Top 56 Quotes & Sayings by Maria Ressa

Explore popular quotes and sayings by a Filipino journalist Maria Ressa.
Last updated on December 18, 2024.
Maria Ressa

Maria Angelita Ressa is a Filipino-American journalist and author, the co-founder and CEO of Rappler, and the first Filipino recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize. She previously spent nearly two decades working as a lead investigative reporter in Southeast Asia for CNN.

I landed in New Jersey, where I could barely speak English, and I had to figure out what a short brown kid was going to do in this big white world.
To deal with COVID-19, countries like India, Brazil, Jordan and Thailand are cutting press freedom and freedom of expression. In nations like Israel, South Korea and the U.S., intrusive surveillance has been imposed to track the movement of citizens, at the expense of human rights.
Press freedom is not just about journalists, right? It's not just about us, it's not just about me, it's not just about Rappler. Press freedom is... the foundation of every single right of every single Filipino to the truth, so that we can hold the powerful to account.
Let me go back to a fundamental thing we all used to agree on: information is power. That's why we became journalists in the first place. — © Maria Ressa
Let me go back to a fundamental thing we all used to agree on: information is power. That's why we became journalists in the first place.
The seed idea for Rappler really is looking at information cascades. If you think about it, the end goal - when I was raising money for Rappler, I didn't talk about investigative journalism, even though that's our core.
Technology enabled Rappler's fast growth starting in 2012, but we were also among the first victims when social media was weaponized in 2016.
I always felt that I wasn't as American as Americans and then I realised when I got back to the Philippines that I was not Filipino.
The attacks against me and Rappler began appearing on Facebook in the summer of 2016. A year later President Rodrigo Duterte was repeating them in his State of the Nation address.
Frankly, it's a bit shocking to me the lengths government will go to to let little Rappler feel its power.
Investigative journalism is never mass-based; it's very focused, and you want people who are passionate about it to take it.
In 14 months, my government, the Philippine 2 government, has filed 11 cases. I posted bail eight times, I've been arrested twice in five weeks, detained once, and the only thing I've done, my only crime is to be a journalist, to speak truth to power.
All through my life, when faced with a difficult decision, I always ask myself - where can I learn more. Make the choice to learn.
All around the world, leaders are gaining more power. That's what this pandemic demands: a coordinated whole-of-nation approach with a powerful conductor at its center.
After living a decade in Jakarta, I chose. I chose Manila, the Philippines, for better or worse. — © Maria Ressa
After living a decade in Jakarta, I chose. I chose Manila, the Philippines, for better or worse.
I would give back every single award to be able to actually do our jobs as journalists without this kind of harassment.
Enshrined in the Philippine constitution, which is similar to the United States, is the bill of rights: freedom of expression, freedom of the press. These are enshrined. And yet, freedom of the press has been curtailed.
I run Rappler, an online news site in the Philippines.
Constitutionally you can't have a law go retroactively.
The social media platforms have taken over the distribution of news globally. They treat a lie the same way you would treat a fact.
When you're on social media, your brain is being rewired.
The difference between Rappler and other newsgroups in the Philippines is that journalists control Rappler both editorially and commercially. We make decisions that are bad for business but protect the public sphere.
Any journalist who asked critical questions, anyone on social media who questioned about the extrajudicial killings was bombarded with abuse, threats of violence death threats from trolls and bots and these fake Facebook accounts.
Don't be afraid - if you don't exercise your rights, you will lose them.
I'm banking on the fact that there are still good people in government who will prevent this. I've been a journalist for more than 33 years, and at Rappler we refuse to change, I refuse to be bullied.
So a lie told a million times becomes the truth.
Without facts you can't have truth.
In a war zone you know exactly where the threats are coming from. I plan my way in and we plan our way out and you're there for a limited period of time.
I don't think we have wrapped our heads around how much technology has allowed the manipulation of individuals and democracies.
If the social media platforms don't take the gatekeeping seriously they will kill the public sphere. If we don't get this right in 2020 you can open a decade or longer of a descent into fascism. And it will be global because platforms are global.
Always make the choice to learn. What Princeton taught me was whatever mess you are studying, pull a thread with great persistence 'til you have clarity of thought. Princeton taught me how to solve a problem. How to think - that's what we pull out of this place.
Ninety-seven percent of Filipinos on the Internet are on Facebook. And according to Hootsuite or We Are Social, in January 2019, Filipinos spend the most time on the Internet, and they spend the most time on social media globally.
Now technology gives you a chance to help organize. You don't have to wait for either the inefficiency or the corruption. You don't have to wait for government. You can actually self-organize and build institutions bottom up.
I'm not a critic, I'm a journalist. I'm doing my job holding the government to account.
If you want to rip the heart out of a democracy, you go after the facts. That's what modern authoritarians do. You lie. All the time. Then, you say it's your opponents and the journalists who lie.
Then there is my country, the Philippines. President Rodrigo Duterte placed most of the country under a lockdown on the ides of March. Surrounded by men in uniform, he cut public transportation and talked about home quarantine, checkpoints and curfews, but said little about the virus or economic aid for those in need.
A Princeton education sets you up for life: you have learned how to learn, and at a time when technology has changed everything, you will constantly have to learn.
Truth matters. Checks and balances matter. — © Maria Ressa
Truth matters. Checks and balances matter.
After I got arrested the Filipino government unshackled me. I knew first-hand how they violated my rights and I could speak about that from experience.
Embrace your fear. Imagine what you're most afraid of, touch it and hold it so that you rob it of its power.
In a weird way, I'm a good target for the government, because I can push back.
My heroes were always a combination of Captain Kirk and Mr Spock. You have to be ruled by logic, but if you're only ruled by logic and you don't touch your emotions, you will make the wrong instinctive call.
Press freedom is the foundation of the rights of all Filipinos to the truth.
I'm not a criminal but I've been fingerprinted like a criminal.
We know firsthand how social media and the law have been weaponized against perceived critics of the Duterte administration. We've been reporting on it from the start.
How well we survive this time of creative destruction, it really is, depends on each of us, on each of us fighting our individual battles of integrity, for integrity.
What are the values that give meaning? What is the line that you will never cross, because on this side you're good, and on this side you're evil.
Journalism has a check-and-balance effect to those in power, and those in power submitted themselves to it. — © Maria Ressa
Journalism has a check-and-balance effect to those in power, and those in power submitted themselves to it.
If you can make people believe lies are the facts, then you can control them.
I think that social media platforms and technology have been the accelerator for the push for the populist-style administrations in democratically elected presidents.
If I lose these tax-evasion cases and others filed by the Philippine government, I could go to jail for 10 to 15 years.
I'm not a politician; I'm a journalist.
Don't let technology dictate your life.
Never judge. Step in their shoes.
I work too hard, I'd be a really bad mom, unfortunately. I can't even keep a plant!
The more you do the right thing, the harder it is to do the wrong thing.
You cannot succeed if at some point you haven't failed.
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