World Press Freedom Day 2023
May. 3rd, 2023 08:47 amNoting that today matters, and this is one more of the reasons why:
https://www.unesco.org/en/days/press-freedom
Apparently, this is the 30th anniversary of the start of this practice.
https://rsf.org/en/2023-world-press-freedom-index-journalism-threatened-fake-content-industry?data_type=general&year=2023
https://j-source.ca/introducing-staying-alive-preserving-local-news-in-canada/
https://www.unesco.org/en/days/press-freedom
Apparently, this is the 30th anniversary of the start of this practice.
https://rsf.org/en/2023-world-press-freedom-index-journalism-threatened-fake-content-industry?data_type=general&year=2023
https://j-source.ca/introducing-staying-alive-preserving-local-news-in-canada/
I suspect that such is indeed going on.
https://twitter.com/HeatherMoAndCo/status/1575508432089751552
https://twitter.com/HeatherMoAndCo/status/1575508432089751552
Representation, Reconciliation
Jan. 7th, 2022 08:09 pmI'm listening to this tonight as I type these words:
https://www.cbc.ca/radio/ideas/connie-walker-on-how-lived-experience-can-help-indigenous-journalists-expose-truth-1.6307328
https://www.cbc.ca/radio/ideas/connie-walker-on-how-lived-experience-can-help-indigenous-journalists-expose-truth-1.6307328
Another January 6th
Jan. 6th, 2022 07:18 amWhat happened on this date a year ago is known too well by now.
Other anniversaries are still noted as well. But the Trump Insurrection - still underway - is the most infamous of them right now in North American and global small-d democratic-minded memories. I've read in The Globe and Mail, The Intercept, and elsewhere about the alarm bells still sounding. The looks by various authors to Rwanda and what used to be the Soviet Union and Yugoslavia and how those places ought to have meaning for us all now.
I say this is not an anniversary to celebrate. It should be another "never again" moment. We know, also, that there are still too many who have sworn "forever again and again until WE win!" instead, because they've learned to see the real worlds through the kinds of lenses I call at best horrific. Because the will to cruelty remains persistent in too many human hearts.
The work to contain the will to cruelty continues for us all. Everywhere.
Other anniversaries are still noted as well. But the Trump Insurrection - still underway - is the most infamous of them right now in North American and global small-d democratic-minded memories. I've read in The Globe and Mail, The Intercept, and elsewhere about the alarm bells still sounding. The looks by various authors to Rwanda and what used to be the Soviet Union and Yugoslavia and how those places ought to have meaning for us all now.
I say this is not an anniversary to celebrate. It should be another "never again" moment. We know, also, that there are still too many who have sworn "forever again and again until WE win!" instead, because they've learned to see the real worlds through the kinds of lenses I call at best horrific. Because the will to cruelty remains persistent in too many human hearts.
The work to contain the will to cruelty continues for us all. Everywhere.
CBC/Ideas: Untold Stories of Ethiopa
May. 20th, 2021 08:09 pmListening to this programme as I type this entry. Per the title on the CBC page:
Maaza Mengiste on confronting the past without 'smoothing out the rough edges of history'
The writer turns to archival photography to explore how historical narratives are created
https://www.cbc.ca/radio/ideas/maaza-mengiste-on-confronting-the-past-without-smoothing-out-the-rough-edges-of-history-1.6033285
Maaza Mengiste on confronting the past without 'smoothing out the rough edges of history'
The writer turns to archival photography to explore how historical narratives are created
https://www.cbc.ca/radio/ideas/maaza-mengiste-on-confronting-the-past-without-smoothing-out-the-rough-edges-of-history-1.6033285
(no subject)
Jun. 26th, 2020 07:30 pmThanks to
twistedchick for pointing this essay out to me:
https://longreads.com/2020/06/18/the-long-con-of-britishness/
Good on Laurie Penny for this. She's been good for sometimes brutal honesty about the worlds we live in - real and fictional - for a few years now. This is another aspect of that work of hers.
And this comes to mind in particular:
"If you love your country and don’t own its difficulties and its violence, you don’t actually love your country. You’re just catcalling it as it goes by."
Canada's existence in its present form is another consequence of that long con, and the people living here are dealing with being consequences of that as well. Consequences for each other. We are a mess right now. We can do better. We can be better.
Whether we end up with balkanization back into what the Indigenous nations had before first contact with the European nations whose leaders wanted empires built upon the burned bones and spilled blood of the locals; into a mix of Indigenous and Settler holdings; the next conquest of the American Trumpist fascism if that survives this November upcoming; or something else hopefully unified by freely made choice and better for its struggles to accept our own ugly truths and better angels...?
I don't know yet.
https://longreads.com/2020/06/18/the-long-con-of-britishness/
Good on Laurie Penny for this. She's been good for sometimes brutal honesty about the worlds we live in - real and fictional - for a few years now. This is another aspect of that work of hers.
And this comes to mind in particular:
"If you love your country and don’t own its difficulties and its violence, you don’t actually love your country. You’re just catcalling it as it goes by."
Canada's existence in its present form is another consequence of that long con, and the people living here are dealing with being consequences of that as well. Consequences for each other. We are a mess right now. We can do better. We can be better.
Whether we end up with balkanization back into what the Indigenous nations had before first contact with the European nations whose leaders wanted empires built upon the burned bones and spilled blood of the locals; into a mix of Indigenous and Settler holdings; the next conquest of the American Trumpist fascism if that survives this November upcoming; or something else hopefully unified by freely made choice and better for its struggles to accept our own ugly truths and better angels...?
I don't know yet.
(no subject)
Jun. 25th, 2020 06:01 pmMasha Gessen on moral clarity:
https://www.newyorker.com/news/our-columnists/why-are-some-journalists-afraid-of-moral-clarity
Making a note to re-read at whatever leisure I still have.
https://www.newyorker.com/news/our-columnists/why-are-some-journalists-afraid-of-moral-clarity
Making a note to re-read at whatever leisure I still have.
WRITERS: Laurie Penny c. 2019
Sep. 1st, 2019 08:20 pmI've seen her work in news services and on blogs.
She's still doing her work.
Here's one more of her stories. Or perhaps an update of one you already know parts of.
Thanks to the Mary Sue for pointing it out.
She's still doing her work.
Here's one more of her stories. Or perhaps an update of one you already know parts of.
Thanks to the Mary Sue for pointing it out.
...the 30th anniversary of the Tiananmen Square Massacre of pro-democracy protesters and activists by troops of the mainland Chinese army...
...and the 75th anniversary of the D-Day landings in Normandy, France.
Both events matter to human history for very different reasons. And yet, one reason unites them: human rights.
We must neither forget, nor be taught that remembering is toxic to social harmony.
...and the 75th anniversary of the D-Day landings in Normandy, France.
Both events matter to human history for very different reasons. And yet, one reason unites them: human rights.
We must neither forget, nor be taught that remembering is toxic to social harmony.
...such as Vladimir Vladimirovich Putin.
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-03-18/insulting-putin-may-now-land-you-in-jail-under-new-russian-law
He's done so much that's worthy of insult from the 1990's onward - and we wonder about his KGB career prior to that - that it's difficult to determine where to begin. Though many people have made efforts to figure out the best answer to that question, to be sure.
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-03-18/insulting-putin-may-now-land-you-in-jail-under-new-russian-law
He's done so much that's worthy of insult from the 1990's onward - and we wonder about his KGB career prior to that - that it's difficult to determine where to begin. Though many people have made efforts to figure out the best answer to that question, to be sure.