I'm Jonathan Sacerdoti

Who controls what you know? Ashley Rindsberg on the capture of Wikipedia and public knowledge

1 h 16 min · 14 mei 2026
aflevering Who controls what you know? Ashley Rindsberg on the capture of Wikipedia and public knowledge artwork

Beschrijving

Ashley Rindsberg has uncovered how a small group of powerful online actors can twist the facts we trust, reshape public reality at global scale, and quietly influence what millions of people believe they know. Search engines, encyclopaedias, artificial intelligence models and social platforms now form the infrastructure of public knowledge. They shape what citizens believe, what institutions repeat, what journalists trust, and what political actors can smuggle into respectable discourse. The deepest battles of the internet age are fought through language, sourcing, rankings, edits and definitions. This is a full scale battle for your mind. In this conversation, Jonathan Sacerdoti speaks with Ashley Rindsberg about Wikipedia, propaganda, information warfare, and the collapsing distinction between knowledge and power. At stake is the machinery by which ideas acquire legitimacy. Donate to support these conversations. [https://jonathansacerdoti.com/donate] 👁‍🗨 Watch if you want to understand how information warfare now operates through the institutions we trust most, and why the struggle over facts has become a struggle over political legitimacy, historical memory and civilisational confidence. 💬 We Discuss: 🧠 Why the internet has become the primary power centre for politics, culture, ideology and public belief 📚 How Wikipedia’s claim to neutrality can become a vehicle for narrative control 🌍 Why the battle over Israel, Palestinians and Jews on Wikipedia carries serious geopolitical consequences 🕵️ How anonymous editors can influence material with profound political, economic and human significance 🤖 Why artificial intelligence systems relying on Wikipedia may amplify contested narratives at scale 🧾 How information laundering works when sources, citations and institutional trust reinforce one another ⚖️ Why “neutral point of view” can fail when moral and political conflicts are embedded in the sources themselves 🏛️ How trusted knowledge infrastructure affects journalism, education, policy and public memory 🔥 Why modern propaganda often appears through respectable systems rather than crude slogans 🧩 What this reveals about Western institutions, technological dependence and the fragility of shared reality 🔔 Subscribe for more serious and unflinching conversations about information warfare, free speech, Israel, antisemitism, media power and the institutions shaping the West. 📲 Follow Jonathan On X [https://x.com/jonsac] On Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/jonathansacerdoti/] On Substack [https://jonsac.substack.com] 👇 Comment below — who should be trusted to guard public knowledge when the platforms shaping reality are anonymous, ideological and structurally unaccountable?

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aflevering Suspended, investigated, nearly expelled: what universities do to dissidents, and how Connie Shaw broke free artwork

Suspended, investigated, nearly expelled: what universities do to dissidents, and how Connie Shaw broke free

