The Leveson inquiry – oh, what a lovely game
The power and petty gangsterism of the tabloid press.
By John Pilger Published 30 May 2012
Rupert Murdoch is a bad man. His son James is also bad. Rebekah Brooks is allegedly bad. The News of the World was very bad; it hacked phones and pilloried people. British prime ministers grovelled before this iniquity. David Cameron even sent text messages to Brooks signed “LOL”, and they all had parties in the Cotswolds with Jeremy Clarkson. Nods and winks were duly exchanged on the BSkyB deal.
Shock, horror.
Offering glimpses of the power and petty gangsterism of the tabloid press, the inquiry conducted by Lord Leveson has, I suspect, shocked few people. As the soap has rolled on, bemusement has given way to boredom; Tony Blair was allowed to whine about the Daily Mail’s treatment of his wife until he and the inquiry’s amoral smugness protecting him were exposed by a member of the public, David Lawley-Wakelin, who shouted: “Excuse me, this man should be arrested for war crimes.” His Lordship duly apologised to the war criminal and the truth-teller was seen off.
Why Rupert Murdoch should complain about the British establishment has always mystified me. His interrogation, if that is the word, by Robert Jay, QC, was a series of verbal marshmallows that Murdoch promptly spat out. When he described one of his own rambling, self-satisfied questions as “subtle”, Jay received this deft dismissal from Murdoch: “I’m afraid I don’t have much subtlety in me.”
Liberal to a fault
As the theatre critic Michael Billington reminded us recently, it was in the Spectator in 1955 that Henry Fairlie coined the term “the establishment”, defining it as “the whole matrix of official and social relations within which power in Britain is exercised”. For most of my career, Murdoch has been an influential and admired member of this club, even a mentor to many of those now casting him as a “bad apple”. His deeply cynical mantra, “I’m only giving the public what they want,” was echoed by journalists and broadcasters as they lined up to dumb down their work and embrace the propaganda of corporatism that followed his bloody move to Wapping in 1986.
More than 5,000 men and women were sacked, and countless families destroyed and suicides committed; and Murdoch could not have got away with it, had Margaret Thatcher and the Metropolitan Police not given him total, often secret support and journalists not lain face down on the floors of buses that drove perilously through the picket lines of their former, principled colleagues.
Cheering him on, if discreetly, were those now running what Max Hastings has called “the new establishment”: the media’s managerial middle class, often liberal to a fault, that later fell at the feet of Murdoch’s man Blair, the future war criminal, whose election was celebrated
in the Guardian with: “Few now sang ‘England Arise’, but England had risen all the same.”
On the day Blair appeared at Leveson, one of his devotees, Polly Toynbee, having tried to give the impression she opposed the criminal invasion of Iraq, wrote: “I never thought Blair anything but sincere in joining that war.” Note the craven, Blairite spin: “joining that war”.
Leveson has asked nothing about how the respectable media complemented the Murdoch press in systematically promoting corrupt, mendacious, often violent political power whose crimes make phone-hacking barely a misdemeanour. The Leveson inquiry is a club matter in which a member has caused such extraordinary public embarrassment, he must be blackballed, so that nothing changes.
What jolly fun to hear Jeremy Paxman grass on Piers Morgan who, he gossiped, described to him how to hack phones. Paxman was asked nothing by Jay about the essential role of the BBC and its leading lights as state propagandists for illegal wars that have killed, maimed and dispossessed millions. How ironic that the lunch Paxman attended at the Daily Mirror appears to have been given in 2002, when the Mirror, edited by Morgan, was the only Fleet Street newspaper uncompromisingly opposed to the coming invasion of Iraq – thus reflecting the wishes of most Britons.
And what a wheeze it was to hear from the clubbable Andrew Marr, the BBC’s ubiquitous voice: he of the superinjunction. As Murdoch’s Sun declared in 1995 that it shared the rising Blair’s “high moral values”, so Marr, writing in the Observer in 1999, lauded the new prime minister’s “substantial moral courage”. Marr was most impressed by Blair’s “utter lack of cynicism”, and by his bombing of Yugoslavia, which would “save lives”.
By March 2003, Marr was political editor of the BBC. Standing in Downing Street on the night of the assault on Iraq, he rejoiced at the vindication of Blair who, he said, had promised “to take Baghdad without a bloodbath”. The diametric opposite was true. Hawking his self-serving book A Journey in 2010, Blair selected Marr for his “exclusive TV interview”. During their convivial encounter they discussed an attack on Iran, the country Hillary Clinton once said she was prepared to “obliterate”.
