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ERF the Worm, Al Wijat and Marven the Marvelousall say along with the rest of the world on mother Earth

Madeleine McCann must be found!!!


Missing Madeleine! Madeleine McCann was abducted from Praia Da Luz,
Portugal on 3rd May, 2007 anyone with any information and/or ideas how to find Madeline ....please go to your nearest police station




"..Being a policeman and accepting bribes is worse...."

.."Bribing the London Met Police is surely the worst 'crime here'...."



The roasting young James got for

 stuffing up the Evil Media Empire


Bert BarrottMr Al Capone this afternoon issued the following statement with respect to various allegations against himself and his organisation by the Gruadian Newspaper Capone Associates operates purely as a bottle washing facility. Our operations are conducted with the highest integrity. Proof Alcohol found filling 124,670 bottles is thought to be a result of defects in our quality control system, which are being corrected.The body discovered in the boot of Mr Capone's car was a rogue body, possibly placed there by a disaffected employee who has since left the organisation. We have no knowledge of his present location. After an extensive search no more bodies have been discovered.Mr Capone is usually on vacation and has little or no knowledge of what goes on at the plant in his absence (or presence) He states however that he has been let down by people he trusted. He will not be resigningThe $245,000 found in the possession of Police Commissioner Bloggs and identified as being derived from Capone Associates was a donation to the Poor Children of Baltimore which had unfortunately been misdirected.

Rita MooreWouldn't it be poetic justice if the meeting between the Murdochs and Brooks was hacked or bugged to hear the roasting young James got for stuffing up the evil Empire.


The fly on the wall at the News of the World
 staff closure meeting!!
John MurrayI know the whole phone hacking thing is distateful, and rightly hit a nerve with the public, but bribing the police is surely the worst 'crime' committed here.  Even if they were just getting info on the Royals, police corruption is hugely serious.  We are a democratic nation supposedly free from that sort of corruption.  I hope more whistleblowers come to light and that they throw the book at those responsible on both sides.

jjh"bribing the police is surely the worst 'crime' committed here" being a policeman and accepting the bribe is worse.

thomybdoes anyone really think we get a free media. 
this is all properganda. no news media empire can be truly clean and now has been proven.
one question this was on labor watch, just another thing that brown and blir etc will get away with, Democracy ? ha 
http://www.freepress.net/owner...
Ben: I don't suppose anyone knows if anyone's scanned / tweeted the crosswords in question, for posterity's sake? I am, of course, assuming that no-one here would have bought themselves a copy of the ill-fated paper.... would they? 

doody_headHas anyone got a link to the recording? 

Would have loved to be a fly on the wall at that meeting..
herrlippThere you go - http://bit.ly/qD6fpO


Telegraph: News of the World final crossword has a message for 'catastrophe' Rebekah Brooks

Departing staff at the News of the World appear to have sent a parting message of disgust to former editor Rebekah Brooks in the crossword of the paper's final edition.

Rebekah Brooks, chief executive of News International
'Woman stares wildly at calamity' was one of the final crossword clues 

JohnBSheff: What is it with the Murdock's and now Brookes why do they have this TEFAL protection, nothing seems to stick to them. Rebekah was at the Heart of the operation and she admitted as much at the commons hearing in 2003 but she is just called in as a witness, but Coulson is arrested????

petaYes, the rest of us are as confused as you are

soapboxjoeThis story has a long way to run until the real facts are realised.
Members of the police force are in line for a term at Her Majesty's pleasure along with senior members of News International. That Parliament was deliberately misled when they were offered the opportunity to come clean and admit the depths of the scandal will doom their fate.
I also suspect some will squeal when the pressure is applied to them and the whole industry en-mass could end up under the microscope if to secure their fate they claim (with evidence) that other publications have engaged in the same tactics. Then of course there is the issue of whether those that will be implicated within the Met end up revealing those higher up who knew of and condoned the dangerous and corrupt relationships with the press. The stifling of a 'real' investigation into this whole affair from the outset was not the doing and authority of one man alone. This could creep higher up the judiciary. And if it needs to, it should. Once this happens, politicians are then going to be scrutinised like never before, as even Tony teflon Blair is 
already in the frame over his close relationship with Murdoch himself.

 10 Jul 2011

Despite orders allegedly given from the top of News International to ensure to "ensure there were no libels or any hidden mocking messages of the chief executive", staff appear to have found a way of mocking Mrs Brooks one last time.

