a political, economic and critical media analysis of the establishment news system, I noticed you say mainstream, and you’ve been you’ve referred to it several times.

We usually just say establishment legacy corporate over here. We understand that people think about mainstream media similarly, but there’s not much mainstream about the 6 corporations or 5 tech companies that control most all of the platforms and outlets. So we try to get even more descriptive with that by calling them who they are.

As the, as, as Michael Peretti once pointed out, the so called mainstream media, isn’t just close with corporate America or friendly with corporate America. They are corporate America and their interests are deeply aligned. And you quote, not quote, but you’re ripping on the late great social psychologist, Alex Carey here.

Oh, yes. You say elite news outlets lie at the very heart of what late Alex Carey shrewdly termed treetops propaganda. Where what is often presented and even is quote news winds up serving state corporate interest rather than the information needs of the citizenry and again that includes fake news half based conspiracy theories and in fact corporate media has tried to reassert its dominance by claiming it’s fighting the very things that it often promotes half baked stories itself their own conspiracy theories can you talk a little bit about some of that and how it relates to corporate coverage of certain social movements, you know, you just give a couple more examples, Andrew, because your book is so filled with documented, rich examples and analysis, and I know we can’t do justice to it, but if you could just talk a little bit about it to give our listeners a little more taste of how your media dependence model applies.

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Andrew Kennis: Sure, I mean, we could talk about the family separation. Because I think it really, is a good case study that is very MDM ish. It’s very digital age ish because we have this policy that actually technically was a secret pilot program under Obama wasn’t really publicized at all. And it wasn’t really a fully fledged program as it became under Trump who bragged about it, literally, of course, first starting on Twitter, but at the same time that that Trump interestingly enough was bragging about the program that soon became official just a couple of months later.

This is March 2018. It became official not actually, not even a couple months is like, the big weeks after his tweet. There was a great case by the ACLU. Trying to combat that policy and stop it and reverse it. And, there wasn’t a social media outcry about this just yet. And as a result, the New York Times completely didn’t cover, good tree tops propaganda example right here, you know, in terms of neglect didn’t cover that case at all.

Didn’t give the US people a chance to know more about what was going on. Thanks to our civil society, you know, doing its job and providing the checks and balances we need on our government. And meanwhile, the nonprofit Guardian did cover it. Right? So nobody knew that much about what was going on and or the efforts that we’re trying to combat this policy until.

Actually, Kamala Harris, you know, and said it started, grilling some, Department of Homeland Security officials about this until there was an op ed, you know, barely as a result of this period of national media, opposing the policy and soon there after, a tremendous social media outcry. And interestingly enough, and in a very digital age way, there wasn’t that much on the ground resistance because the policy in the end only wound up really lasting from the time that people actually started hearing about it and around the, the Kamala Harris incident, the op eds, not even a month did it last, right? So that’s a very interesting telltale, I think, example of how things work in a digital age. It can go really, really quick, right? So, within this month, there wasn’t really enough time to get a lot of resistance on the ground. It wound up not being totally necessary in the end, but there was a tremendous social media outcry, and that was enough to eventually to the point, got to the point where four first ladies were pushing the policy, including Trump’s wife, his, is himself his old wife and literally day later when when she opposed the policy, the policy was reversed. So this is a very big digital age example where even when there is a resistance on the ground, it is possible in theory to completely reverse a White House policy. Now, again, we don’t want to get too carried away with idolization or digital utopian ideas because sure enough, when the social media outcry diminished.

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And there still wasn’t really on the ground resistance thereafter. It took years and it still actually is going on to this day to completely get rid of family separation when there wasn’t that oversight and that pressure. There was violations of court rulings and there was still family separation going on and, not to the extent, admittedly that it was when it was in the spotlight, fortunately, but still it just goes to show you what unworthy movements have to do because certainly the advocacy community for undocumented immigrants and pretty much mostly asylum seeking refugees fleeing the U.S. drug war. What what they have to do to get on the map. What do they have to do? They have to have Trump tweeting and going ballistic. They have to have a senator question this policy.

There has to be a global social media outcry. You know, there has to be a first, you know, for first time in history for first ladies opposing the White House policy at the same time going public about it. This is what an unworthy social movement has to do. They can get on the map, much less reverse the White House policy.

Now, the dichotomy comes in again. When the worthy social movements don’t have to even do half of that. Don’t have to get the numbers on the ground that, unworthy social movements to or organize global social media outcry, they’re just literally on the map instantly. And, that’s those are the gaps.

And those are the unfair dichotomies that we’re dealing with to this day. Especially since really, it’s the unworthy social movements. Ironically. And the unworthy victims to this day, whether they be in Yemen or in Palestine that, have to do so much more, even though they’re the ones that are most linked to U.

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S. Pentagon and Beltway policy. So, in a democracy, you know, our press and our, you know, the, the 5th estate that’s so important to democracy, their most important job is to make us the most aware of what our own government is doing. And what we can potentially oppose by our own government, perhaps secondarily.

You know, we also, of course, want to be aware of what states that are hostile to the U. S. and whether Western interests are doing as well, but in practice, and this is the big problem, and this is what both the propaganda model as well as my own media dependence model try and capture, in practice, that’s flipped. So we hear and know tons more about what, you know, nations such as Russia are doing, which is not a bad thing, but at the expense of being able to know what our own government is doing. So, to the extent that, U.S. and even Western people know what’s going on in Yemen. Compare it to Ukraine.

