
Jizzlaine Marxwell
563 posts

Jizzlaine Marxwell
@JizzMarxwell
Waiting to be pardoned








One of my longest-standing arguments is that we are not living in Orwell’s 1984, where truth is centrally suppressed and censored by force (that’s former communist societies, modern-day China, Russia, North Korea). We are living in something much closer to Huxley’s Brave New World. The truth is not hidden - it is almost always readily available. But it is buried beneath an industrial quantity of noise: propaganda, outrage, half-truths, conspiracy theories, influencer theatre, algorithmic rage bait and an endless stream of content designed not to inform us, but to keep us emotionally stimulated. The modern information system does not need to censor the truth when it can simply drown it in noise. A fact no longer has to be disproven - it only has to be surrounded by a hundred competing claims, stripped of context and nuance, turned into partisan ammunition and pushed into the same feed as celebrity gossip, memes and 15 second videos engineered to deliver the fastest possible dopamine hit. By the time the truth reaches us, it appears as just another piece of content competing for our attention. That is the more sophisticated form of control: not preventing people from knowing, but exhausting their capacity to care. Orwell feared a world in which people would be deprived of information. Huxley feared a world in which they would be given so much distraction, stimulation and triviality that they would lose the desire to seek it. The defining struggle of our age is therefore not simply between truth and censorship, but between truth and indifference.


In 2022, Hong Kong cited security reasons for refusing to disclose which books had been removed from libraries. This time, security chief Chris Tang says no banned book list will be provided because people might just "change the wording of titles." Booksellers must make the decision and the "law is clear," he says. hongkongfp.com/2026/07/17/law…



















The real “baddies” are women who are unafraid to sell books in countries with dictators who are afraid of the people. Her t-shirt says “I am a bookstore employee”. Very seditious.



This is outright racism and an open mockery of international law — portraying the Philippines as a monkey and dismissing the Arbitral Award as nothing more than a script written by the US and Japan.


@kong001x isn't it pretty normal for diplomats of the same country to have access to the same information what's not normal is random social media users online spreading the exact same disinformation on China 🤔🤔🤔


















