September 18, 2024 - 7:10pm

→ Public intellectuals support Brazil’s X ban 

Several public intellectuals have banded together in support of Brazilian judge Alexandre de Moraes’s suspension of X in the country. Moraes banned access to the platform in Brazil after a lengthy public feud with Elon Musk over free speech. The X CEO had refused Moraes’s request that he ban certain accounts, citing censorship concerns.

Scholars including Thomas Piketty and Yanis Varoufakis have sided with Moraes, arguing in the open letter that Musk’s noncompliance was part of a “broader effort to restrict the ability of sovereign nations to define a digital development agenda free from the control of mega-corporations based in the United States”. Who are the real authoritarians?

→ Former NIH director suggests ‘immunising’ people against ‘misinformation’

Former National Institutes of Health (NIH) Director Francis Collins has claimed that Americans need to be immunised against disinformation preemptively during a Wednesday discussion on MSNBC.

“We need to figure out how to immunise people against misinformation, prospectively,” Collins said. “Not always playing catch-up, but when something comes along, say: okay, get ready. You’re going to start to hear some crazy things about this. Be ready for that, and don’t be taken in.”

Collins is currently promoting his unironically titled new book, The Road To Wisdom. Writing in the Atlantic this week, he admitted to some informational failures from the NIH under his leadership: “The sources that were supposed to share objective information […] failed to achieve that.” Everyone makes mistakes. 

→ Saudi Arabia’s flop city 

This town has everything: modern urban planning, ancient sodomy laws, and a summer temperature approaching that of the Sun. But Saudi Arabia’s ambitious “The Line”, currently being built in Neom, has not yet achieved the “civilisational revolution” it promised in its massive PR campaign.

The streets and pavements were desolate, as was the public park, in a video shared by a South African influencer living in Neom. The few residents appeared to eat all their meals in a sad, fluorescent-lit “dining hall”. All of the buildings in the clip were three storeys high, a far cry from the promised 105-metre-high metropolis, and the bike lane was predictably not in use. The scene closely resembled a collection of hotels surrounding a mid-sized regional airport. Granted, Rome wasn’t built in a day — or a desert.