It’s a big difference. And the same thing goes for for social movements time and time again, even to this day. So 1988 was surely a long time ago, but that book was updated more than a couple of times and actually Project Censored had something to do with it. But this stuff does happen to this day.

And even with social movements, and that’s what my book tries to capture.

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Mickey Huff: Absolutely. And we’re speaking with Dr. Andrew Kennis, his latest book from Rutledge is Digital-Age Resistance: Journalism, Social Movements, and the Media Dependence Model. The book focuses on media dependence models, social movements, and Andrew, before the break, you were talking about you had mentioned Russia again and Ukraine talked about Yemen.

We’re going to bring Gaza into this too, which which has been going on for a long time, but I know your book came out in the in 2022, but all this still applies. And just very quickly, just recently. I mean, well, right around then when this was coming out. That’s when we saw the Russia invasion of Ukraine.

And we saw terrible things happening there in that, in that conflict. Secretary of State Blinken and others, you know, made commentary about Russian violation of the Geneva conventions. You know, very important stuff, right. And of course supporting Ukrainian resistance against the invasion.

And now a couple years later, when we see the same questions asked of the Secretary of State about whether or not the Geneva Conventions are being violated in Gaza, they just can’t seem to find an answer. So it’s a clear double standard. And at least in this regard, to me, it does sound like a pretty prime example of what you mean by worthy and unworthy movements.

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Andrew Kennis.

Andrew Kennis: Absolutely. No, Israel and Palestine apply in, in three different ways. Unworthy social movements. In both nations, you know, whether it comes to Palestine or Israel and worthy victims, well, actually, we can add a 4th, right? Unworthy victims too. So let’s go through those, right? So we have the unworthy social movement in Israel itself.

Yes, I mean, this is a major ally of the U.S. and thus is subjected to plenty of favorable media treatment. And so when there’s movements opposing major U. S. allies within, the nation itself, they don’t get a lot of press. They often do not get a lot of press. And so very few people know, even though this was literally the precursor to October 7th, 2023, that millions of people were protesting against the Netanyahu administration, protesting against the corruption and endemic to the, to the regime.

I guess you could call it pretty much because Netanyahu is a war criminal and former general himself, by the millions in Tel Aviv. The millions. I mean, this is a nation that even really want its Prime Minister to con, continue being Prime Minister barely was able to con, you know, really be the head of state, in the, the most recent election, in Israel.

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And yet another example of an unworthy social movement. On the flip side of the end of it, obviously Palestinian Civil Society resistance was going on for decades on on end. This is the longest military, longest running military occupation in the world. And very few US people, and even to a certain degree, people in Europe are routinely exposed to coverage news coverage about the often peaceful resistance that has taken place in the occupied territories.

Even to the extent where there was a FAIR study done on, you know, US citizens knowledge of what’s going on in Palestine and Israel, and it was found very decidedly that most people in our country don’t even know that there’s a military occupation in place in Palestine, much less it being the longest running one in the world.

So, once again, a huge example of unworthy social movement and often unworthy victims too to the extent that it was pretty plenty, heavy and extensive even before October 7th that Palestinian civilians are subjected to Israeli war crimes and, you know, defense, so called defense, IDF, the Israeli Defense Force, the repression of them.

And this contrasts with the worthy victims that we saw in October 7th. So, obviously, the amount of coverage and sympathy and empathy that were given to Israeli civilians, especially in the immediate aftermath of the attacks in Israel was very, very disproportionate compared to what we saw to coverage given to Palestinian civilians beforehand, much less their civil society resistance efforts decades and decades on end.

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So, none of this helps understand what is admittedly, the somewhat complex and long running conflict, when folks don’t understand that very keyly, this is an illegal is according to international law and long the longest running military occupation, much less familiar with the more peaceful and nonviolent sets of resistance that we’ve also seen long time in Palestine as when we do see Palestinians resistance highlighted, it’s almost always the most negative and violent form of it. So, you know, yes, Palestine and Israel absolutely intimately applies to the media dependence model, including even the student protesters who have been repressed by their own administrators.

Mickey Huff: Worthy and unworthy protests. Go ahead, Andrew.

Andrew Kennis: Yeah, I mean, you don’t have to be, a movement that gets no coverage to still be unworthy. So, again, we see, an example of, student protesters in the states, literally having a race held to get any tension whatsoever, literally having to be arrested.

It’s not that there wasn’t resistance on these campuses all the way back to literally when the, the war first started, if you want to say it’s starting in October, 2023, you know, the occupations of war in and of itself, right? But the latest incarnation, I guess, of the war has received plenty of student resistance on campuses throughout the country, both before and after October.

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Even more. So after October, but most

Mickey Huff: all that. Yes. Yeah.

Andrew Kennis: Mainstream America, you know, for the most part has didn’t really know about any of this. And even to this day, knows just a bit until literally students got arrested were thrown off their own campuses, there was a group I was just in touch with because I invited a couple of students in it to speak to my class that replied to me. Sorry, we’re banned. Literally. This is an Arizona State University Latino group that was acting in solidarity with Palestine. They’re banned. So, yeah, I mean, this is really the MDM in work. Right? So, when there’s nonviolent resistance, that doesn’t result in arrests that doesn’t necessarily have you know, hell breaking loose, so to speak, it’s ignored. And then when finally, there’s some, you know, more, radical action, so to speak, or direct action even being undertaken, there is at least some mainstream media coverage, but without the context that’s routinely given to worthy social movements, and thus, what does Main Street see?

