The Mail was
beside itself with joy yesterday, as it found an ally in its constant fight
against the hated Beeb: “BBC
website is 'destroying' local newspapers and harming democracy, warns Home
Secretary Theresa May” proclaimed the headline. The Home Secretary
had suddenly become Very Bestest Friends with the legendarily foul mouthed Paul
Dacre and his obedient hackery.
What's f***ing wrong with selective quoting, c***?!?
I use the term “suddenly”
advisedly, as that band of hacks is at the same time leering at Ms May’s every
appearance and making the entirely spurious comparison between her and model
Cara Delevigne: “With
each passing day, it is becoming more difficult for Ms May to continue to laugh
off comparisons between her and fashion icon Cara Delivingne”. Oh f***
right off. This is idiotic.
Theresa May wears a strapless dress. Then she wears
something with a pair of boots. Then a tartan pattern suit. Then the morons at
Northcliffe House scour the Web for evidence of Cara Delevigne – who, as a
model, by definition, wears, often briefly, a shed load of outfits, many of
which she wouldn’t choose to wear if it was down to her – in something similar.
That’s false equivalence, desperate journalism.
And not only is the Mail
praising Ms May while trying to stir up mock horror over her wardrobe, but the
hacks are also being highly selective with what they allow into print. Her
speech to the Society of Editors’ annual conference also contained two
significant items which do not fit the Vagina Monologue’s agenda. Both were
left out of the Mail’s report. So
here they are.
Anyone going anywhere near the Mail recently knows that the editorial line on the Snowden material
being published by the deeply subversive Guardian
is
deemed to be “assisting the enemy”.
Ms May acknowledged yesterday that the “Guardian
did go through processes at senior Government level before publishing Snowden
leaks”. So much for the “irresponsible
and harmful” meme, then.
And, worse for Paul Dacre and his crusade against properly independent
press regulation, Evan Harris noted “Theresa
May says that the Royal Charter system has no mechanism in it which can impact
on newspaper content”. So much for the idea of politicians telling
editors what they can and cannot print, and the much-trailed idea that the
new system would involve prior restraint. It wouldn’t.
But all that the Mail
reported was the supposed attack on the BBC. That’s a particularly extreme act
of selective reporting, even for the Mail. And added to that is the constant
suggestion that Ms May is dressing inappropriately, and so by inference may not
be of totally sound judgment.
What a bunch of steaming hypocrites they have at Northcliffe
House. No change there, then.
Sorry.
ReplyDeleteClicked the link but couldn't go any further than the second sentence -
Warns it could "dangerous to the health of democratic politics"
Interesting approach to grammar there DM.
Oiky would have a fit.
A guessing game for readers?
ReplyDeleteQ. What is the common link between The Daily Mail and Theresa May?
A.They may or may not be making it up.
That's not very "healthy for the health of democratic politics" either.
BBC is legally bound to at least try to be honest and balanced.
ReplyDeleteLocal newspapers can be as biased as their owners want them to be. Surely not good for the health of democratic politics?
Anyway, here in Crewe we don't have viable local papers. One has spent years simply sorting and placing text from press releases without any attempt to check facts (and then charges 80-odd-p a copy before giving it away as the free edtion next week), one has no real presence in Crewe and just rehashes stories from north cheshire to try and make them fit Crewe and the third isn't even from this region and just sticks a token Crewe story in to call it the Crewe edition. None will touch the story of "Edward Hunter" and the tax avoidance schemes that helped make him rich.