Among the clues in the paper's Quickie puzzle were: "Brook", "stink", "catastrope" and "digital protection".

The clues for the Cryptic Crossword seemed to cut even closer to the bone, with examples including: "criminal enterprise", "mix in prison", "string of recordings" and "will fear new security measure".

The clue for 24 Across - which reads "Woman stares wildly at calamity" - is thought to be a reference to a photograph of Mrs Brooks staring furiously from the window of a car as she left News International's Wapping headquarters following the announcement the News of the World was to be shut down.

The answer to the clue is not one she would appreciate: "disaster".

Other answers included: "stench", "racket" and "tart".

A source at the News of the World told the Daily Mail that Mrs Brooks had ordered two loyal Sun journalists to comb the papers looking for tricks.

They said: "Rebekah tried everything to stop the staff having the last word and she utterly failed.

"She brought in two very senior Sun journalists to go though every line on every page with a fine tooth comb to ensure there were no libels or any hidden mocking messages of the chief executive.

"But they failed and we’ve had the last laugh.’

Mrs Brooks, a former editor of the News of the World, was met with angry words when she addressed staff on Friday.

In a secret recording made during her speech, Mrs Brooks can be heard saying: "This is not exactly the best time in my life but I'm determined to get vindication for this paper and for people like you."

There are then cheers as an unidentified male staff member angrily replies: "You're making the whole of News International toxic. There's an arrogance that you think we would want to work for you."

Comments:

Nobody SpecIial: @JohnBSheff:: The word you're looking for is "teflon". Tefal is a brand name.





Ivor McCormackDoes anyone else not think that this is how BSkyB is protecting itself from the takeover attempt by Murdoch? Redirect and fight on their terms? I do not have any respect for the people involved as I believe that journalistic integrity is something that was lost a long time ago when people whose job it was to check facts before presenting them and caused problems such as the MMR panic. If you want to do something about it, boycott the papers, the TV and hurt them. Jeez, too much shield bashing and not enough doing!

Bravo to that crossword puzzle editor.  
The thing you have to realize about writers is that writers will ALWAYS find a way to get their message out, even if it’s hidden in the most unlikely of places. 
Steven Spielberg got his own forbidden message out as far as his anger at General Motors for their role in destroying the once magnificent interconnected network of American light rail and commuter rail. That was a world-class transportation system which a predominantly car-free Middle Class enjoyed here in America between 1910 and 1950. But in the mid-1920's General Motors recognized the competition that a logical and functioning nationwide light rail system posed to car sales, so they set up a fake company called National City Lines to buy up as many of the smaller pieces of the nationwide rail system as possible, rip out the rail tracks, and then replace the trains with GM buses.  GM didn’t need to destroy ALL of America’s light rail systems --just various segments of it-- in order to make light rail into a less-than-stellar mode of transportation. 
Spielberg's method of expressing his disgust with General Motors was via producing the hit Hollywood movie "Who Framed Roger Rabbit?" But instead of a company called National City Lines buying up the rail lines, that movie featured a company called the Cloverleaf Corporation. The movie was mistaken by most observers as nothing but a harmless kiddie cartoon flick. But it was actually a profound political statement, and a scathing indictment against General Motors for the predatory business practices which they secretly spent nearly 20 years accomplishing completely under the noses of the unsuspecting American people. And then in 1947 (which is the same year that “Roger Rabbit” takes place), when General Motors was called into the Federal Court of Los Angeles (the same city where “Roger Rabbit” takes place) to answer for their crimes, they were found not guilty of all charges except one: violations of the Sherman Anti-Trust Act (that’s an American anti-monopoly law, and because National City Lines always only ever used GM buses, that’s what did them in on that charge). And so as punishment for their crime, GM was fined $1,000, and each of the members of the Board of Directors of GM was fined $1 each. In the meantime, the street car system of Los Angeles is gone forever, and that city has become one of the most over-highwayed, over-car-choked, pollution laden cities on Earth with unending traffic jams and average commute times exceeding an hour for most of its citizens.
Forty year later, Steven Spielberg got his cinematic revenge against GM in the form of a harmless kid’s movie. 
So don't ever mess with writers. Writers always have the last word.
skorzenyRevenge ?
Wow - Roger Rabbit must sure have annoyed the GM board - most of whom wouldn't even have been born in 1947.
GM's own stupid policy of making gas-guzzling barges has done them more harm than a 1000 Roger Rabbits
Drake TitusvilleI do not pretend that "Who Framed Roger Rabbit" caused actual harm to GM. Instead I will merely assert that had Spielberg tried to play it straight by doing a realistic historical film about what is now called the General Motors Streetcar Conspiracy, he likely would have been censored by the studio. So the victory he achieved with that film wasn't so much one of just desserts against GM as much as it was an artist being able to get around the roadblocks to free speech that powerful entities (such as GM and Rupert Murdoch) are usually able to throw up in the way of artistic expression. 
Spielberg's lifelong friend and colleague George Lucas faced many roadblocks himself when he (simultaneously) produced the historical true-story film "Tucker: The Man and His Dream." That movie was about a small American businessman named Preston Tucker who decided to start his own car company (the Tucker Automobile Company), yet the Big Three in Detroit did everything possible to stop him. He had a better car than anything GM, Ford or Chrysler had to offer, and so they pulled every trick possible to undermine his company before it could even get off the ground. Meanwhile, George Lucas faced many roadblocks to his film because the studio was under a lot of pressure to tone down the portions of the script which showed the Big Three as bad guys. 
Spielberg escaped a similar censorship ordeal by opting for a more covert film with a hidden message. 
In the end, that crossword puzzle was just as much a victory for Free Speech as "Roger Rabbit" was. They can TRY to censor you, but if you're very clever in your craft, you'll still manage to get your message out. GM and NotW can each engage in activities such as usurping common decency, destroying a national asset (trains), interfering with police (deleting voice mails), and then when faced with criminal charges get off with a slap on the wrist. But such companies CANNOT silence the artist who chooses to speak out against their misdeeds. 
So I again say: bravo to the crossword puzzle editor.
Ben: I don't suppose anyone knows if anyone's scanned / tweeted the crosswords in question, for posterity's sake? I am, of course, assuming that no-one here would have bought themselves a copy of the ill-fated paper.... would they? 
doody_headHas anyone got a link to the recording? Would have loved to be a fly on the wall at that meeting..
herrlippThere you go - http://bit.ly/qD6fpO

