Originally posted by Gordon
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Quite so. From long experience of dealing with issues like this and the press the best policy is to avoid it uness you know the journalist personally and even then his/her editor can get in the way. Press releases can be helpful to say what you want in a specific instance but even then words can be selected to suit the journo/editor. As FF says, a minefield, keep out of it.
Our position is a "moral" one based on our general feeling that R3 has lost its intellectual grip in an attempt to be more "accessible"; it's an opinion and one that probably commands minority support among listeners. Appealing from that stance to a regime that is legalistic/formalistic in its constitution admits no ready solution, it can simply disagree and do what it wants with the support of the Trust. It also reeks of intellectual elitism. Elitism in itself is not a bad thing and takes many forms, some more acceptable than others, ask Sir Alex Ferguson or any PL football fan - would they want the "best" players in their team? of course they would. That's elitism. Somehow, when we edge away from the demotic towards anything intellectual the word attracts censure.
As we have discussed several times in the past, to escalate any campaign means a radical change in the way For3 is constituted. We are few in number, not a fully coherent group, we have no formal establishment or "cabinet", no funds, no lobbying policy except insofar that FF has taken the lead on expressing views to the BBC. That is no one's fault, and I mean no disrespect to or criticism of anyone, it is just a reflection of the facts.
As we are now influence is limited. Any "more aggressive" group will need clear and achieveable war aims which have a broad base of support and I'd suggest a war chest to go with it. Serious lobbying costs time and money as does influence. Think of it as a business proposition - what is your product and who will buy it? More to the point, who are your investors and why would they back you for what return??
I, for one, think that in the circumstances FF has done a marvellous job in maintaining pressure on the BBC and the momentum and belief in what FoR3 stands for. If anyone thinks they can do, or could have done, better let them try.
Our position is a "moral" one based on our general feeling that R3 has lost its intellectual grip in an attempt to be more "accessible"; it's an opinion and one that probably commands minority support among listeners. Appealing from that stance to a regime that is legalistic/formalistic in its constitution admits no ready solution, it can simply disagree and do what it wants with the support of the Trust. It also reeks of intellectual elitism. Elitism in itself is not a bad thing and takes many forms, some more acceptable than others, ask Sir Alex Ferguson or any PL football fan - would they want the "best" players in their team? of course they would. That's elitism. Somehow, when we edge away from the demotic towards anything intellectual the word attracts censure.
As we have discussed several times in the past, to escalate any campaign means a radical change in the way For3 is constituted. We are few in number, not a fully coherent group, we have no formal establishment or "cabinet", no funds, no lobbying policy except insofar that FF has taken the lead on expressing views to the BBC. That is no one's fault, and I mean no disrespect to or criticism of anyone, it is just a reflection of the facts.
As we are now influence is limited. Any "more aggressive" group will need clear and achieveable war aims which have a broad base of support and I'd suggest a war chest to go with it. Serious lobbying costs time and money as does influence. Think of it as a business proposition - what is your product and who will buy it? More to the point, who are your investors and why would they back you for what return??
I, for one, think that in the circumstances FF has done a marvellous job in maintaining pressure on the BBC and the momentum and belief in what FoR3 stands for. If anyone thinks they can do, or could have done, better let them try.
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