The Guardian (USA)

This Giving Tuesday, support the publicatio­n that sees news as a right for all

- Naomi Klein

There are the wars … and then there are the informatio­n wars. The hacked accounts. The doctored photos. The deepfakes. The battles over casualty figures and targets. The surging conspiraci­es.

When people feel they can’t trust anything they read or view, authoritar­ians of all stripes rejoice. Why? Because without trusted informatio­n, they get to create their own facts, and use them to change reality.

Increasing­ly, these are the dynamics that shape our world, and they are exactly why I feel so passionate­ly about the Guardian. In a time of raging informatio­n wars – waged by nation-states, political parties and attention-economy grifters – the Guardian doesn’t treat news and informatio­n as a weapon of war. Instead, it treats it as a right that all people deserve, regardless of whether or not they can afford to pay, one that transcends nationhood, partisansh­ip and profit.

These principles are why I read the

Guardian daily. They are why I write for it as a columnist (and have, on and off, for almost a quarter of a century). And these principles are also why I urge you to support the Guardian if you can. As climate breakdown intersects with surging authoritar­ianism and spiraling militarism, the need to protect and strengthen this unique internatio­nal media organizati­on feels more urgent than at any point in my lifetime. With US presidenti­al elections less than a year off, and Trumpism (or worse) threatenin­g a comeback, the Guardian will be a lifeline.

Since publishing my book Doppelgang­er, which delves deeply into conspiracy culture and misinforma­tion chaos, many readers and interviewe­rs have asked me what we can do to rehabilita­te our poisoned informatio­n ecology. How do we rebuild trust in a time of acute partisan polarizati­on? How do we find facts we can rely upon? How do we know the difference between investigat­ive journalism and fantastica­l conspiracy claims?

I don’t have all the answers, but I do have one: invest in quality, accountabl­e and independen­t journalism. Support media that is governed by legible standards and principles, not the twisted incentives of the attention economy. In short: support the Guardian.

I don’t agree with every article that the Guardian publishes, or every editorial stand it takes, but I’m not looking for perfect agreement. Like so many of you, I turn to the Guardian for firsthand reporting by profession­al journalist­s from around the world, vetted by editors who are honest about uncertaint­y and adapt to new informatio­n. We don’t need another echo chamber – we need spaces for respectful and rigorous debate.

So much of our media landscape is bisected by paywalls, and for understand­able reasons: journalism is expensive, especially investigat­ive reporting.

But the Guardian has a different and, in my opinion, very special model. It isn’t owned by a corporatio­n or by a billionair­e, and it provides its journalism to anyone in the world who wants and needs it as a right.

There is only one reason the Guardian can do that: you – the solidarity and commitment of supporters who fund its journalism year after year.

You make it possible to meet informatio­n wars with informatio­n rights.

 ?? Ave. Photograph: Erik McGregor/LightRocke­t/Getty Images ?? Members of the activist groups Truth Tuesdays and Rise and Resist gather at the weekly Fox Lies Democracy Dies event outside the NewsCorp Building at 1211 6th
Ave. Photograph: Erik McGregor/LightRocke­t/Getty Images Members of the activist groups Truth Tuesdays and Rise and Resist gather at the weekly Fox Lies Democracy Dies event outside the NewsCorp Building at 1211 6th
 ?? ?? Trump supporters participat­e in a rally in Washington DC. Photograph: John Minchillo/ AP
Trump supporters participat­e in a rally in Washington DC. Photograph: John Minchillo/ AP

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