Just, you know, student protesters being arrested. God knows what they think about that, you know, they’ll, they’re not really, the context that, the country needs and deserves there.

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Mickey Huff: So Andrew Kennis, I hate to do this to you, but we have a few minutes left, and we have a lot to cover, but I do want to cover the media dependence model of public policy, because you talk about how another news media system is not only possible, but necessary for democracy’s sake later on in the book, and you have some really detailed tables.

Where you talk about you describe specific kind of policy paths and avenues for media reform. And here we are coming up on UN Press Freedom Day. You know, the merging of critical media literacy education and the importance of independent journalism. Let’s have you talk briefly about we’ve been talking about media literacy.

I mean, you’ve been doing critical analysis of a lot of what’s happening. Let’s in the last few minutes we have. Let’s talk about why the independent press matters. You talk about national nonprofit options, public works options, you know, borrowing off some of the ideas of Bob McChesney, Victor Pickard, you know, many others, a lot of folks that we both know, talk to us a little bit about some of these solutions for a better, more independent, vibrant media that really addresses, that tries to erase the distinction of worthy, unworthy victims and talks about these in broader context.

Andrew Kennis.

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Andrew Kennis: Yeah, I mean, first off, I mean, Free Press, which was founded in part by Robert Marcesni and, and, you know, the, the media for, the Mix Center in Philadelphia that Victor is involved with. Media Inequality

Mickey Huff: Change, yeah. Right, right. With Rutgers and, yeah.

Andrew Kennis: Todd Wolferson. They, they do great work in that.

What’s plenty of what inspired some of the reforms that I was advocating in the book, for, but also we can just even look to historical examples like the BBC and at the book covers as well. So, you know, in, in the United Kingdom, when when people bought television sets, like, you know, a portion of that was designated toward the BBC and the BBC is a tremendous, nonprofit global source. And while it isn’t a perfect one, and there’s so much criticism of it, we stand a lot to gain to have something closer to that model in the U. S. And there’s no reason why we shouldn’t. And, yeah, I mean, media these days, especially now, more than ever with navigating the fake news terrain and the Internet and all the kind of unfiltered crap that’s thrown at us.

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So to speak. Yeah. Is, is, is just as important and sancte and, and, and, you know, sanctuous as kindergarten education. This is what the book is trying to argue in grand part. So we we take it for granted the US that our kindergartners go to a school that’s nonprofit. That isn’t run for the most part by Tom, you know, the Edison Corporation and and as was the case in New York state when literally a kindergarten went bankrupt.

And so thankfully that has not taken off that much and we understand that that’s very important and sacred so to speak, these days, I argue our news media is too. So, between the attacks, and we haven’t even had a chance to talk about this on professional journalism and yes, this is actually a conference going to be going on in just another week at Rutgers about this topic, you know, deep cuts for decades on end to the professional journalists we have working out there.

More now than ever before, we need our news media to be non profit. So we’ll be unshackled from corporate advertisers, corporate owners, and corporate marketing, you know, which influences to a much higher degree than any of us should feel comfortable.

Mickey Huff: And framing, corporate framing.

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Andrew Kennis: Absolutely. How mainstream news is routinely reported.

And so I laid out a bunch of different ways that we can make our news media more non profit, whether it has the BBC funding model to get more money into nonprofits or, or even intent enticing existing for profit media, including even the New York Times to go nonprofit itself. You know, I think that that would be a huge step in the right direction.

And, it’s something that, you know, I wrote in detail about and gave gave a bunch of different ways to do this. Whether the full jugular of having a completely nonprofit news media system, which, very much in the favor of, or at least one that’s more more so the case that it is today, because when you compare the U.

S. as many of us, political economists have been doing, and the news media around and how much nonprofit news media we have in the U. S. compared to even Western Europe, much less Scandinavia. We run it really, really far behind and precisely during a time when we need it the most. So, and that’s something mainstream, you know, when polled about really agrees on.

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I mean, time and time again, U. S. citizens are telling us through polls. Not dutifully reported upon by the mainstream news media itself, or legacy, as you say, establishment itself, that they’re sick and tired of big media. They don’t trust big corporate media. They know that the Internet is only to a certain limited extent a viable alternative, especially when the best non-profit journalism we see on, on the internet is, is often marginalized. And so this is a situation where not only there’s a democratic impetus for more public support, nonpartisan support too, I don’t mean to make this like a partisan mission of any sort, and the BBC in many cases have succeeded in that we need to emulate that in the states.

To whatever extent we can, so that that that was what I tried to chart out the map with those tables you referred to in different ways, different options, whether it be at least a bit more support, including public, nonpartisan support for more professional nonprofit news media or a lot more we’re in a sort of, we literally are that’s kind of time kind of error.

That we are in desperate need of that.

