Thanks Everyman for elucidating and these further thoughts.
By purity I simply meant judgement of people or their projects by rigid adherence to perceived principles (or some such )
I didn’t know Martha Gelhorn beforehand. From a quick look she had a long career as an on the ground war correspondent. Seems she was a leftwing supporter of Israel, and of the Spanish Republic.
She seems to have been known for speaking her mind in her reporting and scorning journalistic objectivity.
That article seems to bear this out. The way it’s written, I wouldn’t normally have read it.
Her career seems to have been distinguished and/or brave, she kept going until she was in her 80s. And they named a prize after her.
Other recipients include Dahr Jamail, Robert Fisk, Patrick Cockburn, and Julian Assange.
Pilger praises her.
My reading is that the prize is awarded for journalistic courage!? Not for political merit (which would make it a political prize).
While I can see how that article written over three decades before her last one grates on you, I think you’re being hard on Cook; she didn’t give him the award, as I say it was named after her for her journalistic courage as a veteran, not for pro-zionist hit pieces in the 60s.
Would you reject a Pilger award, because he had been friends with Gellhorn?
I think your ‘model’ is valid in theory, and we’ve probably seen piecemeal instances of it. I’ve seen politicians appeal insincerely to traits certain sectors have, that they don’t have themselves, in order to advance something they want.
But it would be a stretch to think of it as the norm, and try to ‘call it out’ every time you read something you disagree with from someone you respect. We know the pressure on independent journalists are under, and some compromises are necessary.
You’ve only got to read the btls underneath to see that Cook is showing a deal of courage, and conviction, in wading in to combative disagreements with his clientele. It would be far easier to avoid these revelations - tame though they seem to us, they have got him a lot of flak.
Campbell has had similar reactions for crossing red lines - yet see how much he has spread a useful message to people that would otherwise not have received it!
And if either Campbell or Cook have masters to obey, logically they shouln’t be happy at these developments either.
So I wouldn’t agree that activism is being neutered - rather the opposite, opening fresh eyes to level of ideas that even if not the most radical, they wouldn’t otherwise be opened to.
I’ve no time to spend worrying about double spies - I don’t need to know anyone’s true motivations. I think that’s the wrong track. You have to try to check things anyway, so take away what seems useful, and try to check it out. You can still judge by your experience of the person.
To me Cook, Campbell, Robert Malone etc, are all useful and when they are discussed - in all seriousness - as if they were some kind of plants it seems to me that’s a victory that can be notched up for the enemy.
Also, you can often get useful information from the untrustworthy opponents!
Cheers