header banner
WORLD

‘Curating our reality’: Investigative journalist Abby Martin takes aim at US media hegemony to RT

MOSCOW, Sept 6: A journalist whose documentary series was shut-down by financial difficulties due to US sanctions on Venezuela, has told RT that the US along with tech giants “are curating our reality” when it comes to independent media.
The Empire Files host Abby Martin | Photo: Russia Today
By Agencies

MOSCOW, Sept 6: A journalist whose documentary series was shut-down by financial difficulties due to US sanctions on Venezuela, has told RT that the US along with tech giants “are curating our reality” when it comes to independent media.


Abby Martin, who until last month hosted The Empire Files on Latin American TV network teleSUR, told Mike Papantonio’s America Lawyer program that recent Trump administration sanctions had “completely ceased TeleSur’s ability to function.”


“The latest round of sanctions,” argued Martin, has resulted in all contract journalists at the company “unable to receive funds all around the world,” while the ability to send and receive funds through Caracas “ has also been completely halted.”


Related story

Taking investigative journalism to new heights


“There’s a reason why people like you, people like me work for outlets like RT, like TeleSur,” Martin told Papantonio.


“There’s very little places, virtually no places obviously in the corporate media apparatus that you can tell the truth to challenge corporate tyranny and this US imperialist narrative of constant regime change all around the world.”


Accusing tech giants like Facebook and Google of “working hand in glove” with the US government and conservative think tanks, Martin said the attack on alternative media outlets that challenge the “corporate media hegemony” of the US was an attempt at “literally curating our reality and trying to paint anything that challenges this establishment narrative as conspiracy theories, as disinformation, as Russian trolls.”


“It’s a very dangerous and slippery slope that we’re on and I just think it’s time that we take a step back and actually fund the journalists that we want to see and want to support,” she concluded.


Since taking office, the Trump administration ramped up sanctions against Venezuela, imposing travel restrictions in September 2017. Since Venezuela’s elections in May, Washington has expanded to bar US firms or citizens from buying debt or accounts receivable from the Venezuelan government, including its state oil firm.


In July, it added President Maduro to the growing list of high-ranking Venezuelan officials targeted by sanctions which freeze any of Maduro’s assets under US jurisdiction.


Hyperinflation as a result of the economic sanctions has hit the country’s poor the hardest. Shortages have seen prices of the everyday items skyrocket, with bundles of notes needed to buy the most basic of necessities.

Related Stories
My Career

Technology has made media effective in its role as...

SOCIETY

Press Council takes actions against 31 erring YouT...

POLITICS

Chinese envoy in Nepal courts controversy with apo...

POLITICS

PM Dahal takes responsibility of the arrest of KMG...

My City

Auditions for 'Rap Battle Nepal' commence

Top Videos

Bold Preety willing to fight for her musical career

Awareness among people on heart diseases has improved in Nepal’

Print still remains the numbers of one platform

Bringing home a gold medal is on my bucket

What is Nepal's roadmap to sage child rights