catwink1941Maybe sometime in all this, this older woman will cut off at least ten pounds of her hair.  This style of dog-chewed curls is  really only for the young.

Big_Vern: She's either got major amounts of dirt on just about everybody or has done a power of shagging or both.

jjh"has done a power of shagging" Are you Yo Sammity Sam?

John MurrayI know the whole phone hacking thing is distateful, and rightly hit a nerve with the public, but bribing the police is surely the worst 'crime' committed here.  Even if they were just getting info on the Royals, police corruption is hugely serious.  We are a democratic nation supposedly free from that sort of corruption.  I hope more whistleblowers come to light and that they throw the book at those responsible on both sides.

jjh"bribing the police is surely the worst 'crime' committed here" being a policeman and accepting the bribe is worse.

thomybdoes anyone really think we get a free media. 
this is all properganda. no news media empire can be truly clean and now has been proven.
one question this was on labor watch, just another thing that brown and blir etc will get away with, Democracy ? ha 
http://www.freepress.net/owner...

Dave Mogfordwhahahahahhaha!!

JohnBSheff: What is it with the Murdock's and now Brookes why do they have this TEFAL protection, nothing seems to stick to them. Rebekah was at the Heart of the operation and she admitted as much at the commons hearing in 2003 but she is just called in as a witness, but Coulson is arrested????

petaYes, the rest of us are as confused as you are

soapboxjoeThis story has a long way to run until the real facts are realised.
Members of the police force are in line for a term at Her Majesty's pleasure along with senior members of News International. That Parliament was deliberately misled when they were offered the opportunity to come clean and admit the depths of the scandal will doom their fate.
I also suspect some will squeal when the pressure is applied to them and the whole industry en-mass could end up under the microscope if to secure their fate they claim (with evidence) that other publications have engaged in the same tactics. Then of course there is the issue of whether those that will be implicated within the Met end up revealing those higher up who knew of and condoned the dangerous and corrupt relationships with the press. The stifling of a 'real' investigation into this whole affair from the outset was not the doing and authority of one man alone. This could creep higher up the judiciary. And if it needs to, it should. Once this happens, politicians are then going to be scrutinised like never before, as even Tony teflon Blair is 
already in the frame over his close relationship with Murdoch himself.

lovetruncheon: didn't they do something similar in hot metal years ago?
publishing an apology to a vicar in the crossword with the clue "not a werewolf"?

