Crowdfunding. Some people find it difficult to talk about.
Others find it difficult to do. And one person who finds both concepts less
than straightforward, if only out of misguided loyalty to Rupert Murdoch and
her trolling obsession, is (thankfully) former Tory MP Louise Mensch, who has
decided to go after writer Peter Jukes, whose crime has been to live-Tweet the
Hacking Trial.
(c) Doc Hackenbush 2014
In order to allow him to accomplish this task, Peter, who is
a freelance journalist who must meet all his outgoings, including paying the
mortgage, from earnings, turned to the crowdfunding tool Indiegogo. Many people
contributed: some as little as £5, others into three figures. All their names,
provided they wanted them to be known, are
displayed on the site. So are amounts, although some are not disclosed.
Ms Mensch has taken issue with campaigning group Hacked Off having contributed. She
missed someone called Adam Boulton, and another person by the name of Rupert
Murdoch, as well as missing me, but then, most people tend to. That more than
90% of Peter’s funding did not come from Hacked
Off is not allowed to enter: for Ms Mensch, she can now claim bias (for
whatever reason).
The Mensch massive attack did not get off to an auspicious
start: “‘Hacked Off sponsored my Tweets
while I pretended to be impartial and a journalist’ is a great quote. Do use it”
she leered, but missed Peter’s Twitter handle and so he never saw it. The
stupidity was compounded by her not understanding how crowdfunding works: no
condition can be attached to payments.
So funding via Indiegogo is not, repeat not, repeat NOT tied
sponsorship. It can’t be withdrawn if the recipient does something that
displeases the donor, for instance. But Louise was not listening: “‘I list Hacked Off’ does not absolve your
bias, sponsored Tweeter pretending to be a journalist” she ventured,
unaware that Peter does not need to pretend to be a journalist – he is one
already. Unlike her.
And, as will be apparent, every time she had a go at him,
someone jumped in and reminded her of her debt to Uncle Rupe, such as when she
snarked “‘Peter claimed to be impartial
while sponsored by Hacked Off’ has a ring to it”. What part of “Indiegogo funding is not tied sponsorship”
does she not understand? The whole lot, by the look of it. And, as the man
said, there’s more.
Claiming that Peter had admitted her accusation (he hadn’t)
she wibbled “You claimed impartiality
while Hacked Off sponsored you? And here’s a transparent list of people who
sponsored me”, pretending nobody did so, while, once again, the first
Tweeter to add their opinion mentioned Murdoch. The combination of wilfulness and stupidity
was as consistent as it was tedious. And it had only one effect.
Sales of Peter’s
forthcoming book Beyond Contempt
have increased as a result.
2 comments:
Aw bless, I believe UBERMENSCH TROLL is homesick and is missing good ol' Blighty so much that she is more interested in what goes on this side of the pond than her new adopted home in the US. The new business didn't go so well?
Or perhaps it's not homesickness but a combination of heavy metal and the self confessed heavy use of drugs in the past that is still crambling her brain?
Or it could be Uncle Rupe's attempt to play his late tackles in early to discredit the book before it comes out.
Or (no one expects the Spanish Inqusition) it could be some or all of the above.
One has to commend Peter Jukes for his patience in humouring the humourless troll by replying to her tweets and other threatening trolls.
BUY THE BOOK TO SEE THE BIGGER PICTURE!!!!!!!
PS No sponsor was harmed or dispossessed of any cash in making this comment.
Last Wednesday, The Sun led with the headline "Great day for Redtops" - conveniently playing down the conviction of Andy Coulson. On Thursday The Sun's headline was "Here's a REAL scandal - WRONGA" implying that the Wonga scandal is far more important than the Hacking scandal covered the previous day.
NI journos trash Leveson stating that the law is sufficient to control press demeanours. But now the Sun asks its readers to 'look away' when the courts carry out their work. This clearly shows the Murdoch press have not learned any lessons and that without proper regulation the press will continue in their old ways.
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