Blood and guts
In the text messages disclosed by Leveson between the Murdoch lobbyist Frédéric Michel and the Culture Secretary, Jeremy Hunt, there is this one from Michel: “Very good on Marr, as always.” In a cable leaked to WikiLeaks, the US embassy in London urged Hillary Clinton to agree to be interviewed by the “congenial” Marr because he often “set the political agenda for the nation” and “will offer maximum impact for your investment of time”. Jay the Inquisitor showed no interest.
When Alastair Campbell “gave evidence”, Jay waved a copy of Blair’s book and quoted Blair’s view of his chief collaborator as “a genius”.
“Sweet,” responded Campbell.
“And with great clanking balls as well,” continued Jay QC, awaiting the laughter. The silence of 780,000 Iraqi widows was a presence.
Not one serious critic of the institutional power of the media has been called by Leveson, though farce is welcomed. Richard Desmond, who owns the Daily Express and a section of the British porn industry, during his appearance in January damned the Daily Mail and said that the Press Complaints Commission “hated our guts”. Shock, horror. Or just sweet.
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13 comments
There is nothing more predictable than Pilger sneering at a press inquiry in the UK.
John, of course, lives in the UK and makes a living spewing hatred towards it and flaunting his utter contempt for its press.
Then he goes off to relax in luxury hotels in Havana where he giggles at fat ladies and can't be bothered to mention a critical word about a country that imprisons its press critics.
There is no bigger fraud, no bigger coward, no bigger waste of space than this tired old crank John Pilger.
Excellent article by John Pilger. The hacking and sacking by Murdoch Empire journalists and executives is the least of it when compared to the consequences of warmongering and climate change denialism that has led to calls for global boycott of Murdoch media (see "Boycott Murdoch Media": https://sites.google.com/site/boycottmurdochmedia/ ).
Thus warmongering by Murdoch media is associated so far with 12 million Muslim deaths from violence or war-imposed deprivation since 1990 , the breakdown being 4.6 million (Iraq, 1990-2012), 5.6 million (Afghanistan, 2001-2012), 2.2 million (Somalia, 1992-2012), 0.1 million (Palestine, 1990-2012), 0.1 million (Libya, 2011-2012). Which country is next in line for Murdoch media-supported Anglo-American devastation? Syria? Iran? For the Awful Truth not published by the Murdoch media nor indeed by other Mainstream media of the Western Murdochcracies and Lobbyocracies see "Muslim Holocaust, Muslim Genocide": https://sites.google.com/site/muslimholocaustmuslimgenocide/ ).
The consequences of anti-science, climate change denialism of the Murdoch media will make the Iraqi Genocide, Afghan Genocide, Somali Genocide, Libyan Genocide and Palestinian Genocide look like Teddy Bear's Picnics. It is estimated from the projections of top climate scientists that 10 billion mostly non-European people will perish this century in an horrendous climate genocide due to lack of timely action on man-made climate change (see "Climate Genocide": https://sites.google.com/site/climategenocide/ ). Pro-Zionist Murdoch is a major investor in Apartheid Israeli fossil fuel developments that according to Israeli environmentalists threaten Palestinian aquifers (see "Israel: IEI's Land Of Oil And Money ": http://www.fastcompany.com/magazine/158/israel-oil ).
allot of positive insites here lol. mlsp
allot of positive insites here lol. mlsp
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A ce propose je recherche des jeunes demoiselles pour un mec motel :=)
Thankyou John Pilger. A lone voice in a sea of lies and spin. There is a special place in Hell for the Murdochs and Blair.
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I do not really want to reopen the WMD discussion but can someone explain. a) Hussain did gas a lot of Kurds and so he did have a stock and access to a potential weapon of Mass Destruction , indeed he had mass destroyed using it and b) he had used Scud missiles on Israel so he had the ability to strike over distance. It is conceivable that gas and Scud could be combined. What happened to them? Were they moved to alllies like Syria? Were they destroyed? Are they still there but well hidden?
I am not suggesting he had the facility to strike the UK but his regime was so secretive and obstructive we never really knew what his real capability to do harm was. What I believe is that it was certainly possible that he did have WMD's and he was predisposed to use them without compunction. On that basis there was some justification in the ensuing action we were party to.
'The Power Principle' considered an outstanding documentary by many intellectuals backs up Mr Pilgers exellent article with hard facts. Watch amd weep..
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article31417.htm
Pilger is outside the world of spin we have all been subject to -which is a bonus.But it is also a drawback in that we have difficulty keeping up with the evidence he relies upon.Blair seemed to be telling Leveson spin was a necessity otherwise media distortion (reverse spin)would dominate.However we were not getting anywhere near the truth about Iraq,WMDs or anything else during his premiership.I did my national service in Iraq in 1946 when it was a protectorate as was Palestine and I feel attached to both lands.David Lawley-Wakelin echoed my sentiments precisely.But who are these witnesses whom Pilger would like to call ?