Mickey Huff: Yeah. My guest for this part of the program has been Dr. Andrew Kennis. We’ve been discussing his latest book, Digital-Age Resistance: Journalism, Social Movements, and the Media Dependence Model out from Rutgers. Andrew Kennis, where can people learn more about you, your book, your work, and how can they follow you or contact you online?

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Andrew Kennis: Yeah, you know, I can be found on any, social media just by looking for, my name, whether it be, Facebook or Twitter, and then also DigitalAgeResistance.Org. Is a website that’s dedicated to the to the book. It lets you know how you can buy it even from independent bookstores. And so, literally a title of the book digital age resistance.

One word dot org is the site for the book and where folks can find out more about how to get it and also actually be exposed because we’re out there’s a fortunate and publish, full color photos as it’s usually the case of academic books. So, that’s where they can see. Great. There’s a lot of great award winning photo journalism that that fortunately, we got donations for that’s contained in the book.

That’s also featured on the website and it’s full color. So yeah, DigitalAgeResistance. org. And thanks again for having me on today.

Mickey Huff: Andrew Kennis, thank you so much for your very important work. And we’ll have to have you back on the show. There’s plenty more that we can be talking about and using your theories and ideas to analyze the things happening around us.

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Thank you so much for joining us on the Project Censored Show today.

Andrew Kennis: My pleasure. My pleasure. Thanks.

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Does Taylor Swift Want To Be a Genuine US President?

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Taylor Swift

Imagine cleaning out your basement, finding what appears to be a charming but unremarkable painting, then scratching its surface to discover a Frida Kahlo self-portrait beneath. In 2012, Taylor Swift was a prominent country music artist with crossover appeal, but not a major force in entertainment. Then came the Red album and the genius began to appear. Comparisons with Mozart are now more commonplace and understood, and universities teach courses on her. She occupies the same kind of status as Madonna and Michael Jackson in the 1980s and 1990s and, earlier, Elvis Presley and the Beatles. The Kahlo is now visible. Is there yet another layer?

Swift’s recent endorsement of United States presidential candidate Kamala Harris may conceal more than it reveals. After all, everyone knew her political allegiances lay with Democrats; none of her 284 million Instagram followers or anyone else would have been surprised that she wants Harris to win the forthcoming election. Maybe the endorsement is something more: advance notice that Swift intends to become a political presence in the future. If so, she could run for president in 2028. By then, she’ll be 39 years old. John F. Kennedy was 43 when he was elected in 1960, making him the youngest elected president in US history.

A new day?

Preposterous as it sounds, remember: In May 2015, Donald Trump was known principally for the NBC television show, The Apprentice, which he had fronted since 2004. He’d made his political views well-known, taking out full page ads in The New York Times and The Washington Post criticizing US foreign policy in 1987. In 1999, Trump briefly explored running for the Reform Party’s nomination for president in the 2000 election, though he withdrew.

So when Trump announced his candidacy as a Republican in June 2015, it came as an outrageous surprise. He’d never held political office of any kind. Only one other president had been elected without political experience: Dwight Eisenhower’s background as the Supreme Commander of the Allied Expeditionary Force in Europe during World War II provided him skills that translated well to the presidency. He served two terms as president, from 1953 to 1961.

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Eisenhower was a product of a different age in US politics. Trump is very much part of an age when the US struggles with a political bipolarity: Policy vs passion, logic vs emotion, wisdom vs relatability. Politicians are elected as much for celebrity appeal as leadership capability. Voters seem ready to believe they are much the same thing. How otherwise can we explain Trump’s success in 2016?

Two years after Trump’s election, Oprah Winfrey seemed poised to turn the 2020 election into a showbusiness extravaganza when she said she was “actively thinking” about running for president. At least, that was the inference from her speech at the Golden Globes. “A new day is on the horizon,” she prophesied. In 2018, Oprah was at her persuasive peak. She was arguably the single most influential person in the world and would have made a formidable contender, despite her political inexperience. Oprah was a rare celebrity, praised for her moral authority, venerated for her inspiration and respected for her support to countless women. She seemed kissed with purpose — her destiny was surely the White House.

Trump actually named Oprah as a possible running mate when he was considering putting himself forward with the Reform Party in 1999; it’s doubtful she would have been interested.  She settled into a kind of trusted advisor role, dispensing wisdom and assistance without showing any ambition for power. Today, Oprah has lost her momentum, though her coruscating endorsement of Harris was a reminder of her presence. She remains an interested party.

Celebrity times and celebrity politicians

Traditional politicians like senators and governors have, in recent years, lost immediacy. They project personae and exude authority in a carefully stylized and practiced manner, using the media in almost the same way Bill Clinton (president 1993–2001) or George W. Bush (president 2001–2009) did. By contrast, figures from entertainment know how to make themselves believable. They engage audiences by sharing ostensibly private insights and exchange the experiences that shape or scar them.

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Swift, like other celebs, makes no attempt to separate her public face from her private life. She surpasses arguably every artist in history in her ability to share personal experiences through her music. Her fans wax about how her music speaks to them personally with insight and vision. Many of her fans are too young to vote now, but not in four years.

Some readers will think I’ve stumbled Lewis Carrol-like down a rabbit hole leading to a land of magic and strange logic. I remind them that in 2016, Trump secured 304 electoral votes compared to opponent Hillary Clinton’s 227, winning the presidency. He may yet be re-elected. Swift will not feel intimidated by her lack of political worldliness, sophistication or practical knowledge. After all, Trump had none of these benefits.

