From ‘Anti-Semitism’
to Economics – Good Journalists are being replaced by Precocious Windbags & Puffed-up Pundits
of John Pilger in the
media these days. There was a time when
his films, on the Ethiopian famine or Year
Zero about Pol Pot’s Cambodia or Death
of a Nation on the genocidal Indonesian occupation of East Timor were headline news but Pilger was
too honest and spoke the truth to power once too often.
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| Just a sample for the hundreds of Guardian articles attacking Jeremy Corbyn – for more try the excellent 5 Filters site – one of many bogus attacks on Corbyn – there has been no stampede though to apologise for getting it wrong though |
of the Year Award twice, in 1967 and again in 1979, but he has been slowly
frozen out of mainstream journalism – by the New Statesman in 2014 and The
Guardian in 2015. Both the New Statesman
and The Guardian have moved to the right as part of the anti-Corbyn hegemony
in the bourgeois press, Pilger is a journalistic odd man out.
beacon of the liberal left, has been the worst of all. It has in many ways led the anti-Corbyn movement. People expect no better from the Daily Mail
or Sun, but they do expect better from The Guardian, whose raft of pundits and ‘journalists’
have sung one refrain – Corbyn is not up to it.
bigoted, narcissistic and all-round stupid is Nick Cohen whose article Don’t
tell me you weren’t warned about Corbyn set new standards of idiocy;
over the coals by the Guardian’s Readers Editor but only because he described
his readers as ‘fucking fools’. Those who refused to give up their support
for Jeremy Corbyn were described thus by Cohen:
be to stop being a fucking fool by changing your fucking mind.’ The idea that this idiot could
himself be wrong never occurred to him. So
full of self-righteousness was he, admittedly a Guardian journalist’s trait,
that Cohen had no doubts about the disaster that was Corbynism: It was he argued a ‘threat to democracy’
itself not having an opposition worthy of the name. He told us that:
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| John Pilger receiving the Journalism of the Year Award |
have gone easy on Corbyn and his comrades to date for the transparently obvious
reason that they want to keep them in charge of Labour.
Will there be 150, 125, 100 Labour MPs
by the end of the flaying? My advice is to think of a number then halve it. Don’t tell me you weren’t warned about Corbyn
mediocre Nick Cohen continues to scribble away for The Observer whilst a
journalist like John Pilger is left writing these days for the alternative
press. Britain’s journalists, almost
without exception, have become little more than their proprietors’ prostitutes.
earlier this year felt like a farewell to the age of the reporter. Parry was
“a trailblazer for independent journalism“, wrote Seymour Hersh, with
whom he shared much in common.
Cambodia, Parry exposed Iran-Contra, a drugs and gun-running conspiracy that
led to the White House. In 2016, they separately produced compelling evidence
that the Assad government in Syria had not used chemical weapons. They were not
forgiven.
outside the United States. Parry set up his own independent news website
Consortium News, where, in a final piece following a stroke, he referred to
journalism’s veneration of “approved opinions” while “unapproved
evidence is brushed aside or disparaged regardless of its quality.”
something has changed in recent years. Dissent tolerated when I joined a
national newspaper in Britain in the 1960s has regressed to a metaphoric
underground as liberal capitalism moves towards a form of corporate
dictatorship. This is a seismic shift, with journalists policing the new
“groupthink“, as Parry called it, dispensing its myths and
distractions, pursuing its enemies.
abandonment by the “MeToo” zealots of our oldest freedom, presumption
of innocence, the anti-Russia racism and anti-Brexit hysteria, the growing
anti-China campaign and the suppression of a warning of world war.
“mainstream”, a corner of the Internet has become a vital source of
disclosure and evidence-based analysis: true journalism. Sites such as
wikileaks.org, consortiumnews.com, ZNet zcomm.org, wsws.org, truthdig.com,
globalresearch.org, counterpunch.org and informationclearinghouse.info are
required reading for those trying to make sense of a world in which science and
technology advance wondrously while political and economic life in the fearful
“democracies” regress behind a media facade of narcissistic
spectacle.

criticism. This is the remarkable Media Lens – remarkable partly because its
founders and editors as well as its only writers, David Edwards and David
Cromwell, since 2001 have concentrated their gaze not on the usual suspects,
the Tory press, but the paragons of reputable liberal journalism: the BBC, the
Guardian, Channel 4 News.
respectful and polite when they ask why a journalist why he or she produced
such a one-sided report, or failed to disclose essential facts or promoted
discredited myths.
hysterical, as if they have pushed back a screen on a protected species.
journalism. Like Noam Chomsky and Edward Herman in Manufacturing Consent, they
represent a Fifth Estate that deconstructs and demystifies the media’s power.
journalist. David Edwards is a former teacher, David Cromwell is an
oceanographer. Yet, their understanding of the morality of journalism – a term
rarely used; let’s call it true objectivity – is a bracing quality of their
online Media Lens dispatches.
published book, Propaganda Blitz, in every journalism school that services the
corporate system, as they all do.
Edwards and Cromwell describe the critical part played by journalists in the
crisis facing Britain’s pioneering health service.
as “austerity”, with its deceitful, weasel language of
“efficiency savings” (the BBC term for slashing public
expenditure) and “hard choices” (the wilful destruction of the
premises of civilised life in modern Britain).
debt owed by its crooked banks, not its people. The resources that would
comfortably fund the National Health Service have been stolen in broad daylight
by the few allowed to avoid and evade billions in taxes.
