Many thanks to our Patrons who cover ~2/3 of our hosting bill. Please join them if you can.

Ron Ridenour

From Wikispooks
Revision as of 21:52, 31 December 2020 by Terje (talk | contribs) (journalist/activist)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Person.png Ron Ridenour WebsiteRdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
(journalist, author, activist)
Ron ridenour.jpg
NationalityUS
"journalist-author-editor-activist for peace, equality and justice"

Not to be confused with Ronald 'Ron' Ridenhour, who played a central role in spurring the investigation of the My Lai massacre.

Ron Ridenour is an American journalist and author living in Denmark. Describing himself as a "journalist-author-editor-activist for peace, equality and justice....I have written for the mass media until blacklisted, for the underground and for social media."[1]

After starting to "question American values" during military service, he became politically active in the early 1960s, inspired by the Cuban Revolution. At first protesting against the Bay of Pigs invasion, he joined the Fair Play for Cuba Committee. He was an activist during the 1964 Mississippi Freedom Summer campaign to force the state to allow black people the right to vote. He later supported the Black Panther Party, and other liberation movements inside the United States as well as revolutionary movements throughout Latin America. He was with the American Indian Movement at Wounded Knee occupation (1972), where he wrote about their resistance for the Los Angeles Free Press.

Journalism

Ridenour began working as a reporter in 1967. He was fired from three dailies (Hanford Sentinel, Riverside Press-Enterprise, Hollywood Reporter) for failing to self-censor his reportages and for union organizing efforts, as well as support for the Black Panthers. The FBI visited at least two work places to get him fired. In the 1970s, he reported for and edited several alternative “underground” weeklies, including the "Los Angeles News Advocate“, "Los Angeles Free Press” and the “L.A. Vanguard”.

In 1980, he moved to Denmark for personal reasons. Between 1982 and 1996, he lived for a year in Nicaragua and worked for the Nicaraguan Sandinista government; and eight years in Cuba where he translated, wrote and edited for its foreign publishing house, Editorial José Martí, and its news agency, Prensa Latina.

His work has appeard in many publications, including The Morning Star, New Statesman, The Guardian, Playboy, Liberation News Service, Pacific News Service, Coast, Qui, Skeptic, Sevendays, and Pacifica Radio.

He presently writes for Covert Action Magazine.

He has written many books, the latest is "The Russian Peace Threat: Pentagon on Alert", Punto Press, New York, June 2018.


Many thanks to our Patrons who cover ~2/3 of our hosting bill. Please join them if you can.


References


57px-Notepad icon.png This is a page stub. Please add to it.