Another day, and another particularly nasty argument in the
debate over the proposals about to be made by Lord Justice Leveson which nobody
actually knows about, this time among the members of the National Union of Journalists
(NUJ). The
body’s last delegate meeting had endorsed “robust regulation of the press by an independent, accountable body”.
And NUJ
General Secretary Michelle Stanistreet added “We believe that if we are to achieve independent, accountable
regulation it needs to be underpinned by statute enabling a framework for a new
body to be established with clear terms of reference, and a structure that
involves journalists and civil society ... This is absolutely not the same as
state regulation, far from it. Our model is based on the system in Ireland”.
She has therefore clearly come out against state regulation –
but then, so has the Hacked Off
campaign. Both
are now being subjected to a barrage of abuse and misinformation from a
large part of the Fourth Estate, which merely underscores what this blog pointed out yesterday about the possible reasoning behind last Friday’s Guardian editorial – to keep the peace.
The level of debate – or rather, the depths to which it has
already sunk – can be seen in
an editorial yesterday in the Super Soaraway Currant Bun (and remember, if
you want to know Rupert Murdoch’s views, read a Sun editorial). Here, readers are told of “the chilling decision of a union in our own trade to back
Stalinist-style State regulation of newspapers ... Government control of the
Press”.
And, just in case you didn’t take the hint, this would mean “We would end up like Russia, Zimbabwe and
Iran, with State stooges and politicians deciding what can or can’t be printed
in your Sun ... with journalists facing arrest for disobeying
official censors, it would be the end of free speech in our country”.
This is hilariously stupid, counter-productive and totally untrue into the
bargain.
But it is typical of the howls of protest,
screaming denunciation and abusive dismissal of anyone suggesting reform. Some
of the lame-brained claim Leveson will stop them being journalists. Those with
no experience of working in Ireland claim the model used in Ireland, of which
they have no knowledge, is rubbish. Only a small minority messed up. This is a
fight, and for the very survival of, er, something.
Or perhaps it’s all a conspiracy to draw attention
away from the BBC and Jimmy Savile. Christ on a bike, this is utterly desperate
in its sheer paranoia and panic. Leveson’s terms of reference include the
preservation of press freedom. Nobody wants to curtail free speech – except those
who want to remove the provisions of the Human Rights Act. And who do you think
they might be?
The same papers that are now screaming the loudest.
More stinking hypocrisy.
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