Saturday, July 30, 2011

"Stupidity, Narrowness and Cruelty": The Murdoch Trademarks

Charles Moore, the former editor of the London Spectator and a columnist at the Telegraph, is a Tory conservative and has been so for as long as I've read him. But now he is doubt-afflicted. Perhaps not on the road to apostasy, but certainly to enlightenment, willing to say something no conservative in this country would have the courage or insight to admit:

"I'm starting to think that the Left might actually be right"



It has taken me more than 30 years as a journalist to ask myself this question, but this week I find that I must: is the Left right after all? You see, one of the great arguments of the Left is that what the Right calls ?the free market? is actually a set-up.

The rich run a global system that allows them to accumulate capital and pay the lowest possible price for labour. The freedom that results applies only to them. The many simply have to work harder, in conditions that grow ever more insecure, to enrich the few. Democratic politics, which purports to enrich the many, is actually in the pocket of those bankers, media barons and other moguls who run and own everything.

[snip]

[A]s we have surveyed the Murdoch scandal of the past fortnight, few could deny that it has revealed how an international company has bullied and bought its way to control of party leaderships, police forces and regulatory processes. David Cameron, escaping skilfully from the tight corner into which he had got himself, admitted as much. Mr Murdoch himself, like a tired old Godfather, told the House of Commons media committee on Tuesday that he was so often courted by prime ministers that he wished they would leave him alone.

The Left was right that the power of Rupert Murdoch had become an anti-social force. The Right (in which, for these purposes, one must include the New Labour of Tony Blair and Gordon Brown) was too slow to see this, partly because it confused populism and democracy. One of Mr Murdoch?s biggest arguments for getting what he wanted in the expansion of his multi-media empire was the backing of ?our readers?. But the News of the World and the Sun went out of the way in recent years to give their readers far too little information to form political judgments. His papers were tools for his power, not for that of his readers. When they learnt at last the methods by which the News of the World operated, they withdrew their support.

It has surprised me to read fellow defenders of the free press saying how sad they are that the News of the World closed. In its stupidity, narrowness and cruelty, and in its methods, the paper was a disgrace to the free press. No one should ever have banned it, of course, but nor should anyone mourn its passing. It is rather as if supporters of parliamentary democracy were to lament the collapse of the BNP. It was a great day for newspapers when, 25 years ago, Mr Murdoch beat the print unions at Wapping, but much of what he chose to print on those presses has been a great disappointment to those of us who believe in free markets because they emancipate people. The Right has done itself harm by covering up for so much brutality.



The Murdoch influence has been equally malignant on our side of the Atlantic. Moore:



Last week, I happened to be in America, mainly in the company of intelligent conservatives. Their critique of President Obama?s astonishing spending and record-breaking deficits seemed right. But I was struck by how the optimistic message of the Reagan era has now become a shrill one. On Fox News (another Murdoch property, and one which, while I was there, did not breathe a word of his difficulties), Republicans lined up for hours to threaten to wreck the President?s attempt to raise the debt ceiling. They seemed to take for granted the underlying robustness of their country?s economic and political arrangements. This is a mistake. The greatest capitalist country in history is now dependent on other people?s capital to survive. In such circumstances, Western democracy starts to feel like a threatened luxury. We can wave banners about ?life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness?, but they tend to say, in smaller print, ?Made in China?.

Source: http://www.vanityfair.com/online/wolcott/2011/07/sanity-from-the-other-side-of-the-ocean.html

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