2. What is ColdType’s mission?
“In its original
tabloid format ColdType promised to provide readers with “Writing Worth
Reading From Around The World.” That’s still our basic mission – I’m
constantly seeking writing that has something to say – and says it in
an intelligent, well-reasoned way.
“ColdType is dedicated to
excellence in progressive thought: the site is full of powerful book
excerpts, wonderful essays and some of the finest columnists in the
online world. Great thinking. Great writing. Great design. That’s what
we try to achieve in each monthly package.”
3. What is the approximate readership of your publication?
“The
ColdType web site gets between 150,000-250,000 hits a month, depending
on the amount of cross-postings we get. Most of the hits come in the
first two weeks of publication, which is why I’d like to publish more
often. But, right now, there’s no time for that . . .
The
ColdType Reader, just one part of coldtype.net, has been lifted by
other web sites around the world, so we know it gets lots more
downloads than our web counter tells us but, as the other sites don’t
supply figures, it’s hard to find out the precise circulation. One of
the good about being an Internet-based magazine is that there’s a
completely different circulation model than that of mainstream
publishing; the numbers don’t grind to a halt when a new issue is
published – we’re still getting hundreds of downloads each month of
issues published 18 months ago.”
4. How long have you been publishing Cold Type?
“ColdType
began as a tabloid magazine 13 years ago in 1994. I launched it while
corporate design consultant for Thomson Newspapers’ North American
operation. My ambition was to publish a weekly tabloid highlighting
great newspaper journalism from around the world, but I didn’t have
enough cash (or, if truth be told, the courage) to do my own prototype.
So I used corporate cash to do it, as a publication for the group’s
journalists. In hindsight, I realise I should have gathered the cash
and published it myself – that first issue was a runner up in the
Canadian National Magazine Awards contest for an 8-page photo essay by
Toronto photographer Russell Monk on the genocide in Uganda; and the
response to those first 2,000 copies was amazing.
“Five issues of the printed ColdType were produced, all of which are on our web site
http://www.coldtype.net/old.html
Ironically, Monk’s Rwanda photo essay isn’t there yet – I lost the page
files 10 years ago, but we’ve just tracked them down, so it will be in
the next issue
http://www.coldtype.net/photo.html
“When
I left Thomsons in 1996, ColdType ceased publication. Thomsons gave me
the title when they got out of the newspaper business in 2000 after
which it sat gathering dust for a couple of years until I had a
brainwave and registered ColdType.net to publish the magazine – still
as a tabloid – in pdf format. After one issue, I realized that the
newspaper format was not ideal for an online publication, so turned it
into the format you see it today, with long, essay-length articles
produced as downloadable pdfs.
“The ColdType Reader followed a couple of years ago. Its genesis was in a collection of essays titled OtherVoices
http://www.coldtype.net/voices.04.html
that I had introduced to coldtype.net in 2004, and later abandoned as
too time-consuming. (Look out for a separate e-book of the Best of
OtherVoices later this year). I realized there was a place for shorter
magazine-length articles a couple of years ago and ColdType/2 was born;
I renamed it The ColdType Reader an issue later as the title was
confusing readers.”
5. You have published some iconic figures from the Left. How do you draw such intellectual talent?
“I
hope they’re attracted by the philosophy and quality of the
publication. Right from its first printed issue, ColdType has carried
the work of great writers and photographers, and I believe that quality
attracts quality – our contributors certainly aren’t lured into
ColdType by money, because there isn’t any. I’m proud to have fine
contributors such as George Monbiot, John Pilger, Greg Palast, Edward
S. Herman, Uri Avnery, Michael Parenti, Noam Chomsky, Loretta
Napoleoni, Robert Fisk (who has been with us since the first printed
issue) and many others, and I hope they feel the same way about
ColdType.”
6. Your PDF format is unique; I am not aware of another sociopolitical or news site that employs it. What led you to employ PDF?
