I have to admit that the think pieces on the media’s ineptitude to do their f***ing job are part of the issue cuz who is the audience if everyone seems to see a problem yet the problem keeps continuing?? Maybe a dumb question I don’t know 🤷🏽♀️
I have always loved the Intercept, DemocracyNow, and The Guardian for how their work challeng…
I have to admit that the think pieces on the media’s ineptitude to do their f***ing job are part of the issue cuz who is the audience if everyone seems to see a problem yet the problem keeps continuing?? Maybe a dumb question I don’t know 🤷🏽♀️
I have always loved the Intercept, DemocracyNow, and The Guardian for how their work challenges me, so I’m glad to put this one in that group.
Also, I wrote a research paper on Naomi Klein’s latest book and what’s wild is that she has literally discussed at length the issue of what’s taking place in Gaza and what she called the “doppelgänger politics” of Israel and Palestine. She has about three specific chapters that go into great depth about ways to approach the topic and how to think through certain things, but in almost every interview I could find of her no one ever asked her about it. It’s probably one of the most in depth non-academic books that discusses it drawing from history and how trauma interplays into why people act the way they do in the present it’s very nuanced in the way that the stories we tell ourselves through history have tangible ramifications when we don’t challenge why something is the way it is & leading through empathy. Highly recommend it, I believe they are chapters 12-14 or 15 (though the entire book is excellent).
I have to admit that the think pieces on the media’s ineptitude to do their f***ing job are part of the issue cuz who is the audience if everyone seems to see a problem yet the problem keeps continuing?? Maybe a dumb question I don’t know 🤷🏽♀️
I have always loved the Intercept, DemocracyNow, and The Guardian for how their work challenges me, so I’m glad to put this one in that group.
Also, I wrote a research paper on Naomi Klein’s latest book and what’s wild is that she has literally discussed at length the issue of what’s taking place in Gaza and what she called the “doppelgänger politics” of Israel and Palestine. She has about three specific chapters that go into great depth about ways to approach the topic and how to think through certain things, but in almost every interview I could find of her no one ever asked her about it. It’s probably one of the most in depth non-academic books that discusses it drawing from history and how trauma interplays into why people act the way they do in the present it’s very nuanced in the way that the stories we tell ourselves through history have tangible ramifications when we don’t challenge why something is the way it is & leading through empathy. Highly recommend it, I believe they are chapters 12-14 or 15 (though the entire book is excellent).