Thursday 7 July 2011

News of the World scandal disguises 'ethical' media others

The 'horror dungeons' at the News of the World are now giving-up their darkest secrets, despicable revelations that threaten not only to break Murdoch's ugly tabloid but to expose a much more systematic level of corrupt practices and criminal relationships.

But the hacking scandal now engulfing Murdoch's empire is also allowing false reverence for the BBC and other 'respectable' media as it preens itself on upholding 'journalistic morality'.

Hacking the victims   

Now-available records confirm that NotW spook-investigator Glenn Mulcaire listened-in on murder victim Milly Dowler's phone as a criminal investigation was under way into her abduction.  He also deleted messages on her phone to free-up space, giving the Dowler family false cause to believe she may have still been alive.  Many other notable victims are now coming to light.

However, it's increasingly clear that Mulcaire was not acting as a lone rogue.  Phone hacking and other such invasions are widespread across the tabloid media.  Ex-NotW reporter Paul McMullen has also confirmed that his paper paid large sums of money on a regular basis to police officers in exchange for confidential information.   

Awareness of such actions goes right to the top of the Murdoch organisation.  It reaches higher even than then NotW editor-in-chief and present News International chief executive Rebekah Brooks, who, as a Channel 4 News investigation has now shown, was acutely aware of such subterfuge, having also been party to a meeting with the Metropolitan Police over the NotW's surveillance of a detective investigating the case of a murdered journalist.

Only now are the really uncomfortable questions being asked. Why didn't Brooks declare her knowledge of all this hacking and surveillance?  Why didn't the police themselves mention the meeting they'd had with Brooks?  Why has there been no police investigation or, indeed, serious media examination, before now into the cash payments made to police officers by NotW? 

The NotW is now facing a serious backlash, with public boycott sentiment and companies like Ford and Sainsbury pulling their advertising from the paper, a reaction threatening to ruin one of Murdoch's most lucrative Wapping brands.

All of which puts key politicians in the spotlight over their own carefully-cultivated relationships with the Murdoch empire, not least David Cameron who has close links with Brooks and employed her successor at NotW, Andy Coulson, as his communications chief.

Coulson now faces a potential perjury charge for testifying during the recent Tommy Sheridan perjury trial that he didn't know about NotW hacking and payments to corrupt police officers.

In the admirable course of unlocking NotW/police deceptions, Labour MP Tom Watson has now openly declared the Sheridan verdict "unsound" as a consequence of Coulson's allegedly false statements.  The gathering revelations of Murdoch-police accommodations also throws a confirming light on why the Crown Office decided to pursue a criminal prosecution against Sheridan in the first place.

Meanwhile, Cameron has issued all the customary words denouncing NotW and promising an independent inquiry, a likely whitewash and stalling exercise while he tries to smooth-manage the Murdoch relationship and BSkyB deal.  Labour leader Ed Miliband has, in turn, sought to maximise Cameron's embarrassment, carefully neglecting his own party's prostitution to Murdoch.
 
Liberal media's 'shock'

But the hypocrisy doesn't end at Downing Street or Parliament. It has also been 'righteous-judgement' time among the wider media as more 'respectable' journalists savage the NotW and Murdoch's mercenary practices.

Some have expressed their deepest shock over NotW methods, such as ITN's Daisy McAndrew who tweeted:
"There are v few stories I remember that elicited genuine shock &amp [sic]; disgust around the newsroom. Milly Dowler's phone being hacked is one." 
The BBC's big-act business editor Robert Peston has also given his standard drama delivery on News International's gathering problems, exorting on how the political pressure could impact on parent company News Corp's BSkyB bid.

Yet, while people will rightly boycott the NotW and condemn Murdoch, Brooks, Mulcaire and their ghoulish operations, the public outrage also encourages false notions of corporate and media angels. 

Just as 'good businesses' like Ford see the expedient need to distance themseves from 'bad business apples' like NotW, so do many journalists revel in setting themselves apart from Murdoch's 'bad apple' papers.

The sanctimonious tendency of an establishment-liberal media to seek ethical 'status' in such cases has never been so prominent.

Thus, could Newsnight's Jeremy Paxman ask a NotW feature writer if he was in any way "ashamed" to be associated with Murdoch's paper.

It wouldn't, of course, occur to Paxman or his BBC colleagues to reflect on their own shame in being part of an organisation which has done so much to defend and rationalise Britain's aggressive war policies or failed to report Israel's oppression of occupied Palestinians.    

While legitimate to decry the deep distress Mulcaire and NotW have caused their unwitting victims,  why can't such journalists and editors apply relevant and proportionate language to much higher state crimes?
 
What, in particular, could they, should they, be saying about the calculating politicians who have inflicted mass death and suffering in Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya and elsewhere?

More self-critically, what could they, should they, be saying about the failure of their own 'vanguard' media to expose and pursue the executive directors of such slaughter?