Connie Shaw went on LBC at 8am to defend free speech on Islam — and was publicly called a racist before the interview ended. She had already been suspended from her university radio committee and faced potential expulsion for writing about trans ideology on campus. She used to be woke herself. 👉🏻 If you like this interview please share it with a friend, and give it five stars 👈🏻 Across universities, newsrooms, and public platforms in Britain, a pattern keeps repeating: point to Islamic extremism, question trans ideology, or defend Western identity — and the response is not debate but accusation. The labels shift from episode to episode — racist, transphobic, far right — but the mechanism is identical. Name the person, not the argument. Make the cost of speaking visible to everyone watching. This is how honest conversations are removed from public life. In this conversation, Jonathan Sacerdoti speaks with Connie Shaw — external affairs officer at the Free Speech Union and commentator — about Islamism, trans ideology in academia, the grooming gangs cover-up, the state of British universities, Israel, and what free speech actually means in a society where some speech is already a coded call to violence. At stake is the ability of any citizen to say plainly what they can see. Donate to support these conversations, at https://jonathansacerdoti.com/donate 🧑‍💻 Watch if you want to understand how ideological pressure shapes young people at school and university — and why those who break from it face organised attempts to silence them. 🗣 We Discuss: 🎙 Why Connie was accused of racism on LBC for defending free speech on Islamic public prayer in Trafalgar Square 🏫 How trans ideology embedded itself inside academia — and what happened when Connie wrote about it 📖 Why some students believe that even reading the opposing argument is an act of moral transgression 🕌 Why criticism of Islamism keeps being reframed as racism — and who benefits from that confusion 👮 How a self-described former school snitch and feminist society chair woke up to what she had been part of 🇮🇱 What Connie found when she visited Israel, and why many people who hold strong opinions still don't know what happened on October 7th ✝️ Why an atheist can still believe Christianity is essential to Western civilisation 🗺 Whether free speech can survive in a society where some communities use language as a coded call to violence ⚖️ What role figures like Tommy Robinson actually play in British political life — and whether that role is ultimately helpful or harmful 👶 Why declining birth rates and the breakdown of relationships between young men and women may be the most underreported civilisational crisis of our time 📺 Subscribe for more serious and unflinching conversations about free speech, Islam, trans ideology, Israel, antisemitism, and the culture wars reshaping the West. 🔔 Follow Jonathan On X: https://x.com/jonsac On Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jonathansacerdoti/ On Substack: https://jonsac.substack.com 💬 Comment below — is there a point at which protecting free speech becomes a form of civilisational self-harm, and if so, who gets to draw that line?

2 jun 20261 h 19 min
aflevering Who controls what you know? Ashley Rindsberg on the capture of Wikipedia and public knowledge artwork

Who controls what you know? Ashley Rindsberg on the capture of Wikipedia and public knowledge

Ashley Rindsberg has uncovered how a small group of powerful online actors can twist the facts we trust, reshape public reality at global scale, and quietly influence what millions of people believe they know. Search engines, encyclopaedias, artificial intelligence models and social platforms now form the infrastructure of public knowledge. They shape what citizens believe, what institutions repeat, what journalists trust, and what political actors can smuggle into respectable discourse. The deepest battles of the internet age are fought through language, sourcing, rankings, edits and definitions. This is a full scale battle for your mind. In this conversation, Jonathan Sacerdoti speaks with Ashley Rindsberg about Wikipedia, propaganda, information warfare, and the collapsing distinction between knowledge and power. At stake is the machinery by which ideas acquire legitimacy. Donate to support these conversations. [https://jonathansacerdoti.com/donate] 👁‍🗨 Watch if you want to understand how information warfare now operates through the institutions we trust most, and why the struggle over facts has become a struggle over political legitimacy, historical memory and civilisational confidence. 💬 We Discuss: 🧠 Why the internet has become the primary power centre for politics, culture, ideology and public belief 📚 How Wikipedia’s claim to neutrality can become a vehicle for narrative control 🌍 Why the battle over Israel, Palestinians and Jews on Wikipedia carries serious geopolitical consequences 🕵️ How anonymous editors can influence material with profound political, economic and human significance 🤖 Why artificial intelligence systems relying on Wikipedia may amplify contested narratives at scale 🧾 How information laundering works when sources, citations and institutional trust reinforce one another ⚖️ Why “neutral point of view” can fail when moral and political conflicts are embedded in the sources themselves 🏛️ How trusted knowledge infrastructure affects journalism, education, policy and public memory 🔥 Why modern propaganda often appears through respectable systems rather than crude slogans 🧩 What this reveals about Western institutions, technological dependence and the fragility of shared reality 🔔 Subscribe for more serious and unflinching conversations about information warfare, free speech, Israel, antisemitism, media power and the institutions shaping the West. 📲 Follow Jonathan On X [https://x.com/jonsac] On Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/jonathansacerdoti/] On Substack [https://jonsac.substack.com] 👇 Comment below — who should be trusted to guard public knowledge when the platforms shaping reality are anonymous, ideological and structurally unaccountable?