James RigbyWhore folds, went astray and good riddance (4,2,3,5)

mortOo you wag you

monkeyboyrogueThere's a funny song and video about the phone hacking affair here;

https://www.youtube.com/watch?...

jjhFunny songs never are.

Bert BarrottMr Al Capone this afternoon issued the following statement with respect to various allegations against himself and his organisation by the Gruadian Newspaper Capone Associates operates purely as a bottle washing facility. Our operations are conducted with the highest integrity. Proof Alcohol found filling 124,670 bottles is thought to be a result of defects in our quality control system, which are being corrected.The body discovered in the boot of Mr Capone's car was a rogue body, possibly placed there by a disaffected employee who has since left the organisation. We have no knowledge of his present location. After an extensive search no more bodies have been discovered.Mr Capone is usually on vacation and has little or no knowledge of what goes on at the plant in his absence (or presence) He states however that he has been let down by people he trusted. He will not be resigningThe $245,000 found in the possession of Police Commissioner Bloggs and identified as being derived from Capone Associates was a donation to the Poor Children of Baltimore which had unfortunately been misdirected.

Rita MooreWouldn't it be poetic justice if the meeting between the Murdochs and Brooks was hacked or bugged to hear the roasting young James got for stuffing up the evil Empire.

TheLegendKillerI want to know what hold she has over Murdoch

mortProbably knows where the £500 million NI profits go every year...

Auton: Certainly none of it goes to the treasury in taxes

teletubbieand what she's holding?

rickinhkHis balls?

mooncatI suspect that the only qualification for being a senior journalist at The Sun is to be able to read things with big letters and not need the accompanying pictures.
One imagines that a crossword is beyond their limited intellectual abilities.
Brooks must have fairly limited intellectual ability herself if she truly thought such a move would actually work.
That said, I would love to know who wrote the crossword for the ESN journalists at the News of the Screws.

thepharaohThe online version of the paper appears to have done the same. As of 22:57 hrs Sunday,www.newsoftheworld.co.uk... have a look at the background newspaper on the left of the main splash.It reads "That bitch forced me to quit"...pink text on blue background. Nice

iolandeI bet every single article chosen for that cover was deliberate.  And I bet every one was gained through phone hacking.

russhughes: The woman who claims that she knew nothing about the hacking in one breath and in the next declares it was an isolated case. 
If she didn't know about the first, how can she give assurances about all the rest?
You can't both not know and know, disaster is the exact word.

Donna TrumpTo paraphrase Lennon & McCartney (Polythene Pam):
"She's the kind of a girl who makes the News of the World
Yes you could say she was a moral midget"

muffler: I pretty sure the 2 Sun checkers have never done a crossword in their lives... to hard.

prejudicedAs you've managed two mistakes in one short sentence you're not exactly in a position to criticise.

muffler: 1) I admit I am bad with the keyboard and 2) You're point is that because my typing sucks I therefore am wrong?  3) I stand to the point that I don't find The Sun a paragon of intelligence.

pinkcadillacHilarious! I would stop contributing right now if I were you, and go back to primary school. sign up for basic english.

mr_smithThe News of the World had a cryptic crossword?

mortThey do, but it isn't hard... a favourite from many years ago stuck in memory; "Nothing could be finer, than to be in ______ in the morning". 
Let us not judge others by our own unreasonably high standards hahahahahahaha.

rickinhkFlorida?

jjhbloom?

tommyudo: Bet those Sun subs get the chop.


bojimbo26: I'm surprised they didn't all walk out last week , and give her two fingers ( or the middle one ) .



Relive some of the News of the World's best work with this gallery of the tabloid's best 'stings' down the years.

News of the World Best Sting Number One:
Prince Harry. In January 2009 the paper released footage of Prince Harry making racist jokes.

News of the World Best Stinge Numver Two
est Sting Number Two:




David Beckham and Rebecca Loos. In 2004 the paper first reported the English footballer had been cheating on his wife Victoria with Loos, who was paid more than $500,000 for an interview and access to Beckham's text messages.

News of the World Best Sting Number Three:


Michael Phelps. In February 2009 the paper published a photo of 14-times Olympic gold medal winner Phelps smoking a bong.

News of the World Best Sting Number Four:


Lawrence Dallaglio. The former British rugby captain resigned under a cloud after the paper claimed he'd used and sold drugs. He denied the allegations and complained he'd naively fallen victim to the paper's set up.