“Although
I appreciate the reach of the Internet, I’m not too keen on its limited
formatting. And, like many other internet readers, I still like to
print out stuff, read it and file it – holding a publication in your
hands and turning pages is so much more fun than reading on a computer
monitor. The great thing about the pdf format is that it allows me to
publish without having the hassles of advertising or subscriptions or
print runs or returns or paying printing bills and postage – or making
a profit! And I think there’s something respectful in presenting great
journalism in a manner that avoids the generic blandness of html,
making it instead enticing, unique readable. Just look at our
collection of 50 of Joe Bageant’s essays –
http://www.coldtype.net/joe.html – as an example of what I mean.”
7. ColdType provides peerless quality in its visual
presentation of its fine content. How are you able to maintain such a
high standard when you charge no subscription fees?
“It’s
as easy to produce quality, as it is to produce crap – and I’ve had
enough experience working in publishing over the last 30 years to tell
the difference. I don’t have to charge because ColdType is not my day
job – I travel around the world consulting on editorial and design for
newspapers and magazines. I think of ColdType as therapy – working for
commercial publishers imposes intellectual demands that I’m not always
happy with; editing ColdType allows me to publish what
I
(italic) believe is relevant. I hope we’ll be able to survive without
accepting paid-for ads, begging for money or charging subscribers.”
8. Please give us a quick biographical sketch of Mr. Tony Sutton.
“I’m
English, spent the early part of my career on weekly, evening, Sunday
and national newspapers in Britain. Then I became assistant London
editor of the East and West African editions of Drum magazine,
transferring to South Africa where I became executive editor of the
magazine – which was aimed at Black readers – a couple of months before
the June 1976 Soweto schoolkid riots (see more on my years at Drum at
http://www.coldtype.net/photo.html).
After that I became a consultant, working for the black alternative
media as well as mainstream newspapers and magazines. I moved to Canada
in 1990 to redesign the Globe and Mail newspaper in Toronto,
transferred to the corporate office as head of design for North America
and then became an independent consultant 12 years ago. I also spent
five years as part time editor of Design, the magazine of the US-based
Society for News Design.”
9. Also, please tell us about your wife and her contributions to your endeavors.
“Jools has kept me sane and out of prison for the past 40 years.”
10. After the years you spent editing Drum and opposing
Apartheid in South Africa, what are your thoughts on the conditions
that black South Africans face today?
“I still consult for
newspaper clients in South Africa and am amazed how, despite the
obvious signs of wealth in the cities; things haven’t really improved
for the majority of the people. There have been positive changes, of
course: Apartheid ended and everyone got the vote but, after taking
power, the ANC quickly abandoned its socialist ideals and its leaders
saw no problem in adapting to the ‘benefits’ of free market capitalism.
The result is a small class of elite citizens – both black and white –
who have to barricade themselves into homes surrounded by electrified
fencing and patrolled by armed security guards while the masses still
live in squalor.”
11. What do you think of the continued oppression of blacks
in the United States via a deeply entrenched system of
institutionalized racism, including the prison industrial complex, de
facto segregation, structural barriers virtually guaranteeing
widespread impoverishment, and a grossly inequitable educational system?
“I
remember my trips to the United States in the 1980s when black leaders
were demonstrating for the introduction of sanctions against South
Africa. It seemed strange that so much energy was spent in decrying the
lot of their oppressed brothers in South Africa while ignoring the
inequality that was so obvious in their own country. Apartheid doesn’t
have to be institutionalized to be effective – much of South Africa has
learned that lesson since the ANC came to power. The fight for economic
and social freedom for blacks in both countries still has to be won.”
12. Living in a nation which provides guaranteed health care
to its citizens, what do you think of the fact that the US plutocracy
has worked furiously for years to block “socialized medicine” in the
wealthiest nation on the planet, despite numerous polls indicating that
70-80% of US Americans favor a system of national health care?
“Healthcare
in the US is a disgrace. Until something is done about a system that
allows drug companies and other corporations to throw so much cash into
the electoral system the majority of working class people will continue
to be shafted. Change will only come when people open their eyes, see
what’s happening, rise from the comfort of their sofas, take to the
streets and do something about it.”
