Race Wars And The BBC

 

Danny Cohen tells us that the BBC is an intrinsic part of the democratic process…I think it could be argued that it is the opposite and indeed encourages and supports terrorists and race hustlers who are intent on creating racial and religious conflict where they can for their own political purposes.

 

The BBC gave blanket coverage to the killing in Ferguson of a black thug by a white police officer and yet ignored the brutal murder of a white man by a gang of non-white youths who beat him to death with hammers.

The BBC still hasn’t reported on that savage killing…however they do try to play politics with it….trying to make out that any criticism of the lack of coverage is merely a ‘conservative’, right wing conspiracy theory that is completely unjustified in this ironic article…..

Are the media ignoring another St Louis killing?

 

The BBC completely accepts, without evidence, that the thug who died in Ferguson was killed purely because he was black. The white officer was clearly racist in their opinion….when as said, there’s no evidence of that at all.

Here is the BBC take on it:

Well, slavery may have long gone, but apprehending someone because they could be up to no good, simply because they’re black is still police policy in much of the land.

 

The killing in St Louis of  white man is automatically assumed to have no racial motive, and it probably hasn’t, but that isn’t the point…the point is the BBC’s different reaction to both stories.

Today we have Ferguson all over again with the BBC giving yet more blanket coverage to the death of a black man when being arrested by white police officers….a white man’s life is obviously worthless to the BBC.

 

aaagarner

 

The BBC one again reports this from one point of view…that if a black man dies being arrested by white police officers those officers killed him because he was black….the BBC totally accepts the premise that the officers are racist.

The BBC has been reporting all day on the radio that the police had the man in a chokehold and he died because of it… they have been playing a recording of the arrest and misled listeners to believe that the alleged ‘chokehold’ is still in place when the man says repeatedly ‘I can’t breathe’ and was the cause of his death.

The video of the arrest shows that the hold was in place the first time the man gave a strangulated cry that he couldn’t breathe and the officer released the hold but Eric Garner continued to say, loudly and clearly, that he couldn’t breathe as the officers restrained him….but why was he having trouble breathing?

 

 

 

The death is unfortunate but the main cause of death, as the BBC reports, was…..

The city’s medical examiner’s office found in the summer that Mr Garner’s death was caused by “the compression of his chest and prone positioning during physical restraint by police”.

 

Also….and not reported by the BBC….

Garner’s acute and chronic bronchial asthma, obesity and hypertensive cardiovascular disease were contributing factors, the medical examiner determined.

 

The BBC merely says….

The detainee, who is asthmatic, can be heard shouting repeatedly, “I can’t breathe!”.

 

The BBC places undue emphasis on the chokehold…

New York’s medical examiner had already ruled that the death of Eric Garner was a homicide, and that the chokehold contributed to it.

 

Yes, indeed he did say that…but as shown above he said a lot more besides which show that the chokehold wasn’t the main cause of death,  if a cause at all…..so why is the BBC still associating the ‘chokehold’ with his death and emphasisng it above all else?… the chokehold was said to be a contributory factor…but as he died a while after the hold was used, and used for a short period, that must be  a minimal factor…his own heatlh problems being the relevant  factor.

Eric Garner death: What next for the chokehold?

 

Eric Garner was being arrested for selling cigarettes illegally on the street and from the video you can hear he has been, at the very least, advised not to continue with that trade in the past….he then resists arrest and the officers apply the hold to restrain him.

Would they have done that if he was white?  The BBC is suggesting not…but on what evidence?  Eric Garner was a large man and not too happy in the video, he wasn’t going to ‘come quietly’….were the police supposed to just walk away because he was black?

 

This is not evidence of white police officers being racist but of the BBC’s own racism in their assumption that the police were racist.  It is also evidence of the BBC’s own tendency, a dangerous one, to incite racial conflict and inflame tensions…..undoubtedly this will be getting a large audience in Black communities in the UK and will be feeding into that grievance mindset with a stereotype fed to them by the likes of the BBC that white people are all racist and out to oppress them.