Service is being deliberately run down by free market fanatics, to justify its
selling-off . The Labour Party of Jeremy Corbyn may appear to oppose this, but
is it? The answer is very likely no. Little of any of this is alluded to in the
media, let alone explained.
whose innocuous title belies its dire consequences. Unknown to most of the
population, the Act ends the legal obligation of British governments to provide
universal free health care: the bedrock on which the NHS was set up following
the Second World War. Private companies can now insinuate themselves into the
NHS, piece by piece.
was making its way through Parliament? With a statutory commitment to
“providing a breadth of view” and to properly inform the public of
“matters of public policy”, the BBC never spelt out the threat posed
to one of the nation’s most cherished institutions. A BBC headline said:
“Bill which gives power to GPs passes.” This was pure state
propaganda.
Tony Blair’s lawless invasion of Iraq in 2003, which left a million dead and
many more dispossessed. A study by the University of Wales, Cardiff,
found that the BBC reflected the government line “overwhelmingly”
while relegating reports of civilian suffering. A Media Tenor study placed the
BBC at the bottom of a league of western broadcasters in the time they gave to
opponents of the invasion. The corporation’s much-vaunted “principle”
of impartiality was never a consideration.
campaigns mounted by journalists against dissenters, political mavericks and
whistleblowers. The Guardian’s campaign against the WikiLeaks founder Julian
Assange is the most disturbing.
prizes and largesse to the Guardian, was abandoned when he was no longer
useful. He was then subjected to a vituperative – and cowardly – onslaught of a
kind I have rarely known.
lucrative Hollywood movie deal. The book’s authors, Luke Harding and David
Leigh, gratuitously described Assange as a “damaged personality” and
“callous”. They also disclosed the secret password he had given the
paper in confidence, which was designed to protect a digital file containing
the US embassy cables.
among the police outside, gloated on his blog that “Scotland Yard may get
the last laugh”.
The Guardian columnist Suzanne Moore wrote, “I bet Assange is
stuffing himself full of flattened guinea pigs. He really is the most massive
turd.”
attacking Assange, she had suffered “vile abuse”. Edwards and
Cromwell wrote to her: “That’s a real shame, sorry to hear that. But how
would you describe calling someone ‘the most massive turd’? Vile abuse?”
to stop being so bloody patronising.”
imagine what Ecuador’s London embassy smells like more than five and a half
years after Julian Assange moved in.”
editor, Katharine Viner, as “thoughtful and progressive”. What is the
root of this vindictiveness? Is it jealousy, a perverse recognition that
Assange has achieved more journalistic firsts than his snipers can claim in a
lifetime? Is it that he refuses to be “one of us” and shames those
who have long sold out the independence of journalism?
“fake news” is not only trollism, or the likes of Fox news, or Donald
Trump, but a journalism self-anointed with a false respectability: a liberal
journalism that claims to challenge corrupt state power but, in reality, courts
and protects it, and colludes with it. The amorality of the years of Tony
Blair, whom the Guardian has failed to rehabilitate, is its echo.
alternatives,” wrote Katharine Viner. Her political writer Jonathan
Freedland dismissed the yearning of young people who supported the modest
policies of Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn as “a form of narcissism”.
“get on the ballot in the first place?” A choir of the paper’s
precocious windbags joined in, thereafter queuing to fall on their blunt swords
when Corbyn came close to winning the 2017 general election in spite of the
media.
omission: Brexit, Venezuela, Russia, Syria. On Syria, only the investigations
of a group of independent journalists have countered this, revealing the
network of Anglo-American backing of jihadists in Syria, including those
related to ISIS.
Office and the US Agency of International Aid, the aim is to hoodwink the
Western public and speed the overthrow the government in Damascus, regardless
of the medieval alternative and the risk of war with Russia.
group known as the White Helmets, who claim falsely to be “Syria Civil
Defence” and are seen uncritically on TV news and social media, apparently
rescuing the victims of bombing, which they film and edit themselves, though
viewers are unlikely to be told this. George Clooney is a fan.
addresses. Their media-smart uniforms and equipment are supplied by their
Western paymasters. That their exploits are not questioned by major news
organisations is an indication of how deep the influence of state-backed PR now
runs in the media. As Robert Fisk noted recently, no “mainstream”
reporter reports Syria, from Syria.
Francisco, Olivia Solon, who has never visited Syria, was allowed to smear the
substantiated investigative work of journalists Vanessa Beeley and Eva Bartlett
on the White Helmets as “propagated online by a network of
anti-imperialist activists, conspiracy theorists and trolls with the support of
the Russian government”.
alone a right-of-reply. The Guardian Comment page was blocked, as Edwards and
Cromwell document. I saw the list of questions Solon sent to Beeley,
which reads like a McCarthyite charge sheet – “Have you ever been invited
to North Korea?”
all; slogans and outrage are proof enough. What matters is the
“perception”.
what he called “a war of perception… conducted continuously using the
news media”. What really mattered was not the facts but the way the story
played in the United States. The undeclared enemy was, as always, an informed
and critical public at home.
film-maker, whose propaganda mesmerised the German public.
“orders from above”, but on the “submissive void” of an
uninformed public.
allow it.”
Pluto.






