Jump to content

Recommended Posts

to be honest, if it's not behind a paywall, I just assume that the commentators on any article for any paper constitutes a smallish percentage of that paper's readership


Obviously you can tell from the tone, vocab and content when it is a stereotypical reader of said paper - but mostly it's just the same online nutterdom that has (largely) done for this place


* edited to had a meek "100" claim*

StraferJack Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> say what you will about the Guardian and the Mail

> but it's quite the ding dong they are having at the moment


Interesting, because there has always seemed to have been an unofficial agreement that papers/editors didn't attack one another, but the Mail seems to have thrown that aside. Mind you, the Guardian has been sniping at the Mail for years (almost obsessively so), so perhaps they finally snapped.

Sniping attacking


Mutual sniping for years but the anti leveson (govt have no business telling us what to do!!!) mail quickly replaced by

Pro government (newspapers shouldn't judge what government deems important!) mail


Mail is increasingly looking genuinely unhinged to me, even by its standards

Well this was an interesting idea, if not really an interesting read.


http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2013/oct/12/left-daily-mail-paul-dacre


The Guardian invited Paul Dacre (editor, Daily Mail) to write an article, which he (unimaginatively) titled, "Why is the left obsessed by the Daily Mail?". The rest was fairly predictable... except did he rail against the Guardian? No! He hops into the Beeb with nary a mention of the Gruin. Subtext: The Guardian has far too small a readership for the Mail to worry about.


The comments section is the predictable outpouring of bile, but worth five mins and a cup of coffee to laugh at. Though they all completely seemed to have missed the Gruin snub.

"Mutual sniping for years but the anti leveson (govt have no business telling us what to do!!!) mail quickly replaced by

Pro government (newspapers shouldn't judge what government deems important!) mail"


I'm no fan of the Mail, but you can hardly say that it's somehow inconsistent to suggest that newspapers know better about maintaining a free press and governments know better about maintaining national security.

  • 3 weeks later...

"There are quite a number of journos that have worked for both rags. 20 pieces of silver and they'll knock up 1000 words on anything I suppose."


not sure how that pertains to the issue Loz?


Leveson enquiry = most papers saying "no political interference! Free press is important etc"


NSA revelations = not a peep from most of these upholders of freedom

StraferJack Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> I look forward to the mail standing shoulder to

> shoulder with the guardian to protect press

> freedoms

>

>

> http://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/oct/28/david

> -cameron-nsa-threat-newspapers-guardian-snowden



And this is Precicesly what happens when you start making the press accountable to bodies other than the law politicians start making this type of veiled threat......

Dave would be less willing to make "veiled" threats if he didn't feel the rest of the newspaper industry would pile in behind him


it has nothing to do with bodies other than the law - it's the same cosy politicians/media/law circle that saw papers get away with so much for so long


After being initiatlly defensive, the US have accepted the need for this debate (surveillance) but Cameron is way behind the curve. If this country's press was worth fighting for it would be shaming him over this

"Dave would be less willing to make "veiled" threats if he didn't feel the rest of the newspaper industry would pile in behind him


it has nothing to do with bodies other than the law - it's the same cosy politicians/media/law circle that saw papers get away with so much for so long


After being initiatlly defensive, the US have accepted the need for this debate (surveillance) but Cameron is way behind the curve. If this country's press was worth fighting for it would be shaming him over this"


The Leveson:Snowden parallel you are so desperate to draw is just bollocks, though. Govts (and indeed individuals) have always been able to go to court to get an injunction to prevent unlawful publication of material, but the key word is 'unlawful' - you have to satisfy a High Court judge that you've got a good case, and you have to have some evidence. And High Court judges don't exactly have a record of doing whatever govt wants them to, even when national security is involved.


What Cameron said was the govt was prepared to go to court if necessary - nothing new there. The implied suggestion is that in the past papers exercised more discretion about what they printed when there was an obvious potential security angle, and that's also true. What the right balance is a matter of legitimate debate. However, whether you believe in total and unfettered publication of everything, or that the wider public interest is served by some things staying secret, everybody knows that the ultimate backstop is a court applying the law. That's the opposite of what Leveson is proposing.