In 2018, Swift publicly supported Democrats in her home state of Tennessee, causing a surge in voting registrations, especially from young people. It was the first sign of political engagement among her fans. The following year, she spoke out in favor of the Equality Act. In her 2019 music video for “You Need to Calm Down,” she promoted the petition for the act. She was an active supporter of the Black Lives Matter movement as well.

So perhaps it makes sense for her to maintain her positions on the sidelines and encourage advocates, but without risking what could be a damaging misstep. A-listers like Barbra Streisand and George Clooney have stayed in their own dominion while earnestly making their political preferences heard. This would be Swift’s safest choice. After all, you can have too much of a good thing and no one in history has ever been as ubiquitous, audibly as well as visibly. Could audiences just get sick of her?

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One of the verities of celebrity culture is that it values change, freshness and novelty. Swift has been on top longer than most. Maybe she recognizes this herself and is already plotting a segue into politics. A more logical move, however, would be to take action. Not that this is without perils: Madonna crashed as spectacularly as she succeeded in cinema. Celebrity times demand celebrity politicians — or politicians who are prepared to greet Oprah’s “new day” and entertain as much as govern.

The sanest thing to happen to the US

In showbusiness, Swift has reached Parnassian heights: astral record sales, unsurpassable box office and unbelievable social media followings. Artistically and commercially, she is at her zenith, cleverly integrating critiques of patriarchy into her songs when she conveys how even unmistakably successful women are still liable to run into misogyny.

But is it all just too trivial? The state of the world is grim and nothing Swift does will change that  right now. But the winds are blowing in her direction: The post-Harvey Weinstein tremors have destabilized patriarchy and the #MeTo movement remains a force. Would Sean Combs have met with instant condemnation and been reassigned as persona non grata were his transgressions known ten years ago? Censured, castigated, deplored, perhaps; but probably not canceled, as he surely will be. The historical privileges of manhood are disappearing.

Will Swift feel like culture-hopping from music to politics? It may be a leap too far, but no one can ignore her unstoppable influence. Much, I believe, depends on the outcome of the November election. If Harris wins, Swift will devote more time to championing her, perhaps closing the distance between herself and the Democrats, but not maneuvering into the political mainstream. If Trump wins instead, Swift may take the leap of faith and embrace the impossible, as giddily disturbing as this sounds today. Given modern America’s history, Swift’s leap could be the sanest thing to happen to the US.

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[Ellis Cashmore is the author of The Destruction and Creation of Michael JacksonElizabeth Taylor and Celebrity Culture.]

[Lee Thompson-Kolar edited this piece.]

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

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Gordon Brown champions new funding push for global education

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An innovative new funding mechanism championed by former UK prime minister Gordon Brown is to provide $1.5bn in low-cost loans to improve education in poorer countries around the world.

The International Finance Facility for Education (Iffed) is set to launch what it described as the largest one-off investment in decades to improve inadequate schooling in response to global education budget cuts.

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The initial $1.5bn has been raised through support from governments including the UK, Sweden and Canada, and from philanthropic and corporate backers, who will offer guarantees to underwrite a programme to disburse new loans and grants through leading multilateral financial institutions.

Iffed has signed a first agreement with the Asian Development Bank, and is set to authorise an initial disbursement in 2024 of over $100mn. It has approved 10 Asian countries as being eligible for financing, including Bangladesh, India, Sri Lanka and Vietnam.

Discussions are advancing with other backers and intermediaries including the African Development Bank and the World Bank.

Many lower- and middle-income countries have cut their education budgets in recent years, and the World Bank has warned of low levels of basic numeracy and literacy — notably in Africa — compounded by further “learning loss” driven by pandemic-era school closures.

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An estimated 250mn school-age children are currently not in class, with 800mn of the world’s 2bn children set to leave education without any secondary qualifications. 

International aid is dominated by health projects, while education represents just a small fraction and countries often struggle to demonstrate short-term returns to donors.

Brown, the UN’s global education envoy, told the Financial Times that the “groundbreaking innovation” in international development finance had been years in the making. He spoke after Iffed received an AAA rating from credit agency Moody’s and was graded AA+ by S&P.

Under the programme, multilateral banks lend money to governments of lower- and middle-income countries at a very low interest rate. This is in exchange for commitments to invest the money alongside existing domestic spending on credible national education programmes. 

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“People traditionally think of international development in terms of grants or loans,” Brown said. “I think the transformative innovation here is to think not just of guarantees, but how you can leverage guarantees to create the kinds of resources that will never be created in the near future through loans and grants alone.”

He added: “It is shocking that nearly half of all the children on our planet still have no formal schooling. But that can begin to be consigned to history.”

Brown said the model had the capacity to become the “third arm for the development agenda” and was a “vehicle that should be more widely used” across other areas of public policy, such as health.

Donor backing will help to ensure that the new bonds issued by the multilaterals have a high credit rating. So far Canada, Sweden and the UK have committed $342mn in guarantees and paid-in capital and $100mn in grants.

