- cross-posted to:
- quotes@lemmygrad.ml
- cross-posted to:
- quotes@lemmygrad.ml
cross-posted from: https://lemmygrad.ml/post/4681667
Vladimir Lenin on bourgeois media
All over the world, Wherever there are capitalists, freedom of the press means freedom to buy up newspapers, to buy writers, to bribe, buy and fake “public opinion” for the benefit of the bourgeoisie.
VLADIMIR LENIN
It’s always upsetting to know thinkers and organizers were saying this stuff 100 years ago you take a quote from them and directly apply it today. I don’t know if that’s encouraging to think they were right, or saddening to think they were right and not much has change and in fact has got worse.
Things are better in time and places, from time to time
He doesn’t miss
an important reminder that the “government” and the “state” are not the same exact entity and in a capitalist society the media which is run by the capitalist class is also “state run media”
“Freedom of the press” is another of the principal slogans of “pure democracy”. And here, too, the workers know — and socialists everywhere have admitted it millions of times — that this freedom is a deception while the best printing presses and the biggest stocks of paper are appropriated by the capitalists and while capitalist rule over the press remains, a rule that is manifested throughout the world all the more strikingly, sharply, and cynically, the more democracy and the republican system are developed, as in America for example.
The first thing to do to win real equality and genuine democracy for the working people, for the workers and peasants, is to deprive capital of the possibility of hiring writers, buying up publishing houses, and hiring newspapers. And to do that the capitalists and exploiters have to be overthrown and their resistance suppressed.
The capitalists have always used the term ‘freedom’ to mean freedom for the rich to get richer and for the workers to starve to death.
In capitalist usage, freedom of the press means freedom of the rich to bribe the press, freedom to use their wealth to shape and fabricate so-called public opinion.
In this respect, too, the defenders of ‘pure democracy’ prove to be defenders of an utterly foul and venal system that gives the rich control over the mass media. They prove to be deceivers of the people who, with the aid of plausible, fine-sounding, but thoroughly false phrases, divert them from the concrete historical task of liberating the press from capitalist enslavement.
—Lenin, Congress of the First Comintern