Note that the man reporting this:

Will black Americans finally get a fair deal?

Well, slavery may have long gone, but apprehending someone because they could be up to no good, simply because they’re black is still police policy in much of the land.

…is the BBC’s Clive Myrie…..

Clive Myrie

 

 

And note the BBC’s reporting of the verdict of ‘homicide’ on the death of Eric Garner…

New York’s medical examiner had already ruled that the death of Eric Garner was a homicide, and that the chokehold contributed to it.

To you and me that means murder…but not to the medical examiners….

“Homicide” in this context doesn’t mean what you think. It’s one of five categories medical examiners use to label causes of death and it indicates that “someone’s intentional actions led to the death of another person,” says Gregory G. Davis, president of the National Association of Medical Examiners. The other four labels are suicide, accident, natural, and undetermined, Davis says.

 

‘Intentional actions’ does not mean ‘intending to kill’…but their intent to restrain leading to the death…even if an accidental and unintended result.

The BBC’s use of that word without explanation of the context can only lead to the wrong impression of the verdict on the police’s action..careless use of words or intended by the BBC?

 

 

 

 

Cohen The Barbarian

 

The BBC is an undemocratic, rampaging beast that is pretty much unaccountable and has been given carte blanche to do as it pleases, politicians too afraid to make the necessary changes to it, preferring instead to tinker around the edges…..hence we get no real, meaningful change to the method of financing the BBC and more importantly we get no change to its highly politicised, left-wing world view of how things should be.

 

Last night Danny Cohen, the BBC’s Director of Television, made a speech…here are some of the highlights:

 

I believe that the BBC is one of the most important institutions in the United Kingdom.

It is an intrinsic part of our democracy.

It delivers education and deep joy and stimulation to 97 percent of the population every month.

It would be crazy to damage, undermine or deflate what we have.

 

Part of the democratic process?  An organisation that attempts to close down debate on climate change, on immigration, on Europe, on Islam, on the Middle East.  An organisation that tries to shut parties like UKIP out of the political argument and actively worked to destroy ‘unacceptable’ organisations like the EDL …and has presenters who often express the desire for a Chinese, authoritarian type government that ‘gets things done’…ie without having the inconvenience of having to get the approval of the people.

No not part of the democratic process….or not one that facilitates democracy but rather ‘poisons the well’.

Cohen reels off a list of BBC programmes that he believes illustrate the importance of the BBC to life in the UK, nay the world, and says…

No broadcaster in the world provides this range, this quality, this commitment to all audiences.

 

Well, I suspect Sky, or even YouTube, might argue with that.

 

He comes to an end with a request that other Media groups stop criticising the BBC…

Of course, you will always hold us to account – and so you should.

But….I feel confident you will agree that a BBC that can flourish in a world of globalised media companies is the right thing for the UK and the right thing for audiences.

Perhaps this is time for a little less of the critical friend and a bit more of the friend.

 

That’ll be the BBC that tried to close down its political and commercial rival News International and crushes local news and rival magazine publishers.

With friends like Cohen whispering sweet nothings in your ear I’d  buy my own drinks and keep one eye open all night.

Deep joy and stimulation to one and all this winter holiday!!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Champagne On Hold!

 

There were great expectations in the corridors of the BBC…George Osborne was going to announce the latest borrowing figures and the deficit would be rising, they just knew it!...’On Wednesday we get the Chancellor’s Autumn statement and it looks almost certain he will have to announce worse than expected figures for the deficit’ ….a damning verdict on the ‘Tory’ government and its economic policies…the deficit is ‘hanging around the nation’s neck like a yuletide log!’…apparently.

