Peter Oborne penned one
must-read paragraph earlier this week: “Political
journalism is, in general, an unattractive profession which becomes especially
unpleasant when reporters, taking advantage of safety in numbers, gang up with
each other to turn a decent and honourable individual into a figure of ridicule”.
The “decent and honourable” figure he
had in mind was Mil The Younger.
Who says this man is "weird"?
Oborne put the barrage of invective being hurled at Miliband
on a more or less daily basis on a par with that meted out to Neil Kinnock, “Shagger” Major and, when he was leader
of the Tory Party, William ‘Ague. Yes, the abuse is being rained down on the
Labour leader, and much of it by those who call Miliband “weird”. So perhaps it is time to see just how much room those
hurling the abuse have on that front.
And what better place to start than at the Guido Fawkes
blog? From left, we start with the sad and embittered figure of Simon Carr,
covering with aplomb the enormous chip on his shoulder when it comes to
anything concerning Labour. Then there is Alex Wickham, newly anointed teaboy,
who has become convinced that wearing braces will award him some gravitas
(wrong).
Why, these not at all weird chaps do ...
Next is Master Henry Cole, aged 17 ¾, the odious flannelled
fool pretending to be one of Der Mannijmunt, rather than a thin-skinned shitbag
of no fixed hairstyle. And finally comes the perpetually thirsty Paul Staines,
The Great Guido himself, now known to be a Tory Party shill, deploying his suit
jacket with care in order to conceal his MBE (Multiple Belly Environment). They’re not weird at all.
... and so do all these non-weird people ...
It’s no better at the Telegraph,
where (clockwise from bottom left) we see Benedict “famous last words” Brogan, now an ex-pundit, serial fraud
Christopher Booker, London’s occasional Mayor Alexander Boris de Pfeffel
Johnson, another sad and embittered presence in Janet Daley, and the loathsome
Toby Young, attempting to strike a humorous and edgy pose (badly). They, too, are not weird.
... as well as these examples of non-weirdness
The Mail titles
are equally bad, with (clockwise from top left) Quentin Letts (let’s not), and Peter
Hitchens, whose idea of winning debates is to go on and on and on and on
without letting anyone get a word in edgeways until he starts a froth at the
mouth and falls over backwards. But by that time, everyone else is fast asleep,
so he has triumphed. The rest of the paper’s rogues’ gallery is no less an
unpleasant prospect.
Talentless and unfunny churnalist Richard Littlejohn, the
sage of Vero Beach, is not weird at all, and finally (very) we see Simon “Enoch was right” Heffer, who is the very
acme of normality. These less than totally august beings are all of one mind:
Ed Miliband is weird. They, on the other hand, are not. It’s a strange
looking-glass world that some out there on the right inhabit.
And it is a land
littered with very draughty glasshouses.
They're only dishing it out because they're worried Labour will win in 2015.
ReplyDeleteTedious in the extreme.