Rebooting the Fourth Estate: Building Tools for Grassroots Governance

We’re living in the wreckage of the old order. The so-called Four Estates, pillars of traditional power and authority, which are either rotting from within or already dead. It’s past time to stop mourning and start composting. Right now, at the #OMN we’re outlining and building horizontal social/digital tools to grow grassroots governance, aiming to replace what no longer serves us. These tools are based on tested activist process and being built out using current working federated technology through the Open Media Network (#OMN).

Before we get into that, let’s break down the old foundational history:

  • Lords Temporal – the elites, landowners, oligarchs. Fuckum. Their power is bloated and corrupt. From billionaires flying private jets to COP summits while the planet burns, to political dynasties laughing at austerity from gated compounds, they’re done, even if they don’t know it yet.
  • Lords Spiritual – organized religion as moral compass? Please. They long ago ceded relevance. As the Church clutches pearls over gender and culture wars, the people are elsewhere, building new values and solidarities.
  • House of Commons – dysfunctional, what was meant to represent the people now represents donors, lobbyists, and corporate interests. Labour and Tory are different shades of the same managerial grey. Real democracy? It’s not coming from Westminster.
  • Journalism – the one estate still standing, sort of. But it’s on life support. Mainstream media dances to the tune of its billionaire owners, or worse, chases clicks in the race to the bottom. The BBC parrots government lines and succumbs to culture war baiting.

So what’s next? Our mission is not salvaging old institutions, others can try that path. We’re building new ones. Right now, people are fleeing from the corporate-controlled web (#dotcons) and rediscovering decentralized platforms: Mastodon, Peertube and others built on #ActivityPub. These are important steps towards a federated path. But tech alone isn’t enough, we need governance. We need trust-based, horizontal, transparent tools that empower communities to organize, decide, and act together without traditional gatekeepers.

That’s where the Open Media Network (#OMN) projects come in. We’re designing and testing code to enable this shift, tools for publishing, moderation, and coordination that are rooted in the #4opens: open data, open source, open governance, and open standards. It’s messy, yes. But so is composting. And from that mess, we grow soil. Soil for new media, new movements, and new paths as the old crumbles.

We’re starting with the last two relevant estates: journalism and representative governance. Both are broken, but maybe still salvageable, not by patching them up, but by rebooting change and challenge from the ground up. Think of it as digital mutual aid, media gardening, and radical democracy rolled into one. We have project outlines, we have grounded flows and process. We just need more people who give a shit. This is an invitation, to join, and help build media and governance paths that actually works for the many, not only the #nastyfew.

Oscar Wilde wrote, “In old days, men had the rack. Now they have the Press. That is an improvement, certainly. But still it is very bad, and wrong, and demoralizing.” Wilde saw it clearly: journalism didn’t just rise – in the guise of tech, it consumed the other estates. But now, even that is cracking.


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