Thus, BBC, Guardian and other liberal journalists can castigate Mulcaire et al as evil pariahs while treating high-ranking war criminals like Tony Blair, Alastair Campbell and Geoff Hoon as respectable figures of authority.

So, while Mulcaire has gone to ground, Campbell enjoys multiple media invites to plug his memoirs and appear as a role-model figure on Jamie Oliver's show about education. 

Here's Campbell himself blogging on NotW illegality and media morality:
"The central issue – illegal activity by the media – has not changed. But the public and political reaction almost certainly has. I have argued for some time that this is an issue that just won’t go away."
Indeed, it won't.  Nor will the truth of Campbell's own infamous media manipulations and complicity in mass murder. 

With still-murkier truths to emerge from the NotW issue - spawning, no doubt, another 'national debate' on 'media standards' and calls for a 'better-regulated' press - we can be reasonably sure that no critical spotlight will fall on the BBC or its liberal accomplices over their shameful failure to challenge and expose powerful politicians, corporate tyrants and criminal warmongers.

Running with public feeling over the NotW scandal, liberal media animosity towards Murdoch and his voracious empire may have found new and confident expression.  Now may, indeed, be an optimum moment to strike the wounded beast.  But that won't deal with the deeper corporate priorities and institutional propaganda that drives the wider media, not just Murdoch's sizeable chunk of it.

From the scabrous tabloid red-tops to the liberal-stylish pretensions of the Guardian, the same problems of media conformity to power remain, with little evidence that those journalists 'appalled' by the NotW can remotely see their own functional part in the much bigger deception.  

John

Update at 17.27:  
James Murdoch has just caved-in and announced the closure this weekend of the NotW. It's a tactical, damage-limitation exercise, of course, with an eye on keeping the BSkyB bid safe, but indicates, still, the potential effect of people power to challenge even Murdoch's 'untouchable' empire.
  

4 comments:

Stan d'Up said...

I wonder how 'Fux News' are reporting this - if at all....

Matt Thrower said...

"It wouldn't, of course, occur to Paxman or his BBC colleagues to reflect on their own shame in being part of an organisation which has done so much to defend and rationalise Britain's aggressive war policies or failed to report Israel's oppression of occupied Palestinians."

Possibly this is because the supposedly criminal nature of the acts you mention are a matter of political perspective, whereas the hacking of Milly Dowler's phone is an act that has rightly drawn near-universal condemnation, regardless of political opinion.

Personally, I agree with you. I agree that the war in Iraq was beyond question an act of aggression that was almost certain to - and did - backfire on the people of that country and the cause of stopping international terrorism. I agree that the conditions to which the state Israel subjects the Palastinian people are nothing short of criminal. But there are counterarguments to these positions which can be supported by reason and sometimes even moral underpinnings, whether you agree with those arguments or not.

And that's what bias-free journalism, such as the BBC and ITN are supposed to practice is all about. It's not biased to say that the NotW scandal is, well, scandalous because everyone agrees that it's scandalous. It is biased to suggest that the war in Iraq was a colonial war of unprovoked aggression because a lot of people don't believe that, and can offer convincing cases as to why they don't believe it, whatever your or my opinion is.

John Hilley said...

"Possibly this is because the supposedly criminal nature of the acts you mention are a matter of political perspective, whereas the hacking of Milly Dowler's phone is an act that has rightly drawn near-universal condemnation, regardless of political opinion."

Why "supposedly"? Why should objections to the taking of mass lives have to be grounded in "political opinion"rather than the same kind of concern for basic human rights?

"Personally, I agree with you. I agree that the war in Iraq was beyond question an act of aggression that was almost certain to - and did - backfire on the people of that country and the cause of stopping international terrorism."

"Backfire on the people of that country"? "The "cause of stopping international terrorism"? I'm not sure we do actually share the same perspective here on the motivation behind this invasion.

"And that's what bias-free journalism, such as the BBC and ITN are supposed to practice is all about."

Neither are, actually, bias-free, though, are they? But the problem isn't just that they aren't unbiased, it's the pretence that they're unbiased. At least media like Fox News and the Daily Mail are openly biased, whereas the BBC's great propaganda function is to disguise its bias behind a veil of professed neutrality.

"It's not biased to say that the NotW scandal is, well, scandalous because everyone agrees that it's scandalous. It is biased to suggest that the war in Iraq was a colonial war of unprovoked aggression because a lot of people don't believe that, and can offer convincing cases as to why they don't believe it, whatever your or my opinion is."

That's actually a very biased view in itself of what constitutes bias. I'm sure there are many people who might very well say that the killing of a million people in Iraq was much more scandalous than Murdoch's phone hacking. Again, what makes one "scandalous" and the other "political perspective"? What a biased, loaded and selective media tell us is so?

John

John Hilley said...

Sorry about the delayed publication of/response to these comments.

John