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How Kamala Harris Can Craft a Fair Middle East Strategy

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How Kamala Harris Can Craft a Fair Middle East Strategy

Kamala Harris still has time to change direction on U.S. policy on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict in a way that could secure her the presidency, reduce further damage to Washington’s standing internationally, stop what many—including many Jews, Israelis, and Holocaust scholars—have called a genocide in Gaza, and prevent a regional war. At the risk of oversimplification, all she has to do is apply U.S. law, something very on-brand for a former prosecutor.

Eleven months of financial, political, and military support for Israel’s war on Gaza and the West Bank, triggered by the killing on Oct. 7, 2023 by Hamas of around 1,200 people, has dug a deep policy and credibility hole for the U.S. Washington has given Israel more than $14 billion in military aid since then, including 10,000 catastrophic 2,000-pound bombs, and thousands of Hellfire missiles. On Aug. 20, the Biden Administration added another $20 billion for Israel, including 50 F-15 fighter jets, and much more.

So far, Israel has used U.S. intelligence and weapons to free some of the 117 hostages. It has also killed over 40,000 Gazans, a majority of whom were women and children, according to the Hamas-run health ministry, figures the U.S. and U.N. deem credible. Schools, hospitals, aid convoys, foreign aid workers, and journalists have been targeted. And recent Israeli actions in the occupied West Bank have expanded the destruction there. Israel has also launched airstrikes against Lebanon, Iran, Yemen, and Syria, increasing the risk of regional war. Just this week, in a move many see as evidence that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu wants all-out war, Israel targeted Lebanon in shocking beeper and walkie talkie attacks. All of this has forced otherwise amenable Middle Eastern governments, such as Saudi Arabia, to step back from normalization talks for fear of their own popular uprisings.

Regardless of one’s opinion on Israeli actions and U.S. support for the country, it has come with major consequences. Domestically, a growing number of U.S. officials have resigned in protest, including the State Department official responsible for supervising arms sales to Israel. Hundreds more have protested. Nationwide campus demonstrations have, at very least, manifested a deep rift within the Democratic Party. President Joe Biden has been branded “Genocide Joe” and the backlash against his avowed Zionism contributed to his inability to contest the presidential election because states with large Arab and Muslim populations, like Michigan, were potentially out of reach. Both Biden personally and the U.S. are facing lawsuits for genocide. Terrorism concerns have also spiked, according to the U.S. intelligence community. And, predictably, hate crimes have also spiked against Muslims, Arabs, and Jews. The fatal stabbing of a six-year-old Palestinian American boy near Chicago by his family’s landlord was one of the most horrific examples.

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Meanwhile, the U.S.’ feeble efforts to keep Netanyahu in check and negotiate a ceasefire has left it looking weak and clueless, and, to much of the world, on the wrong side of history. This plays out most visibly in international fora. At the April 18, 2024 U.N. Security Council vote to recognize the State of Palestine, the U.S. alone voted no, with the justification that it “believes in the two-state solution.” The vast majority of U.N. member states have recognized Palestine.

Read More: The West Is Losing the Global South Over Gaza

The U.S.’ blind support of Israel is also damaging other priorities. For example, refusing to hold Israel to international norms is making it harder to leverage those same norms against Russia. U.S. support for the International Criminal Court’s (ICC) indictments of Russian leadership for atrocities in Ukraine is utterly inconsistent with its refusal to acknowledge the Court’s jurisdiction when it comes to possible arrest warrants of Israeli leaders over atrocities in Gaza. This has drawn accusations of hypocrisy and emboldens countries the U.S. is at odds with, such as Russia and China. China, for one, has in recent years become involved in Middle East peace initiatives, which some analysts see as evidence of eroding U.S. dominance in the region.

Into this tragic mess walks Kamala Harris. But there is still time for her to forge a better path, atop the cresting wave of Democratic enthusiasm for her candidacy. And she can do this without picking a side, without either abandoning Israel or supporting its conduct in Gaza. The solution is simple: All candidate Harris or a future President Harris has to do is apply existing U.S. laws and policies to Israel instead of continuing to carve out exceptions.

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Without speculating on her social justice views or personal convictions as a multi-racial American woman married to a Jewish American lawyer, it is clear that Harris is campaigning on her record as a prosecutor and lawmaker. She has consistently presented herself and her values as both humane and pro law-and-order. She is also explicit that she wants to be positive about the future and unshackled by the past, including, presumably, Biden’s record on various issues. Taking a more balanced approach to Israel only requires adhering to these same goals and principles.

There has been extensive analysis of the many ways the U.S. bypasses its own laws on Israel. All Harris needs do is stop this. For example, the Leahy Law, named after former Senator Patrick Leahy, prohibits the State and Defense departments from funding or training foreign military units or individuals if there is credible information (not proof) that they have committed gross human rights violations. There is abundant evidence of Israeli military violations. The Biden Administration has even acknowledged that Israel likely used U.S.-supplied weapons to violate international law. This has given rise to a sense of “impunity” in Tel Aviv, according to former U.S. officials. Senator Leahy himself has decried the problem: “The law has not been applied consistently, and what we have seen in the West Bank and Gaza is a stark example of that.”