News of the World Best Sting Number Five:


Sarah Ferguson. In May last year the paper filmed Prince Andrew's former wife taking $50,000 in cash from a reporter posing as a businessman in return for guaranteeing access to her ex-husband, who works as a trade envoy.


News of the World Best Sting Number Six:


Wayne Rooney. In September last year the paper reported the English footballer had cheated on his pregnant wife with a $2300-a-night hooker.

News of the World Best Sting Number Seven:


Hugh Grant. The British actor turned the tables on the paper in April this year, by secretly recording a reporter saying former editor Rebekah Brooks knew about the phone hacking.


News of the World Best Sting Number Eight:


Sienna Miller. In June 2011 the British actress settled a case against the paper for $190,000 in damages after the paper admitted hacking her mobile phone.


News of the World Best Sting Number Nine:


Max Mosley. In March 2008 paper released footage of the Formula One boss participating in a sado-masochistic orgy with five sex workers. He later successfully took the paper to court over references to the orgy being 'Nazi-themed'.



Why Americans Hate the Media

Why has the media establishment become so unpopular? Perhaps the public has good reason to think that the media's self-aggrandizement gets in the way of solving the country's real problems.

By James Fallows

In the late 1980s public-television stations aired a talking-heads series called Ethics in America. For each show more than a dozen prominent citizens sat around a horseshoe-shaped table and tried to answer troubling ethical questions posed by a moderator. The series might have seemed a good bet to be paralyzingly dull, but at least one show was riveting in its drama and tension.

The episode was taped in the fall of 1987. Its title was "Under Orders, Under Fire," and most of the panelists were former soldiers talking about the ethical dilemmas of their work. The moderator was Charles Ogletree, a professor at Harvard Law School, who moved from panelist to panelist asking increasingly difficult questions in the law school's famous Socratic style.

During the first half of the show Ogletree made the soldiers squirm about ethical tangles on the battlefield. The man getting the roughest treatment was Frederick Downs, a writer who as a young Army lieutenant in Vietnam had lost his left arm in a mine explosion.

Ogletree asked Downs to imagine that he was a young lieutenant again. He and his platoon were in the nation of "South Kosan," advising South Kosanese troops in their struggle against invaders from "North Kosan." (This scenario was apparently a hybrid of the U.S. roles in the Korean and Vietnam wars.) A North Kosanese unit had captured several of Downs's men alive—but Downs had also captured several of the North Kosanese. Downs did not know where his men were being held, but he thought his prisoners did.

And so Ogletree put the question: How far would Downs go to make a prisoner talk? Would he order him tortured? Would he torture the prisoner himself? Downs himself speculated on what he would do if he had a big knife in his hand. Would he start cutting the prisoner? When would he make himself stop, if the prisoner just wouldn't talk?

Downs did not shrink from the questions or the implications of his answers. He wouldn't enjoy doing it, he told Ogletree. He would have to live with the consequences for the rest of his life. But yes, he would torture the captive. He would use the knife. Implicit in his answers was the idea that he would do the cutting himself and would listen to the captive scream. He would do whatever was necessary to try to save his own men. While explaining his decisions Downs sometimes gestured with his left hand for emphasis. The hand was a metal hook.

Ogletree worked his way through the other military officials, asking all how they reacted to Frederick Downs's choice. William Westmoreland, who had commanded the whole U.S. force in Vietnam when Downs was serving there, deplored Downs's decision. After all, he said, even war has its rules. An Army chaplain wrestled with how he would react if a soldier in a morally troubling position similar to Downs's came to him privately and confessed what he had done. A Marine Corps officer juggled a related question: What would he do if he came across an American soldier who was about to torture or execute a bound and unarmed prisoner, who might be a civilian?

The soldiers disagreed among themselves. Yet in describing their decisions they used phrases like "I hope I would have the courage to . . ." and "In order to live with myself later I would . . ." The whole exercise may have been set up as a rhetorical game, but Ogletree's questions clearly tapped into discussions the soldiers had already had about the consequences of choices they made.

Then Ogletree turned to the two most famous members of the evening's panel, better known even than Westmoreland. These were two star TV journalists: Peter Jennings, of World News Tonight and ABC, and Mike Wallace, of 60 Minutes and CBS.

Ogletree brought them into the same hypothetical war. He asked Jennings to imagine that he worked for a network that had been in contact with the enemy North Kosanese government. After much pleading Jennings and his news crew got permission from the North Kosanese to enter their country and film behind the lines. Would Jennings be willing to go? Of course, he replied. Any reporter would—and in real wars reporters from his network often had.

