What is also no surprise - more a matter of regret - is how other media outlets, including, to its shame, the BBC, have churned over this story as if it were fact. It clearly is not: this post will point out just three areas where the spooks and Murdoch hacks made glaringly elementary mistakes which prove it. Those that Robin Day so memorably - and correctly - called “here today and gone tomorrow politicians” would do well to address them.
[You can see the follow-up post, detailing Rupert Murdoch's previous form for spinning for the spooks, and the lead author of the Sunday Times story making a fool of himself on CNN, HERE]
4 comments:
Thanks for this. I thought it seemed a bit dodgy (IE, a load of old bollocks) when it was on the BBC news this morning, and it's good to have confirmation.
You don't think that our most famous emigre, that inhabitant of Manhattan, who had "inside" information about the Snowden story and the Guardian "terrorists" gave up all her detailed research (hah!)to the Sunday Times by any chance?
To justify her six figure ("careful where you put the decimal point") fee?
A once credible, serious paper with high journalistic standard has long since been reduced to nothing more than a far right trashy comic, like the Sun and the Mail. Sad times.
At what point will ST (or any others) explain to us how Snowden managed to lift so much (they say) confidential data about British operations? They have previously claimed the data includes things like which sports clubs offciers were members of. As I've said beofre, either British authorities handed it all over (why??) or the Yanks were hacking British servers BEFORE Snowden took the files.
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