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Welcome to Crisis in Perception, where we examine the systems shaping our world — one book at a time. This episode is also available as a podcast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music, and other major platforms. This episode explores After the Cataclysm: Postwar Indochina and the Reconstruction of Imperial Ideology by Noam Chomsky and Edward S. Herman as a systems-level examination of how media and intellectual institutions reconstruct political memory after war. Rather than focusing on individual journalists or isolated reporting failures, this analysis treats postwar narrative formation as a structured system — revealing how incentives, access, and geopolitical alignment shape which facts are amplified, minimized, or erased. This episode maps how selective human-rights framing, economic policy, and media interpretation interlock — and why those structures persist even when widely criticized. 🎬 Watch the Mini Explainer: 👉 • After the Cataclysm: Postwar Indochina and... 🎧 Listen on Spotify: 👉 https://open.spotify.com/episode/20H2... ❤️ Support the project on Patreon: 👉 https://www.patreon.com/posts/after-c... Author Support If these ideas resonate, consider reading the book yourself or borrowing it from your local library. Supporting authors and libraries helps keep critical inquiry accessible. Call to Action If you value systems-level analysis like this, please like, subscribe, and comment with books or topics you’d like us to explore next. AI Use Disclosure This content was created using AI-assisted tools for research synthesis, structuring, and narration support. All analysis, framing, and editorial decisions are guided by human judgment as part of the Crisis in Perception project.