Blogging. Some find it hard to talk about. Others find it
difficult to do. But less of the Python similes, I have a serious point to make
here. Some people want to blog, though don’t have the cojones to put their own content up and add their name to it. But
help is at hand: they can get someone in, who will write stuff to order, and
into the bargain the whole shebang can be glossily repackaged as an online
magazine.
Says he's an entrepreneur. No, don't laugh
One such sad individual is non-graduate Milo Yiannopoulos,
seen in the photo having clear difficulty making eye contact, like the
inarticulate creep in the Slipknot zip hoodie who just got caught vaulting the
tube station barriers in the forlorn hope that it might impress someone.
Perhaps he was trying to make his mind up whether to leer at the photographer,
blank them, or mutter “f*** off”
under his breath.
Milo runs the Kernel
Mag., in which he gets other people to make really
clever statements about folks they know nothing about. Including me, it
seems. So what does Milo’s appointed gofer think I do? Have Twitter arguments
with right-wingers who are “more
successful”, apparently. Really? Sadly, not this week. And “a dreary left-wing blogger who writes dreary
blog posts about dreary things”. Wow.
And an old ranking from a Total Politics poll has been thrown in. Which was removed from the
blog’s display some time ago. Well, let’s see how dreary it all is: Zelo
Street has been on the phone hacking case from the start, kept ahead of
the game on the drugs debate, explained the shambles that is rail franchising,
got on the case of those Astroturf Lobby groups, and the many faces of the
Fourth Estate.
There’s been Stateside stuff, lots on what it’s like for
ordinary southern Europeans through the downturn, plenty on London and Bozza, and
I’ve just posted on this morning’s helicopter crash. But what of those “more successful” right wingers? Ah well.
That garners my attention when they lie, smear, or both. Perhaps Milo does not
approve of being called out for that kind of thing. His own actions suggest so.
After all, Yiannopoulos has
been sued by former contributors for thousands
of pounds in unpaid earnings (each), shown that he cannot be trusted to
keep confidences as far as he can be thrown (see Twitter conversation), and has
left the Telegraph to pick up a
five-figure bill after the collapse of a technology start-up awards scheme. Oh,
and he picks Twitter arguments with others. Pot,
kettle, eh?
All of which gives the impression that he is an unprincipled
shyster of the lowest form. And he won’t get creditors off his back by ordering
one of his dumb gofers (who should be making sure he gets paid as a priority) to cobble up hatchet jobs based on
hearsay, and his assumption that bodily functions come as high on the list of
personal concerns for anyone outside his circle jerk.
Then he can quit the
petulant sulking and pay his Tube fare, like real grownups do.
3 comments:
I love that Guido Fawkes is at number 3 with this opening:
"Paul Staines is the UK’s top political blogger, thus chasing attention isn’t a necessity for him."
No, the Guido Fawkes blog NEVER chases for attention.
On the other side of this, congratulations at being good enough at what you blog that you are considered good enough to smear.
Milo is a tribal right-winger of the worst kind. He is also good mates with Guido and loves the TPA.
What a nasty and pointless little article on Kernel. Not sure I would have given it any kind of response but I can understand why you did so.
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