But while Jennings and his crew were traveling with a North Kosanese unit, to visit the site of an alleged atrocity by U.S. and South Kosanese troops, they unexpectedly crossed the trail of a small group of American and South Kosanese soldiers. With Jennings in their midst the Northern soldiers set up an ambush that would let them gun down the Americans and Southerners.

What would Jennings do? Would he tell his cameramen to "Roll tape!" as the North Kosanese opened fire? What would go through his mind as he watched the North Kosanese prepare to fire?

Jennings sat silent for about fifteen seconds. "Well, I guess I wouldn't," he finally said. "I am going to tell you now what I am feeling, rather than the hypothesis I drew for myself. If I were with a North Kosanese unit that came upon Americans, I think that I personally would do what I could to warn the Americans."

Even if it meant losing the story? Ogletree asked.

Even though it would almost certainly mean losing my life, Jennings replied. "But I do not think that I could bring myself to participate in that act. That's purely personal, and other reporters might have a different reaction."

Ogletree turned for reaction to Mike Wallace, who immediately replied. "I think some other reporters would have a different reaction," he said, obviously referring to himself. "They would regard it simply as another story they were there to cover." A moment later Wallace said, "I am astonished, really." He turned toward Jennings and began to lecture him: "You're a reporter. Granted you're an American" (at least for purposes of the fictional example; Jennings has actually retained Canadian citizenship). "I'm a little bit at a loss to understand why, because you're an American, you would not have covered that story."

Ogletree pushed Wallace. Didn't Jennings have some higher duty to do something other than just roll film as soldiers from his own country were being shot?

"No," Wallace said flatly and immediately. "You don't have a higher duty. No. No. You're a reporter!"

Jennings backtracked fast. Wallace was right, he said: "I chickened out." Jennings said that he had "played the hypothetical very hard."He had lost sight of his journalistic duty to remain detached.

As Jennings said he agreed with Wallace, several soldiers in the room seemed to regard the two of them with horror. Retired Air Force General Brent Scowcroft, who would soon become George Bush's National Security Advisor, said it was simply wrong to stand and watch as your side was slaughtered. "What's it worth?" he asked Wallace bitterly. "It's worth thirty seconds on the evening news, as opposed to saving a platoon."

After a brief discussion between Wallace and Scowcroft, Ogletree reminded Wallace of Scowcroft's basic question. What was it worth for the reporter to stand by, looking? Shouldn't the reporter have said something ?

Wallace gave a disarming grin, shrugged his shoulders, and said, "I don't know." He later mentioned extreme circumstances in which he thought journalists should intervene. But at that moment he seemed to be mugging to the crowd with a "Don't ask me!"expression, and in fact he drew a big laugh—the first such moment in the discussion. Jennings, however, was all business, and was still concerned about the first answer he had given.

"I wish I had made another decision," Jennings said, as if asking permission to live the past five minutes over again. "I would like to have made his decision"—that is, Wallace's decision to keep on filming.

A few minutes later Ogletree turned to George M. Connell, a Marine colonel in full uniform. Jaw muscles flexing in anger, with stress on each word, Connell said, "I feel utter contempt."

Two days after this hypothetical episode, Connell said, Jennings or Wallace might be back with the American forces—and could be wounded by stray fire, as combat journalists often had been before. When that happens, he said, they are "just journalists." Yet they would expect American soldiers to run out under enemy fire and drag them back, rather than leaving them to bleed to death on the battlefield.

"I'll do it!" Connell said. "And that is what makes me so contemptuous of them. Marines will die going to get . . . a couple of journalists." The last words dripped disgust.

Not even Ogletree knew what to say. There was dead silence for several seconds. Then a square-jawed man with neat gray hair and aviator glasses spoke up. It was Newt Gingrich, looking a generation younger and trimmer than he would when he became speaker of the House, in 1995. One thing was clear from this exercise, Gingrich said. "The military has done a vastly better job of systematically thinking through the ethics of behavior in a violent environment than the journalists have."

