Originally posted by mangerton
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Leveson Report
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Lateralthinking1
As I indicated earlier, my main irritation is the money that has been spent with little intention of doing anything. It is somewhere between outrageous and thoroughly sinful. I also felt that ammy deserved better than the outcome as it stands. :smiley:
I support regulation but have severe doubts that MPs should be the guardians. A wide range of people who have been at the tough end of things, yes. I am sure that they would have views on parliamentary expenses etc. etc. etc. etc. etc. etc.
My feeling is that the press might well rally to the Conservative cause in 2015 but public opinion will outweigh it. With luck, the sheer power of the Milly Dowler case will set a new precedent so that front pages on election day will be meaningless.
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Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostStill, at least Nigel Farage thinks he's "grown up and sensible" (or he says he does :erm:)
where did being "grown up" or "sensible" get us ?
if music is a mirror of society then that's no Mozart for a start :whistle:
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amateur51
Harold Evans, a man who knows only too well how Murdoch works, gives Leveson's regulation proposals a pretty warm welcome (will Simon find that surreal too? :erm:) but is highly critical that the question of media ownship was not tackled
Former editor of the Sunday Times talks about how Rupert Murdoch was able to buy his paper through a back-room monopoly deal with Margaret Thatcher
As he says, the phone-hacking scandal happened because the politicians were scared of News International and News Internaional was scared of nobody.
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Originally posted by David-G View PostI am indeed astonished that Clegg appears to be against freedom of the Press. It's a freedom which it would be dangerous to lose.
"In my view there are two big, liberal principles at play in this debate: on the one hand, the belief that a raucous and vigorous press is the lifeblood of a healthy democracy; on the other, the belief that the vulnerable, the innocent and the weak should be protected from powerful vested interests.
A free press does not mean a press that is free to bully innocent people or free to abuse grieving families. What I want now is for us to strike a better balance between these two liberal principles so that our media can scrutinise the powers that be, but cannot destroy innocent lives. So that the journalists up in the press gallery can hold us – the politicians – to account, but we can look up to the individuals and families in the public gallery knowing they have the right protections in place."It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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amateur51
Originally posted by french frank View PostI don't think his statement supports that view. He says:
"In my view there are two big, liberal principles at play in this debate: on the one hand, the belief that a raucous and vigorous press is the lifeblood of a healthy democracy; on the other, the belief that the vulnerable, the innocent and the weak should be protected from powerful vested interests.
A free press does not mean a press that is free to bully innocent people or free to abuse grieving families. What I want now is for us to strike a better balance between these two liberal principles so that our media can scrutinise the powers that be, but cannot destroy innocent lives. So that the journalists up in the press gallery can hold us – the politicians – to account, but we can look up to the individuals and families in the public gallery knowing they have the right protections in place."
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Originally posted by french frank View Post...A free press does not mean a press that is free to bully innocent people or free to abuse grieving families. What I want now is for us to strike a better balance between these two liberal principles so that our media can scrutinise the powers that be, but cannot destroy innocent lives. So that the journalists up in the press gallery can hold us – the politicians – to account, but we can look up to the individuals and families in the public gallery knowing they have the right protections in place."
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Resurrection Man
Originally posted by amateur51 View PostI think Clegg's being mocked for his stance on Leveson is, for once, out-of-order. He was right, in my view, to make his statement from the front bench and it is a much better thought out response than Cameron's 'eyes on the votes, eyes on the proprietors' effort :ok:
A snapshot of the press this morning. The most common word they use ? "Freedom". Rubbish. With freedom comes responsibility. Something the press have forgotten.
Looking at the captions beneath the photographs of those who presented their concerns at the Leveson enquiry ...captions saying things like "self-interest', 'biassed' simply goes to prove that Leveson was right. The press are a pack of bully-boys.
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostHarold Evans, a man who knows only too well how Murdoch works, gives Leveson's regulation proposals a pretty warm welcome (will Simon find that surreal too? :erm:) but is highly critical that the question of media ownship was not tackled
Former editor of the Sunday Times talks about how Rupert Murdoch was able to buy his paper through a back-room monopoly deal with Margaret Thatcher
As he says, the phone-hacking scandal happened because the politicians were scared of News International and News Internaional was scared of nobody.
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Originally posted by Lateralthinking1 View PostI support regulation but have severe doubts that MPs should be the guardians.
I am inclined to suspect that the best answer (apart from possible acceptance that there may be no such thing at all) is to maintain the status quo in terms of press freedoms but seriously and substantially up the ante for their transgressions of the law and propriety; whilst this would admittedly transfer almost all the responsibility for dealing with unacceptable media behaviour to the Courts - and to the victims for bringing such matters to the Courts in the first place - the very possibility that a Court might be empowered to impose massive and possibly irreparably damaging fines and other penalties upon media organisations that have been proved to have committed the kinds of action that have invited so much horror and contempt in recent times could possibly turn out to be less of a blunt instrument that it might at first seem and might even be seen as its own practical solution.
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Also it's never explained why the current statutory regulation of the BBC by Ofcom - see here for its scope - does not fatally constrain or weaken the BBC's broadcasting freedom. Yet nothing like that degree of statutory regulation is being proposed for the press. And the press is not completely unconstrained by the law at present - the law of civil and criminal libel for instance and all the legislation about phone-hacking that was repeatedly broken over many years.
I think the recommendations re the press, from what I have seen of them, are good. I am a bit disappointed that more was not said about plurality and media ownership which remains a big problem.
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