Didn’t happen, the deficit is going down….Dominic Laurie must have been gutted having earlier announced that he was intensely interested in those borrowing figures….strange that after they were announced he, and the rest of the BBC, didn’t really want to talk about the deficit itself too much, preferring instead to express shock and amazement at the evergrowing national debt and the fact that it was rising…well it woud be…as long as you have a deficit you will add to the debt even if the deficit is getting smaller…as it is.

After the Autumn Statement the first reaction of Dominic Laurie was to call Osborne’s budget a ‘conjuring trick’ and Jon Pienaar claimed the borrowing figures were merely a result of a different way of looking at the figures…the day before when Osborne announced his spending plans for infrastructure spending Nick Robinson dismissed them as promises that will never be fulfilled…pre-election hype….and the BBC in general dismissed the spending as ‘old money’ and not shovel ready….never mind that they are shovel ready and the spending on infrastructure, so long awaited and urged by the likes of Flanders, has finally arrived after the government implemented planned spending cuts on infrastructure that it inherited from Labour in 2010.

The BBC’s approach is entirely negative and seems determined to undermine any ‘good news’ and paint an entirely bleak picture of the economy…depsite it being one of the best performing in the world at the moment…yes inflation is down, yes interest rates are low, yes unemployment is low, yes growth is ticking along nicely…but you know what….the economy’s dire…the figures are ‘terrible!’

 

So just how big though is the national debt…and is it bigger than expected?

I seem to remember that way back in 2010 the projections for national debt were that by 2015  it would be around £1.4 trillionso what is the national debt today?

 

aaaanational debt clock

 

So that’ll be £1.4 trillion…as projected…here is Price Waterhouse Cooper’s projection from 2010...Government general debt £1.4 trillion:

aaaadebt

 

Funny how those ‘on the money’ projections are conveniently forgotten by the BBC’s, and others who should know better, economics experts.

 

Here is Peter Allen, (10:37) who has spent years doing stories on austerity and the economy expressing astonishment, his incredulity, at the size of the national debt…he tells us it is a frightening debtan economy not under control…we won’t do anything about it but we must do…you can’t carry on like that …..especially, he adds, as the threat from global warming is so severe…don’t ask me…at the beginning of the programme he said he would rather be talking about the dire threat of global warming than anything else.

Allen tells us that he’d never thought of the debt before, certainly not as a problem of that magnitude…pretty strange really…his ignorance didn’t stop him talking about the apparent ‘misery caused by austerity’ for years on end…and it could explain a lot about BBC coverage of austerity and the need for belt tightening…..they just buried their heads in the sand and hoped Labour would get in next time if they banged the drum for them enough.

You just know that whatever measures the government takes to rein in spending the BBC will be there with the Labour nay sayers, the charity shroud wavers, the selected voices of the ‘common’ man and woman telling us how austerity has ruined their lives…in fact carrying on pretty much as it has done for the last 4 years opposing every move the government makes….despite Allen proclaiming ‘something must be done!‘.

 

The BBC certainly seemed to be banging the drum for Labour today… Laurie telling us that what we need to put the economy back on its feet is a rise in wages….em…a ‘living wage’…heard that before somewhere…..Justin Webb told us that in relation to taxation we should perhaps be implementing new measures as corporation tax is so difficult to collect…perhaps a tax on wealth…he’d heard, he said, (08:50) some interesting ideas from Labour on that…something like  a ‘mansion tax’…never mind that it has been roundly condemned as unworkable by just about everyone who is even remotely connected to the real world.

We are also hearing a lot about that ‘tax gap’ as tax revenues aren’t as high as needed…..many experts have voiced their opinions in BBC studios…that it is a result primarily of a flood of low skilled workers on low wages who don’t pay taxes.

Curiously the BBC doesn’t make a link to immigration on this….the one time I heard someone mention it was to dismiss it as an unproven theory….they said that people often say that there is a link between having a large pool of labour and low wages, but the BBC told us there was ‘no clear analysis’ to prove this.

Really?  Would have thought it was one of the fundamental principles of economic theory.

