What is Roger Waters’ position on Palestine and related activism?
Waters has long defended Palestinian rights, publicly supported BDS, signed Artists Against Apartheid, and praised Palestine Action as nonviolent despite its criminalization in the UK.
How have industry and state actors responded to Waters’ views?
He reports slander campaigns, pressure on labels and venues, canceled publishing agreements, blacklisting by venues and promoters, and media attempts to limit publicity for his concerts and film.
What broader political trend does Waters warn about?
He warns of creeping authoritarianism in Western governments, increased militarization and fear-mongering, and a decline in civil liberties tied to portraying internal/external enemies.
What threat to free speech is discussed in the interview?
The conversation highlights measures equating criticism of Israeli policy with antisemitism (e.g., IHRA usage), which can chill campus debate and label dissent as hate speech or criminal.
What is the central message of his film This Is Not a Drill as presented here?
The film and accompanying concerts are framed as acts of resistance: exposing injustice (notably Gaza), refusing to be silenced, and mobilizing audiences toward solidarity and truth.