Chris
Hedges will be a very welcome addition to RT
‘On
Contact’: Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Chris Hedges joins RT
America
RT,
2
June, 2016
A
Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist is joining the RT America team.
Author and social critic Chris Hedges will host a weekly interview
show called ‘On Contact,’ which will air “dissident voices”
currently missing from the mainstream media.
Hedges
will interview the black sheep of the establishment, leading
discussions that can’t be heard anywhere else.
“The
absence of dissident voices from the airwaves, including on public
broadcasting that was originally designed to allow those not beholden
to the power elites to be heard, has turned the media landscape in
the United States into an echo chamber for the powerful and the
wealthy,” Hedges said.
“Chris
and his decades work are a true embodiment of RT’s motto ‘Question
More.’ He is unafraid to be a rare voice of dissent in the American
news media, however unpopular his position,” said Margarita
Simonyan, RT’s editor-in-chief.
“Perhaps if voices like Chris’
weren’t ignored by the political and media establishments 13 years
ago, we could have avoided a lot of the travesties plaguing the
Middle East today.“
‘On
Contact’ will feature conversations with activists, intellectuals
and revolutionaries. As Hedges puts it, his show “will examine the
effects of the endless wars, mounting inequality and the steady
erosion of our civil liberties, and will give voice to those who
offer radical solutions, including those proposed by
anti-capitalists, and who have been shut out of the national debate
by a corporatized press.”
“The
constriction of acceptable opinion and debate has eroded the
integrity of the press and contributed to the decay of our
democracy,” Hedges said. ”This program will be a program where
dissident voices will not only be amplified, but celebrated.”
Hedges
was an outspoken critic of the Iraq War and criticized the media
coverage at the time as “shameful cheerleading.”
He
will join RT America's hosts Ed Schultz of ‘News with Ed,’ Larry
King of 'Politicking' and 'Larry King Now' and Tyrel Ventura, Tabetha
Wallace and Sean Stone of 'Watching the Hawks.'
No
stranger to the channel, Hedges has often been a guest on the news
and other RT America programs.
"The
media landscape in the United States has narrowed the acceptable
range of opinion, or been trivialized, to make it little more than a
platform for the elites or part of the vast system of entertainment,"
Hedges said.
"There
are few places ‒ RT is one ‒ where critics of corporate
capitalism and the American empire can find a voice," he
continued. "These voices are vital if we are to find our way
back to a democracy. It is for this reason I am doing On Contact
with RT."
Hedges
began his career covering the Falkland War in Argentina for National
Public Radio. He spent nearly two decades as a foreign correspondent,
reporting from more than 50 countries for a variety of news outlets.
In 2002, he was part of a team of The New York Times reporters
awarded a Pulitzer Prize for the paper’s coverage of global
terrorism.
In
2012, Hedges sued the Obama administration over the National Defense
Authorization Act, which gave the US military the power to legally
detain individuals without charge or trial. He said that, by simply
doing his job, he could be arrested and detained indefinitely due to
the nature of his work: reporting.
Hedges
has authored 11 books, including several New York Times best sellers.
He has a B.A. in English Literature from Colgate University and a
Master of Divinity from Harvard University.
He
speaks French, Spanish and Arabic and studied Latin and ancient Greek
at Harvard.
He
has taught at Columbia University, New York University, Princeton
University and the University of Toronto. He currently teaches
college credit courses through Rutgers University to students at a
maximum-security prison in New Jersey. He is married to Canadian
actress Eunice Wong.
'On
Contact' is recorded at RT’s New York bureau, and will first air on
Saturday, June 11
Karl
Marx exposed the peculiar dynamics of capitalism, or what he called
“the bourgeois mode of production.” He foresaw that capitalism
had built within it the seeds of its own destruction. He knew that
reigning ideologies—think neoliberalism—were created to serve the
interests of the elites and in particular the economic elites, since
“the class which has the means of material production at its
disposal, has control at the same time over the means of mental
production” and “the ruling ideas are nothing more than the ideal
expression of the dominant material relationships … the
relationships which make one class the ruling one.” He saw that
there would come a day when capitalism would exhaust its potential
and collapse. He did not know when that day would come. Marx, as
Meghnad Desai wrote, was “an astronomer of history, not an
astrologer.” Marx was keenly aware of capitalism’s ability to
innovate and adapt. But he also knew that capitalist expansion was
not eternally sustainable. And as we witness the denouement of
capitalism and the disintegration of globalism, Karl Marx is
vindicated as capitalism’s most prescient and important critic.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.