Similarly, various U.S. laws prohibit the sale and transfer of some weapons to foreign governments for various national security and human rights reasons. The Arms Export Control Act requires that countries getting U.S. military aid use it only for legitimate self-defense and internal security. The Foreign Assistance Act prohibits aid to any government that “engages in a consistent pattern of gross violations of internationally recognized human rights.” The Genocide Convention Implementation Act codifies U.S. criminal sanctions for anyone who commits or incites genocide as defined by the international Genocide Convention, which the U.S. is a party to and which formed the basis of the ICJ’s interim judgment that the claim that Israel was committing genocide in Gaza was “plausible.” And the U.S. War Crimes Act prohibits serious human rights and international law violations. Inspectors General at the Pentagon and the State Department are investigating whether the White House’s weapons transfers to Israel violated these and other laws.

Yet the U.S. continues to expedite weapons transfers to Israel, violating its own waiting periods, review requirements, and notification procedures in addition to its absolute legal prohibitions. This is the legal justification behind the increasing number of legal challenges to the U.S. for backing Israel. The U.S. should apply these laws just as it does for other countries. By comparison, on Sept. 2, the U.K. suspended some weapons transfers to Israel because of gross human rights abuses. Germany has also stopped approving arms exports to Israel. A future President Harris could also do this while still helping Israel maintain its “qualitative military edge,” as required under U.S. law since 2008. Upholding U.S. law doesn’t mean abandoning Israel.

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International law provides another low-hanging opportunity for Harris. The number and breadth of Israeli violations in Gaza and the West Bank are too numerous to list, though the ICJ tried in its July Advisory Opinion. Many U.S. lawyers have analyzed these, as have Israeli experts. A President Harris would have a number of options to bring the U.S.’s Israel policy in line with international law without much, if any, policy downside. For example, if the U.S. is committed to a two-state solution, and simply acknowledging the boundaries as determined by international legal decisions and U.N. Security Council resolutions is an easy start.

President Harris could do any of this without picking a side. But as the fallout from her campaign’s decision to block a Palestinian American from speaking at the Democratic National Convention last month shows, she is still vulnerable to losing key states in which Muslims and Arabs are angry and organized. Harris would be in a stronger electoral position if she made her willingness to apply U.S. and international law when it comes to Israel clear.

Politics aside, the U.S. has made a strategic misstep on its strong support for Israel, and the effectiveness of a future Harris Administration on the world stage may well depend on rebuilding U.S. credibility. And both policy and politics aside, stopping the killing could define her legacy. It is simply the right thing to do.

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Nuclear fuel prices surge as west rues shortage of conversion facilities

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The price of fuel for nuclear reactors has surged much faster than that of raw uranium since the start of 2022, in a sign of the bottlenecks that have built up in the west following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Enriched uranium has more than tripled in price to $176 per separative work unit — the standard measure of the effort required to separate isotopes of uranium — since the start of 2022, according to UxC, a data provider.

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Demand for uranium has been driven by a revival in atomic power. However, Russia plays a significant role in the multi-stage process of turning mined uranium into the fuel for a nuclear reactor. This includes converting yellowcake — uranium concentrate — into uranium hexafluoride gas, enriching it to increase the concentration of the type of uranium used for fission, and then turning the enriched uranium into pellets that go into reactors.

Uranium hexafluoride has jumped fourfold in price to $68 per kg in the same period, indicating that conversion is the biggest bottleneck in the nuclear fuel supply chain, analysts said. In contrast, uranium ore has only doubled in price.

“The conversion and enrichment prices are reflecting a much bigger supply squeeze due to the Russia-Ukraine war and other factors,” said Jonathan Hinze, chief executive of UxC.

“Uranium alone does not tell the whole story when it comes to price impacts in the nuclear fuel supply chain.”

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Russia controls 22 per cent of global uranium conversion capacity and 44 per cent of enrichment capacity. Those services are out of bounds for some western utilities following a US ban on Russian uranium, although waivers are allowed until the end of 2027.

Line chart of Rebased to 100 showing Nuclear fuel cycle feels supply squeeze

France, US, Canada and China are the other countries besides Russia that are home to large-scale conversion sites.

The US government said this week that it is closely tracking whether imports of uranium from China are providing a back door for Russian material, after bumper exports in May when the ban was introduced.

The UK used to contribute to global conversion capacity via the Springfields site but conversion services halted in 2014, while France’s plant has faced delays in getting to full capacity.

“The conversion market is very, very tight for the simple reason that existing facilities are in care and maintenance,” said Grant Isaac, chief financial officer at Cameco, the world’s second-largest uranium producer, on an earnings call.

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“Because of the delays in getting all of the conversion-producing centres up to full production in the western world . . . conversion has a very good tail of strength for the next little while.”

While higher nuclear fuel prices are likely to hit the profitability of power companies, the bigger issue is making sure there is enough investment in mines, conversion and enrichment to meet demand from extensions to existing reactors’ lifetime and new ones.

Nuclear fuel companies such as France’s Orano and British-Dutch-German owned Urenco have committed to boosting enrichment capacity, but so far no one has committed to building new conversion capacity in the west.

Nicolas Maes, chief executive of Orano, said at an industry conference this month that investments needed in conversion and enrichment were “massive” compared with the size of the relevant companies.

He compared Orano’s annual revenues of almost €5bn to the €1.7bn needed to expand its enrichment capacity in southern France by more than 30 per cent.

Johnathan Chavers, director of nuclear fuel and analysis at Southern Nuclear, which operates eight nuclear plants in the US, said at the same conference that utilities and the nuclear fuel suppliers were unwilling to make “big bets” due to a “chicken and egg problem”.