Guess the BBC lets its own ‘principles’ get in the way of the facts…can’t have them ruining a good story.

Immigration has lowered wages, put British people out of work and reduced the tax take…and 400,000 immigrants get tax credits…..

 

So in summary, the BBC is entirely negative about the Autumn Statement, ignorant of the national debt….until now, just when Labour are making a lot of noise about it…coincidence?  I think not.  BBC journalists hype the mansion tax and the living wage…and dismiss links between immigration and low wages and low tax receipts….oh, and dismisses Osborne’s spending plans as electioneering hype…and there is a ‘detachment between government policies and the realities of the economy’.  Never mind that the economy seems to be doing reasonably well all considered.

Not a bad days work.  Saves Labour a lot of money on a party political broadcast.

 

 

 

 

 

War Of Words

 

 

The Telegraph reports:

 

Politicians ‘pulled combat troops out of Afghanistan too early’

Britain and its allies would have been more prudent to keep combat troops supporting the Afghan government for longer, a former head of the Army says

Britain pulled combat troops out of Afghanistan too early because of political considerations back home, a former head of the Army has suggested.

Gen Sir Mike Jackson said a recent spate of bloody attacks in Kabul and the weekend Taliban assault on Britain’s former main base in Helmand, Camp Bastion, were “somewhat depressing”.

Britain now had a responsibility to “give every possible support” to the Afghan forces once the Nato-led combat missions finishes at the end of this year.

 

 

That may well prove to be the case…but who is to blame for the politician’s turning tail on the Afghans?

Much of the blame lies with the Media which has been instrumental in opposing the war, reporting negatively on it and doing its utmost to exploit the casualties, our troops and Afghan civilians and of course not slow in doorstepping grieving widows and fatherless children.

The BBC has led the pack in painting the war in that negative light and is now leading the way in depicting it as a failure, a waste of blood and treasure.

The war it spent so much of its own time condemning will now be used for the next ten years and beyond for much pious, sanctimonius preaching about the hopelessness of war…never mind that it was the BBC and like-minded souls who ensured that failure could be a likely scenario as the necessary resorces were held back by politicians all too aware of Media reaction to any ‘mission creep’ and the army restricted in what it could do in order to avoid ‘collateral damage’…never mind that such a policy actually makes certain that fighting the war becomes much more difficult and actually prolongs that fighting…and increases the casualties.

The BBC is by default on the side of the Taliban, Hamas and Islamist terrorists at home for whom they make imagnative excuses when they bomb,  murder and maim British citizens…apparently being unemployed, or feeling a bit disgruntled with your lot in society, or having a feeling you are somehow disenfranchised or ignored is a good enough excuse for murdering 52 people and injuring over 700….or so thinks the BBC.

Always interesting who the BBC sides with.

Yesterday it was Hezbollah, the Party of God.

Naturally they are the good guys…America, Israel and the West the bad guys who force them to do such terrible things.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

[Not] Sorry, Not Interested

 

 

Something for you to ponder from Matt Friedmann without comment from me:

‘This group of intelligent and generally well-meaning professionals ceased to be reliable observers and became instead an amplifier for the propaganda of one of the most intolerant and aggressive forces on earth. And that, as they say, is the story.’

 

What the Media Gets Wrong About Israel

The news tells us less about Israel than about the people writing the news, a former AP reporter says.

Hammer Time

 

 

Once again the BBC looks away when ‘ethnic’ youths beat a man with hammers…the last time was in the UK:

Mother slams multiculturalism as cause of muslim bullying of her son

Lois Rogers, 13 April, 2008, The Sunday Times
The mother of a 15-year-old boy left with brain damage by an Asian gang is blaming multi-culturalism for the way ethnic minorities get away with violent bullying in schools.

Liz Webster, 43, from Swindon, whose son Henry nearly died in the attack, believes a “culture of timidity” among teachers is stopping them clamping down on ethnic minority bullies because they fear accusations of racism. She also accuses teachers of failing to recognise that ethnic minorities can exhibit racism against whites.

