Media being used as propaganda arm by state, capitalist forces, says Kerala Speaker M.B. Rajesh
The Hindu
‘News being made a commodity and a spectacle’
The media is being used as a propaganda machinery by both the state and capitalist forces and it is also found to play to the tunes of communalism, Assembly Speaker M.B. Rajesh has said. Delivering a lecture at an event held in memory of late journalist N. Rajesh here on Tuesday, the Speaker said that news was being made into a commodity and a spectacle. “I am reminded of an incident told by a school teacher during 2019, a year after the disastrous floods. One of his students asked him if there would be floods that year too. Because he apparently liked watching people waddling through water on TV while he curled up under a blanket on a sofa in his drawing room,” said Mr. Rajesh. Watching other people’s plight had become fun for some, he said. Mr. Rajesh pointed out that untruth was being “worshipped” as the society was being flooded with fake news and paid news (to suit the interests of the state and capitalist forces). “Another cause for concern is the celebration of communalism. On the day of the shilanyas of the Ram Temple at Ayodhya, some TV news anchors were seen singing a live duet. That was also a declaration that independent journalism is dead in India,” he said.Hampi, the UNESCO-recognised historical site, was the capital of the Vijayanagara empire from 1336 to 1565. Foreign travellers from Persia, Europe and other parts of the world have chronicled the wealth of the place and the unique cultural mores of this kingdom built on the banks of the Tungabhadra river. There are fine descriptions to be found of its temples, farms, markets and trading links, remnants of which one can see in the ruins now. The Literature, architecture of this era continue inspire awe.
Unfurling the zine handed to us at the start of the walk, we use brightly-coloured markers to draw squiggly cables across the page, starting from a sepia-toned vintage photograph of the telegraph office. Iz, who goes by the pronouns they/them, explains, “This building is still standing, though it shut down in 2013,” they say, pointing out that telegraphy, which started in Bengaluru in 1854, was an instrument of colonial power and control. “The British colonised lands via telegraph cables, something known as the All Red Line.”
The festival in Bengaluru is happening at various locations, including ATREE in Jakkur, Bangalore Creative Circus in Yeshwantpur, Courtyard Koota in Kengeri, and Medai the Stage in Koramangala. The festival will also take place in various cities across Karnataka including Tumakuru, Ramanagara, Mandya, Kolar, Chikkaballapura, Hassan, Chitradurga, Davangere, Chamarajanagar and Mysuru.