  • 5 weeks later...

Except the entire article is one long non sequitur


All the examples that he gives of terrible stories printed by him or others either already involved some sort of illegality, or would still be pretty much unimpeachable even in a post Leveson world, unless the new Code contained exactly the sorts of restrictions that worry serious critics of his proposals.


It's worth remembering that both the McCanns and Chris Jefferies took their cases to court and won. I agree with Levson's conclusion that existing legal remedies are not sufficient, and his proposals for free (or very cheap) fast track proceedings for individuals with a decent case are entirely sensible. I just don't see the need to hitch them to a quasi-legislative structure involving a whole bunch of essentially political appointees setting out to define the limits of public interest journalism.

  • 6 months later...

I was reading this much shared tale a couple of days ago http://www.irishcentral.com/opinion/cahirodoherty/Mass-grave-of-up-to-800-dead-babies-exposed-in-County-Galway-.html


And it struck me that this is the world that bleeeding hearts have eroded. The UK was almost as bad as Ireland except we only had judgementalism, conservatism and hatred of differnce to blame, we can't even pretend it was the church; you only have to look at how single mums are still villified as welfare bludgers, just doing it to skip the housing queue, like those immigrants...


And the calls to roll back these gains, the attitudes of live and let live, multiculturalism, acceptance of gays; this clamour is getting louder as more and more jump on to it realising there's safety in numbers, everyone's doing it, aaah that Clarkson just saying what we all did at school, that's fine.


I fear for the country I really do, woebetide if the polls are true and people really do follow up the euro votes in the general election....

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • I got this  interesting email today. At least some (albeit apparently very few) shoplifters seem to be arrested, though I wonder what the criteria are.   Met Engage Logo Joint Partnership Success – Operation Roscoea, Southwark We’re pleased to share the success of Operation Roscoea, a joint partnership anti-social behaviour (ASB) initiative carried out in Southwark last week. This multi-agency operation saw eight partner representatives from six support organisations conducting outreach patrols alongside officers from our Trust, Confidence and Engagement Team. These joint efforts led to numerous new referrals into support services, ensuring vulnerable individuals are connected with the help they need. Neighbourhood policing teams also carried out joint patrols with Southwark Council wardens, who now hold newly designated enforcement powers. This enhanced collaboration has strengthened our collective ability to respond to ASB and community concerns. Operational highlights included: Six arrests made by officers from North Southwark Town Centre Team, St George’s, North Walworth, Faraday, Newington Ward, Chaucer, and the Proactive Crime Team: 2 for possession of a Section 5 firearm (CS spray) 1 for possession of Class A and B drugs 1 individual wanted for theft 2 for shoplifting ASB enforcement activity included: 2 Community Protection Notices issued to persistent offenders Numerous intelligence reports submitted to support ongoing investigations This operation is a testament to the dedication and teamwork of our local officers and partner agencies. Thank you to everyone involved for your continued commitment to making Southwark safer and more resilient. We look forward to building on this momentum in future deployments. Message Sent By Gary Thomson (Metropolitan Police, DC - Staff Officer to Superintendent Brockway, Southwark) You are receiving this message because you are registered on Met Engage. 
    • I've seen it in the same place the past two Fridays. I'm assuming it's some sand that's left over from when the old sand filters failed. When that happened there was lots of sand on the bottom. I'm guessing it'll only go if they use a pool vacuum to clean the bottom.
    • Maybe because you would have thought such an incident  would have been publicised, or  someone on here would know what it was? On the face of it it seems odd, especially if they were on blues and twos, if there was no serious  reason for it. Unless, as I said, it was some kind of training exercise?
    • If true I was told that the new swimming pool at Canada Water is also closed and will not open until end November/December due to problems.  
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...