 

 

This time it is in the USA and the culprits are black and hispanic:

 

Gang of teens beat St Louis motorist to death with hammers in front of his wife after he got out to confront them when they attacked his car

A gang of teenagers used hammers to beat a newlywed to death in front of his wife and friend after they attacked his car early on Sunday morning in an apparently random attack.

Zemir Begic was heading home from a bar at 1:15 a.m in St Louis when a group of teenagers surrounded his car and began banging on it.

The 32-year-old stepped out of the vehicle, only to be yelled at and set upon with hammers, striking him in the head, abdomen and face and leaving him fatally injured.

The suspects are described as being a group of Hispanic and black males by the St Louis Post-Dispatch.

No sign of this story on the BBC despite it being in the news yesterday…wouldn’t want it to interfere with their wall to wall coverage of the Ferguson shooting where a black thug assaulted a white police officer and was shot as a result.

The BBC undoubtedly thinks that reporting the murder of a completely innocent white man by those of an ethnic persuasion would unnecessarily confuse the issues around Ferguson…issues as they see them…and would put a break on the BBC’s drive to paint the US as a place where white racism is endemic and Blacks and Hispanics the perpetual victims….

Why was an overwhelmingly black area policed by predominantly white officers? Why is there such mistrust among that community of the forces of law and order? Why, if you’re black, are you much more likely to be a victim of crime? Why, if you’re black, are you much more likely to end up in prison? Why are you more likely to be unemployed?

Never mind the president is black.

Maybe they are trying to ascertain the ‘facts’ before rushing to judgement….probably haven’t been able to find a ‘witness’ yet who can claim they saw the Bosnian man attacking the youths who only hit him in self-defence.

Give them time…I’m sure the BBC can do it.

 

 

The Role of the Media in Aiding and Abetting the Deceptions Seen in Climategate

 

 

clip_image002

 

 

From climate sceptic site WUWT:

The deception about global warming was only effective because of the aiding and abetting of the mainstream media.

Those most active in pushing the false information were exposed in the leaked Climatic Research Unit (CRU) emails. They represented very influential media outlets including The Guardian, The New York Times, and the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC).

 

Enjoyed this quote:

“And remember, where you have a concentration of power in a few hands, all too frequently men with the mentality of gangsters get control. History has proven that.”

Everybody knows information is power. Control of power through control of information has evolved, like everything else. Those with power needed a conduit for their version of information. In the global warming deception, they found a media willing to be the messenger. Instead of performing their original role of exposing and limiting power, they aided and abetted.

 

Can quite easily see Harrabin and his sidekicks motoring around with tommy guns gunning down the sceptics….he did after all admit a desire to punch Delingpole…or was it Booker?

 

rodge dodge

 

 

 

 

 

 

We Love The UK!

The reality of immigration brought to you by Frank Fielding in the Daily Mail…..

We’re adding a migrant city the size of Birmingham every 30 months reveals MP who co-chairs migration group

 

The reality of mass immigration and an open door policy is that it means an end to the welfare state, no more free NHS, no more state schools, no more anything really funded by the state….after all how do you tax a huge, ever shifting, anonymous population and how do you judge who should receive the benefits?

Can’t say I have ever heard such a conclusion being articulated on the BBC…but here is David Goodhart in 2004 speculating on such a thing….

Too diverse?

Is Britain becoming too diverse to sustain the mutual obligations behind a good society and the welfare state?

The nation state remains irreplaceable as the site for democratic participation and it is hard to imagine how else one can organise welfare states and redistribution except through national tax and public spending. Moreover, since the arrival of immigrant groups from non-liberal or illiberal cultures it has become clear that to remain liberal the state may have to prescribe a clearer hierarchy of values.

