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Sebastian Ritscher
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THE INFORMATION STATE

Jacob Siegel

Politics in the Age of Total Control

We're constantly told that disinformation is everywhere and that it's ruining our democracy. But what if the war on disinformation itself is really just a weapon to squash any and all legitimate dissent? This urgent book asks how we reached the point where anything that contradicts the dominant narrative can be labeled dangerous disinformation. It sounds the alarm on where society is headed in the age of AI if we don't relearn how to think for ourselves and ask searching questions about whether information can ever be a substitute for truth.
Tablet writer Jacob Siegel charts how a technological infrastructure built to make society more rational and progressive has steadily replaced democratic freedoms with systems of digital control. Instead of competing for voters' support, the Information State uses censorship, mass surveillance, and algorithmic manipulation to shape public perceptions as it tries to engineer reality.

An alliance between government and tech companies formed to wage the war on terror has evolved into an unholy new kind of technocratic state and turned against America's own citizens. In short, the information war came home and completely overtook American politics during the hyperpolarization of the Trump era and the isolation of the Covid pandemic.

Jacob Siegel is a contributing editor at Tablet. He is a US Army veteran who served in Iraq and Afghanistan. He edited and contributed to Fire and Forget: Short Stories from the Long War, the first anthology of fiction by veterans of the global war on terror. Since 2013, he has worked as a journalist and essayist covering war, digital technology, and the convulsions in the American scene.
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Published 2026-03-24 by Henry Holt and Company

Comments

"In The Information State, Jacob Siegel details a rolling coup d'etat, nothing less, by which sovereignty has been relocated from the American people to a network of quasi-state actors. The authority to decide basic matters now rests with this self-credentialing blob, unaccountable by design, with the result that we are now well into a full-blown crisis of state legitimacy. This book is chilling, a real page-turner, and is indispensable for any political theory of the present, whether from the Left or the Right. In fact, Siegel shows the obsolescence of that division."

"In The Information State, Jacob Siegel shows how the emancipatory promise of the Internet has given way to the chilling reality of government by algorithm and the emergence of a "digital leviathan" that threatens liberty and democracy alike."