Why Astra Taylor Calls Mark Zuckerberg a Fascist

A conversation with the former Occupy activist turned author and filmmaker about the cannibal energies of late capitalism

Maria Bustillos
GEN

--

Photo Illustration; Photo: The Washington Post/Getty Images

AsAs impeachment hearings hit a fever pitch and new revelations surface weekly about the connections between Facebook and Republicans, the problems of our democracy on the threshold of the 2020 election couldn’t be more glaring. To get some insight into how best to confront our political morass, I caught up with Astra Taylor, a teacher, activist, and documentary filmmaker who specializes in the study of our democratic aspirations and decline. Her 2019 book Democracy May Not Exist, But We’ll Miss It When It’s Gone is less a straightforward investigation than a do-it-yourself-kit for redefining your own political views at a time when U.S. citizens are waking up to find their lifelong assumptions about government and citizenship upended nearly every day.

Taylor’s focus on participatory democracy follows from her long association with the Occupy movement beginning in 2011, when she co-edited, with Sarah Leonard of Dissent and Keith Gessen of n+1, the Occupy Gazette, a collection of writings documenting events at Zuccotti Park and analyzing their broader significance. She subsequently cofounded Strike Debt, an activist collective dedicated to…

--

--