13. Many have drawn parallels between the plight of the
Palestinians and the black South Africans who suffered under Apartheid.
What is your view?
“The suffering of the Palestinians under the
oppression of Israel and, by extension, the United States is as bad, if
not worse, than that of black South Africans under the evils of
apartheid. Why is it so too easy to forget the lessons of recent
history – Israel, the United States and the world should be ashamed of
what is happening in the West Bank and, more recently, in Gaza. Israel,
perhaps more than any other nation, should know better . . .”
14. How did you wind up in Canada?
“The main reason
we left South Africa was because my son Oliver was about to be drafted
into the South African Defence Force, and there no way Jools and I
would allow him to fight for apartheid. But I was also ready for change
– we went to South Africa on a year-long contract in 1975 and stayed
for 14 – I was a newspaper and magazine consultant at the time and had
done everything I needed to do there; even my unpaid work with the
alternative media was becoming stale, especially as the end of
apartheid was on the horizon. At this time – late in 1989 – I was
invited to Toronto to lead the Globe and Mail newspaper through a major
redesign, so off we went. It was strange to find myself in a hotel room
in Toronto watching Nelson Mandela’s release from jail – at that moment
I thought I’d made a serious mistake, a feeling not helped by the fact
that we’d moved from an African summer to winter in Canada . . .”
15. In what ways, and to what extent, do you see the Stephen
Harper administration moving Canada into the realms of imperialism,
militarism, neocolonialism and fascism?
“I hope Harper
won’t be in power long enough to take us too far down those paths. But
I’m not sure the people of Canada will make the right choice at the
next election, whenever it happens. It’s amazing how the promise of tax
cuts and a bit of extra spending money so easily persuades voters to
elect a government that does not represent their interests. And there’s
no doubt that the propaganda machine will be focused on the previous
Liberal government’s insanely corrupt handling of advertising
contracts. There’s no excuse for corruption, but it probably won’t be
pointed out that at least Jean Chrétien’s lot didn’t waste billions of
dollars and hundreds of lives by signing on to Bush’s war in Iraq,
which Harper likely would have done. Harper’s keenness to resupply the
military and to commit Canada to the futile war in Afghanistan is sign
enough of his belligerence – if he can be so dangerous running a
minority government, I dread to imagine the havoc and misery he might
wreak with a clear majority.”
16. What are your thoughts on Canada’s participation in the imperial war crimes in Iraq and Afghanistan?
“Simple.
We shouldn’t be there. It’s time to return to our traditional
peacekeeping role. Canada shouldn’t be fighting Bush’s wars. Nor should
America.”
17. How do you feel about Canada aligning itself more and more closely with the United States?
“Canada
will always be linked with the United States due to the proximity of
its main centres to the border, but that doesn’t mean the country has
to become servile to whatever US interest is dominant at any particular
time. Right now Canada is about to implement its own no-fly list on air
travelers and seems likely to sign up for America’s idiotic and
paranoid missile defense system. I dread to think where Bush and Harper
will take us next.”
18. As a final question, what strategies do you think
radical writers, publishers, and political educators need to employ to
better penetrate the incredibly tenacious false consciousness
constructed and maintained by the ruling class?
“We have to keep telling the truth, we have to continue the fight for
social justice, and we have to spread the message to more and more
people that global capitalism and corporate greed are
not in the best interest of them, the nation or the world.”
For
once I have little to add excepting my assertion that if we had a
legion of Tony Sutton’s, our world would be a much better place. He
truly is a “Northern Light.”
Many thanks to Tony for participating in the interview and for his substantial contributions to the cause of social justice.
Jason Miller
is a wage slave of the American Empire who has freed himself
intellectually and spiritually. He is Cyrano’s Journal Online’s
associate editor (http://www.bestcyrano.org/) and publishes Thomas Paine’s Corner within Cyrano’s at http://www.bestcyrano.org/THOMASPAINE/. You can reach him at JMiller@bestcyrano.com