Power plant operators are reluctant to sign long-term supply agreements unless the facilities are being built, giving certainty over expected delivery times for nuclear fuel, yet suppliers balk at making big investments without such deals to underwrite them, he said.

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Israeli strike on Gaza school kills 22, says Hamas

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Israeli strike on Gaza school kills 22, says Hamas

An Israeli air strike on a school in Gaza City has killed at least 22 Palestinians, mostly women and children, according to Gaza’s Hamas-run health ministry.

The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said it targeted a Hamas command centre at the al-Falah school, which Israel said the militant group was using to “plan and carry out terrorist attacks against IDF troops and the State of Israel”.

The school, closed during the war, was housing displaced people, the health ministry said.

The IDF said it took steps to mitigate the risk of harming civilians, including using precise munitions and aerial surveillance, and accused Hamas of exploiting civilian infrastructure.

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Hamas “systematically violates international law by operating from inside civilian infrastructure in the Gaza Strip and exploiting the Gazan civilian population for its terrorist activities”, the IDF said.

Hamas has denied using schools and other civilian sites for military purposes.

The Hamas-run government media office said the people killed in Saturday’s strike in the al-Zaytoun area included 13 children – one a three-month-old baby – and six women.

Gaza’s civil defence agency reported the same death toll and added that one of the women was pregnant.

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Also on Saturday, the health ministry said that four of its workers were killed and six injured in an Israeli “targeting” of a health ministry warehouse in the Musabah area of southern Gaza. The ministry did not specify whether the incident was an air strike.

The BBC has approached the IDF for comment on the report of health workers killed.

Other schools have been hit, some several times, by Israeli air strikes since the latest conflict with Hamas began on 7 October.

Earlier this month, the UN agency for Palestinian refugees (Unrwa) said six of its employees were killed in an Israeli air strike on al-Jaouni school in Nuseirat refugee camp, which is being used as a shelter by thousands of displaced Palestinians.

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Unrwa said it was the fifth time the school had been hit since 7 October.

Israel’s military said it carried out a “precise strike on terrorists” planning attacks from the school. The military alleged that nine of those killed were members of Hamas’ armed wing and that three of them were Unrwa staff.

Hamas gunmen attacked Israel on 7 October last year, killing about 1,200 people and taking 251 others as hostages.

Israel responded with a military campaign in Gaza that has killed more than 41,000 people, according to the health ministry.

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Telford capybara ‘startled by mower near open gate’ now OK

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Telford capybara 'startled by mower near open gate' now OK
Hoo Zoo and Dinosaur World The head and shoulders of a capybara, a large rodent, stand sideways to the camera with a body of water in the backgroundHoo Zoo and Dinosaur World

Cinnamon was found 250m (820ft) from her habitat

Cinnamon, the capybara missing for a week in the wilds, is “absolutely fine, other than a little bit tired,” her keepers have confirmed.

The giant rodent escaped from her enclosure at Hoo Zoo & Dinosaur World on Friday 13 September into nearby woodland in Telford, before being found in a pond.

Will Dorrell, joint owner of the park, said “keeper error” had led her to flee through an open gate after being startled by a mower.

“We think the tractor startled her and she dashed past and out the gate,” he said. “During the short period of time the gate was open, they hadn’t seen that Cinnamon was in the long grass.”

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Mr Dorrell added she seemed “very happy to be back”.

Earlier in the week, he said “she was living her best life” because of the large woodland and ponds nearby.

Captured: Cinnamon the capybara returned to Hoo Zoo

Joint owner Becky Dorrell told Today on BBC Radio 4 she herself had spent most of Friday “in our woodland… particularly the area that we first saw her in”.

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“I was pretty confident she’d move from that area… and it was just a case of trying to look for any tracks or evidence of where she could have been,” she explained

Ms Dorrell said a power line had come down during a storm two weeks ago, leading to some trees being cut down.

“That led to the pond and a load of reeds, so I just kind of followed that and some tracks that [Cinnamon had] left and there she was,” she added.

Native to South America, capybara can grow to more than a metre in length and are the largest living rodents in the world.

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Hoo Zoo An aerial drone image of a large capybara in the middle of a green grassy field
Hoo Zoo

Cinnamon had been spotted on a drone camera, about 200m (650ft) away from her home

People worked for about an hour on Friday, during which time the team “slowly herded her into a spot where we could put the cage that we had and [we] just sort of coaxed her in”.

Hoo Zoo & Dinosaur World said she was now back with her brother and later on Saturday would be reunited with her parents, once it had had a vet come and check her over.

Because capybara are non-native, Mr Dorrell stressed they had a responsibility to make sure it was not left roaming the British countryside.

‘Film in the offing?’

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The wildlife park said it had conducted a review and put new steps in place to stop further escapes.

But the best thing for her long term was to be back, because staff could monitor her health, Mr Dorrell said.

Asked if the site would do anything with this, following the wide attention, and if a film was in the offing, he replied: “I don’t know. It’s nice that so many people are [taking] an interest in this story.

“But, what’s more important for us is Cinnamon’s wellbeing, so there won’t be any sort of decisions made on that until we’re sure that she’s nice and fit and healthy.”

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