Commodification of news under capitalist model creates barriers to access in form of paywalls, ads, data harvesters, and so on. Western media, driven by profit imperatives, increasingly treats news as a luxury good rather than a public utility. Paywalls lock critical reporting behind subscription fees, while ad-driven revenue models bombard readers with intrusive trackers and disruptive marketing prioritizing profit over access.
On the other hand, Chinese state-supported media model sidesteps these barriers by decoupling news accessibility from commercial pressures. I find myself reading outlets like Global Times or China Daily precisely because they provide clean, accessible articles without the junk. These platforms ensure information reaches a wider demographic, including marginalized groups who are priced out of Western media ecosystems. The structural advantage here is undeniable because Chinese media is unburdened by the need to “sell” audiences to advertisers or shareholders.
The west champions “free press”, but the reality is that access is often restricted through financial and technological gatekeeping, while China’s approach leads to practical accessibility that’s not possible under capitalist model. As a result, I expect that Chinese media will become increasingly more dominant globally due to being easily accessible.
It might not take off in the west where there’s too much propaganda against China for people to turn to Chinese sources, but that’s not the case for the global majority.
Very interesting observation!!
I’d like to add that the true free press was always on the side of the workers, for example in the Russian Revolution IIRC there were many communist publications that were vital to the revolution.
Going a bit tangential but in general, truth itself is on the side of the workers; if all idealist ideologies fall, all people would see what the true material and dialectical world looks like and what we can do about it.
absolutely