14 mei 20261 h 16 min
aflevering What happens when you question everything about who you are – Bellamy Bellucci breaks every identity rule, and neither side likes it artwork

What happens when you question everything about who you are – Bellamy Bellucci breaks every identity rule, and neither side likes it

Jonathan Sacerdoti speaks with Bellamy Bellucci, a South African-born, American trans-woman who converted to Judaism and now lives between worlds that rarely tolerate one another. Bellamy's identity is often challenged and questions by the very groups that you might expected to affirm it. Public language increasingly celebrates identity while losing any stable account of meaning. Categories multiply, recognition becomes currency, and institutions struggle to distinguish between self-description and truth. In that confusion, questions that once belonged to philosophy or theology now play out through politics, culture, and personal testimony. DONATE TO SUPPORT THESE INTERVIEWS: https://jonathansacerdoti.com/donate Bellamy describes a life shaped by displacement, violence, and reinvention. From apartheid-era South Africa to the United States, from homelessness to religious conversion, and from gender dysphoria to public advocacy for Israel, Bellamy's trajectory cuts across the categories that dominate 21st century Western discourse. 👁‍🗨 Watch if you want to understand how identity, belief, and political ideology collide in a single life shaped by conflict, conviction, and resistance. 💬 We Discuss: 🧭 How personal identity becomes a battleground for wider civilisational conflicts 🔥 Why conversion to Judaism is described as easier than living openly as a Jew 🧠 The distinction between psychological identity and physical reality in gender dysphoria 🌍 How Western institutions reward victimhood and reshape identity into political capital ⚔️ Why October 7 acted as a moment of collective activation for Jews worldwide 🧩 The tension between internal truth and external recognition in modern identity politics 🏛️ How ideological movements adopt minority identities as instruments of power 📉 The erosion of cultural confidence in the West and its consequences for social cohesion 🕯️ The role of faith, resilience, and suffering in shaping Jewish identity across generations 🧱 Why assimilation, belonging, and national identity remain unresolved in Western societies 🤔 Can you be addicted to transition? 🔔 Subscribe for more serious and unflinching conversations about identity, power, and the future of Western societies. 📲 Follow Jonathan On X [https://x.com/jonsac] On Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/jonathansacerdoti] On Substack [https://jonsac.substack.com] 👇 Comment below — can a society sustain itself if it cannot define truth, identity, or belonging with any shared clarity?

26 apr 202655 min
aflevering The warning we ignored: Holocaust survivor Martin Stern on THE HUMAN CAPACTIY FOR EVIL artwork

The warning we ignored: Holocaust survivor Martin Stern on THE HUMAN CAPACTIY FOR EVIL

This Yom Hashoah special episode features Holocaust survivor Martin Stern, who shares his story and reflects on his fears for the world today. Martin Stern survived arrest, deportation, and life in camps as a young child, his survival dependent on individuals who chose courage over conformity at moments of real danger. His life since has been shaped by that experience, through decades of reflection and education, including his work teaching younger generations about the Holocaust and other genocides. In this challenging conversation, Martin It examines how ordinary people come to adopt ideas they have not properly interrogated, how crowds form around moral language that has lost its substance, and how institutions fail to cultivate independent thought. What emerges is not simply memory, but a warning about how societies drift, how certainty replaces judgement, and how easily moral language can be detached from reality. 👁‍🗨 Watch if you want to understand how Holocaust testimony exposes the deeper failures shaping the present 💬 We Discuss: • 🕯 Why Yom Hashoah demands moral seriousness rather than symbolic remembrance • 🧠 How a five-year-old child experienced arrest, interrogation, and deportation under Nazi rule • 🚂 What the camps revealed about ordinary people carrying out extraordinary evil without reflection • 🧭 How individual acts of courage, like those which saved Martin and his sister, illuminate moral choice under pressure • 🏛 How modern institutions and media environments fail to cultivate independent moral judgement • 🗣 Why large groups adopt identical slogans without genuine understanding or inquiry • ⚖ The role of conformity, social approval, and intellectual laziness in shaping belief systems • 🔥 How contemporary hostility toward Jews reflects deeper ideological and civilisational tensions • 🧩 The convergence of identity politics and inherited prejudice as a destabilising force • 📉 Why “never again” has not held, and what that reveals about human nature • 🧑‍🏫 The collapse of education as a system for teaching ethical reasoning and responsibility • 🌍 What it means to live in an era where truth is contested and moral certainty is performative 🔔 Subscribe for more serious and unflinching conversations about history, power, and the moral challenges shaping our world 📲 Follow Jonathan On X: https://x.com/jonsac On Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jonathansacerdoti/ On Substack: https://jonsac.substack.com 👇 Comment below — what does it take for a society to turn memory into judgement, rather than ritual? #JonathanSacerdoti #MartinStern #YomHashoah #HolocaustSurvivor #HolocaustMemory #Antisemitism #WesternValues #EducationCrisis #MoralResponsibility