 

Still waiting for that to happen despite all Cameron’s words and promises….however one group seems to get special status in the UK hierarchy…and the BBC has no qualms about this politicial special adviser being elevated to the House of Lords. 

Goodhart did conclude something similar in this BBC programme….

The gulf between conservative Islam and secular liberal Britain is larger than with any comparable large group….for those of us who value an open, liberal society it is time to explain why it is superior to the alternatives.

He told us that…

Some claim that if people understood Islam more everything would be fine, they would be more tolerant, I think quite the contrary….the more they understand about it the more alien they would find it…authoritarian, collectivist, patriarchal, misogynist…..all sorts of things that Britain might have been 100 years ago but isn’t now.

 

When you import the people you import their values which may be diametrically and dangerously opposed to yours.  How do you deal with that, especially as an open border policy means that a community that gets larger and more insular feels no need to integrate?

Despite the welcome programme with David Goodhart the BBC still dances around the issues refusing to come to a hard conclusion…one that filters through to all its presenters….Goodhart’s programme is probably already on the ‘forgotten pile’ never to be listened to by the BBC journalists when it should be one of the highlights of their journalism college.

 

The BBC’s coverage of immigration has been extensive recently but it is essentially more of the same old same old as they still favour the pro-immigration side of the debate, debates run by presenters who are all too happy running on auto-pilot and thinking happy, uncritical thoughts about immigration and chatting away pleasantly to them.

Was amused to see the BBC packing the studios with immigrants last week to tell us what they thought of our immigration policy…..naturally they told us that it was essentially a racist policy putting fear into the hearts of immigrants everywhere….oh and they only come to the UK because they love it, its culture and its people so much…nothing to do with benefits and all that.

Hardly an impartial way of exploring the issues.

Was amused though to hear the reply of one Polish girl to Peter Allen’s leading question along the lines of….‘Do the Brits like you?’ (49 mins)

Her reply was interesting…she said she was always welcomed by British people…however when living in London…er..the people were different….but now she lives in Manchester and they are really friendly there.

Hmmm…could she really mean that multicultural London, where the Brits have been ethnically cleansed from, is less friendly than good old racist white Britain?

Have to say that whenever a Beeboid asks such a question almost invariably the answer has been that the immigrant has not suffered any discrimination or abuse.  Which kind of paints a different picture to the one so many race campaigners want you to believe, or more importantly they want the polticians who pull the purse strings that fund their band wagons to believe.

 

Did enjoy this repeat by the BBC of an interview with a Polish immigrant, who came here in 1996 so not really relevant to the politics of Labour’s open door policy….repeated on the Tuesday before the Rochdale by-election.  Any coincidence in the timing as it told us how wonderful immigrants were?  However it might have backfired as the smug immigrant considered himself rather clever, well educated and sophisticated…more so than those who oppose immigration…a psychological affliction obviously related to their ignorance and narrow-minded prejudices.

Same old same old from the BBC…they just can’t help it.

 

 

 

 

Harding Hard Done By?

 

An interesting quote from a BBC journo to Nick Cohen in response to Cohen’s previous article on the ‘disastrous’ rule of James Harding……Who’s in Charge of BBC News?……

As a loyalist it is hard to publicly criticise an organisation to which I owe so much.

The journo went on…..

There’s also a genuine climate of fear, unlike anything I’ve ever experienced before. People are afraid to speak out. I often criticise editorial decisions and deployments from within and have been warned by friends higher up not to do so.

 

Cohen wraps up his follow up with this:

It is a backhanded compliment to its honesty that the Right accuses it of liberal bias, the Scottish Nationalists accuse it of pro-union bias and the Left accuses it of pro-Tory bias. All of them are trying to shape BBC coverage because they know that viewers and listeners recognise that – with the well-known exceptions – BBC reporters try to tell the truth as best they can.

This may not sound like much. But in the modern world where PR and propaganda are everywhere on the rise, honest reporting is more necessary and precious than ever.

