In a dark world, a light is held by those who make it harder for the powerful to lie

Journalists like Ravish Kumar battle hostile forces so that facts find a way to survive. With each new threat to our democracy, I cherish them all the more

Zoe Williams

In the summer, my friend Jess Search died after a short and vicious illness. She made documentaries, but people always eschewed words such as “producer” or “exec” when describing her, in favour of “powerhouse” and “force of nature”, and that was even before she started dying. Like anyone with a genuinely fun spirit, she also had an incredibly serious mind, and was knee-deep in trying to fix a lot of things, from the climate crisis to corruption, not just by film-making but through a galvanising quality she had. I felt a lot less hopeful about everything after she died, but it was a film she had made that gave me optimism again, if only about one thing.

While We Watched is a documentary about the Indian broadcast journalist Ravish Kumar, and it slotted into a body of her work – in film-making and in activism – that defended anyone who makes it harder for the powerful to lie. She was the first person I knew who recognised the danger of Slapp lawsuits, and started trying to build a fund for the journalist Carole Cadwalladr and others like her, who would, inevitably, be chased through the courts by people much richer than themselves. That asymmetry of wealth continues to have a devastating effect on investigative journalism….

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2024/jan/01/ravish-kumar-journalism-democracy-threat-lies

********************************************

The news has become intolerable and inhumane. Democracy’s vital feedback mechanism is broken

Socrates, the soul and the cosmos

Friedrich Nietzsche on German hostility to the Enlightenment (1881) / Zeev Sternhell on the price to be paid for cultural differentialism

The Peacock’s Graveyard

Kojin Karatani Wins Berggruen Prize (2022)

The New Associationist Movement

The Intellectual We Deserve (2018)

Theodor Adorno’s Minima Moralia is a warning against resurgent fascism

Walter Benjamin: Capitalism as Religion (1921)

Against homogenisation: Advancing diversity through Democratic Confederalism

Patriotism as a diagnosis

Alternatives to the nationalism of the conspicuously ignorant: Markha Valenta

Periagoge: Liberal Education in the Modern University

From the Multiversity Cave: Plato and Periagoge