13 apr 20261 h 4 min
aflevering The end of a system that once held the world together – Danny Orbach on what comes after the collapse of the global order and the rules-based system artwork

The end of a system that once held the world together – Danny Orbach on what comes after the collapse of the global order and the rules-based system

The language of international law is being stretched to breaking point. Terms once defined with precision are now deployed as instruments of moral accusation, detached from the evidentiary standards that once gave them force. In that shift, something deeper is revealed about the condition of Western institutions. Authority no longer rests securely on method, but on consensus, amplification, and the emotional force of accusation. What presents itself as a defence of human rights increasingly operates through blurred definitions, institutional capture, and self-reinforcing narratives. The result is a system that struggles to distinguish between war, crime, and rhetoric, while insisting on moral certainty. Danny Orbach is an associate professor for history and Asian studies at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. He specialises in military history, political assassinations and coups, military adventurism, illegal orders, dynamics of military atrocities and the history of intelligence and espionage. In this conversation with Jonathan Sacerdoti he challenges the widespread use of the term “genocide” in relation to Gaza, examines how international institutions, media, and academia reinforce one another in elevating contested claims into accepted truth, and how evidentiary standards are displaced by moral framing. He explores the blurring and expansion of legal definitions, the role of NGOs and the UN in shaping narratives, and the way political and intellectual pressures shape judicial and scholarly consensus. He also addresses how immigration and shifting notions of national and cultural identity are placing new strain on Western democracies, challenging their ability to define boundaries, maintain cohesion, and sustain legitimacy. 👁‍🗨 Watch if you want to understand how legal language, institutional authority, and political incentives are reshaping truth, justice, and democracy in the modern world. 🙏🏻 DONATE TO SUPPORT THESE INTERVIEWS: https://jonathansacerdoti.com/donate 💬 We Discuss: ⚖️ Why the legal definition of genocide requires specific intent and why that threshold matters 🧠 How moral intuition is increasingly replacing evidentiary standards in public discourse 🌐 The rise of “junctions of reliability” across the UN, NGOs, academia, and media 📊 How the shift from quantitative to interpretive standards enables political manipulation 🔁 The feedback loop between institutions that amplifies unverified claims into accepted truth 🏛️ Why international courts may be influenced by social and intellectual pressure 🧩 The gradual expansion and blurring of legal definitions in the laws of war 🗳️ How modern political incentives prioritise signalling over compromise in democracies 🧱 The “barnacle effect” of accumulating laws and regulations slowing institutional function 🌍 Why the post-World War II rules-based order is fracturing into a more unstable system ⚠️ The growing gap between liberal elites and democratic legitimacy 🧭 Whether liberal democracy can reform itself before more radical alternatives emerge 🔔 Subscribe for more serious and unflinching conversations about geopolitics, law, and the future of Western civilisation. 📲 Follow Jonathan On X: https://x.com/jonsac On Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jonathansacerdoti/ On Substack: https://jonsac.substack.com 👇 Comment below — can institutions recover their authority once definitions, evidence, and trust begin to erode, or does that loss become irreversible?

9 apr 20261 h 6 min