……the wretched man [Harding] remains in post. If director-general won’t act, then the BBC Trust should, and ask whether it wants to see BBC News remain an essential public service. If it does, as I hope it does, it should then ask whether BBC News can survive with Harding in charge.

 

 

Two issues you might have with that final conclusion…firstly that the BBC is ‘trying its best’ and is essentially impartial….well no…even the BBC has admitted it is biased on immigration, Islam and Europe…never mind the Tories, Thatcher, UKIP and climate change….essentially then the major news subjects of our times.

The second issue is blaming Harding for all the travails of the BBC….For a start Tony Hall has similarly packed the BBC with his own cronies, without bothering the HR department too much…..and BBC News has long been in A&E…how could Cohen forget Paxman’s blast at it [Abridged]….?

 

In this press of events there often isn’t the time to get out and find things out: you rely upon second-hand information – quotes from powerful vested interests, assessments from organisations which do the work we don’t have time for, even, god help us, press releases from public relations agencies. The consequence is that what follows isn’t analysis. It’s simply comment, because analysis takes time, and comment is free.

In news, as much as anywhere else in the industry, the question is no longer ‘what can we do?’ It’s ‘what can we afford?’ Finding things out takes time and money. Easier to stay in the warm fug of what everyone agrees is news. Which is, of course, why we behave as a herd of not-very-clever animals. It’s less risky than thinking for ourselves.

 

What is the defining problem of contemporary television – is trust: can you believe what you see on television, does television treat people fairly, is it healthy for society? There’s a real danger now either that we lose trust. Or that in attempting to regain it we retreat into such a mind-numbing literalism that we neutralise the imaginative capacity of the medium.

Television is now encountering something which politicians have had to live with for years. The weather has changed. We no longer live in a time when trust was axiomatic. The crisis of confidence in television reflects the crisis of trust in politics: the old ‘we know best’ culture – in which producers affected a patrician concern to enlighten the poor dumb creatures who were their viewers won’t wash any longer.

But the most important change, it seems to me, is the philosophy which underpins what we do.

Television and politics are facing the same challenge: how do you connect? Which brings me to the question of news.

Television and politics are facing the same challenge: how do you connect? Which brings me to the question of news.

Let’s be frank. These two trades, politics and media have a great deal in common. Both deal in words and images, both involve a contract with the public based upon fairly explicit promises. And both are trades best practised by people who aren’t over-encumbered with a sense of their own frailty. We are also, of course, both down there with estate agents and car dealers when it comes to public affection and trust. Look at the charts: producers do rank just above paedophiles. Just.

The basic charge sheet against us from Tony Blair and Alastair Campbell is as follows. Firstly, that we behave like a herd. Secondly that we have a trivial and collective judgement. Thirdly, that we prefer sensation to understanding. I’m sorry to say, but I think there’s something in all of these arguments.

The problem is that all news programmes need to make noise. The need’s got worse, the more crowded the market’s become. We clamour for the viewers’ attention: “Don’t switch over. Watch us! You won’t be disappointed!”

The problem is that all news programmes need to make noise. The need’s got worse, the more crowded the market’s become. We clamour for the viewers’ attention: “Don’t switch over. Watch us! You won’t be disappointed!”…the story needs to be kept moving. So it needs to be constantly hyped. Making a lot of noise is one thing we’re all pretty good at.

What’s happened is that we have a dynamic in news now that is less about uncovering things than it is about covering them. It doesn’t matter whether it’s a war in Lebanon or floods in Doncaster, it doesn’t really exist until there’s a reporter there in flak jacket or wellingtons, going live….The need is for constant sensation. The consequence is that reporting now prizes emotion over much else.

 

 

And famously he said:

“The big question here is the one of legitimacy. Sometimes, in the middle of the night, I wonder about what I do. It comes in the form of a question. ‘And who, precisely, do you presume to speak for?’ Who ever voted for you? It’s something we’d do well to remember.”