That was about the mildest way to put it. Although Wallace and Jennings conceded that the criticism was fair—if journalists considered themselves "detached,"they could not logically expect American soldiers to rescue them—nevertheless their reactions spoke volumes about the values of their craft. Jennings was made to feel embarrassed about his natural, decent human impulse. Wallace seemed unembarrassed about feeling no connection to the soldiers in his country's army or considering their deaths before his eyes "simply a story." In other important occupations people sometimes face the need to do the horrible. Frederick Downs, after all, was willing to torture a man and hear him scream. But Downs had thought through all the consequences and alternatives, and he knew he would live with the horror for the rest of his days. When Mike Wallace said he would do something horrible, he barely bothered to give a rationale. He did not try to explain the reasons a reporter might feel obliged to remain silent as the attack began—for instance, that in combat reporters must be beyond country, or that they have a duty to bear impartial witness to deaths on either side, or that Jennings had implicitly made a promise not to betray the North Kosanese when he agreed to accompany them. The soldiers might or might not have found such arguments convincing; Wallace didn't even make them.

Not Issues But the Game of Politics

A generation ago political talk programs were sleepy Sunday-morning affairs. The Secretary of State or the Senate majority leader would show up to answer questions from Lawrence Spivak or Bob Clark, and after thirty minutes another stately episode of Meet the Press or Issues and Answers would be history.

Everything in public life is "brighter" and more "interesting" now. Constant competition from the weekday trash-talk shows has forced anything involving political life to liven up. Under pressure from the Saturday political-talk shows—The McLaughlin Group and its many disorderly descendants—even the Sunday-morning shows have put on rouge and push-up bras.

Meet the Press, moderated by Tim Russert, is probably the meatiest of these programs. High-powered guests discuss serious topics with Russert, who worked for years in politics, and with veteran reporters. Yet the pressure to keep things lively means that squabbling replaces dialogue.

The discussion shows that are supposed to enhance public understanding may actually reduce it, by hammering home the message that issues don't matter except as items for politicians to fight over. Some politicians in Washington may indeed view all issues as mere tools to use against their opponents. But far from offsetting this view of public life, the national press often encourages it. As Washington-based talk shows have become more popular in the past decade, they have had a trickle-down effect in cities across the country. In Seattle, in Los Angeles, in Boston, in Atlanta, journalists gain notice and influence by appearing regularly on talk shows—and during those appearances they mainly talk about the game of politics.

In the 1992 presidential campaign candidates spent more time answering questions from "ordinary people"—citizens in town-hall forums, callers on radio and TV talk shows—than they had in previous years. The citizens asked overwhelmingly about the what of politics: What are you going to do about the health-care system? What can you do to reduce the cost of welfare? The reporters asked almost exclusively about the how: How are you going to try to take away Perot's constituency? How do you answer charges that you have flip-flopped?

After the 1992 campaign the contrast between questions from citizens and those from reporters was widely discussed in journalism reviews and postmortems on campaign coverage. Reporters acknowledged that they should try harder to ask questions about things their readers and viewers seemed to care about—that is, questions about the differences that political choices would make in people's lives.

In January of last year there was a chance to see how well the lesson had sunk in. In the days just before and after Bill Clinton delivered his State of the Union address to the new Republican-controlled Congress, he answered questions in a wide variety of forums in order to explain his plans.

On January 31, a week after the speech, the President flew to Boston and took questions from a group of teenagers. Their questions concerned the effects of legislation or government programs on their communities or schools. These were the questions (paraphrased in some cases):

* "We need stronger laws to punish those people who are caught selling guns to our youth. Basically, what can you do about that?"

* "I notice that often it's the media that is responsible for the negative portrayal of young people in our society." What can political leaders do to persuade the media that there is good news about youth?

* Apprenticeship programs and other ways to provide job training have been valuable for students not going to college. Can the Administration promote more of these programs?

* Programs designed to keep teenagers away from drugs and gangs often emphasize sports and seem geared mainly to boys. How can such programs be made more attractive to teenage girls?

* What is it like at Oxford? (This was from a student who was completing a new alternative-school curriculum in the Boston public schools, and who had been accepted at Oxford.)

* "We need more police officers who are trained to deal with all the other different cultures in our cities." What can the government do about that?

* "In Boston, Northeastern University has created a model of scholarships and other supports to help inner-city kids get to and stay in college. . . . As President, can you urge colleges across the country to do what Northeastern has done?"

Earlier in the month the President's performance had been assessed by the three network-news anchors: Peter Jennings, of ABC; Dan Rather, of CBS; and Tom Brokaw, of NBC. There was no overlap whatsoever between the questions the students asked and those raised by the anchors. None of the questions from these news professionals concerned the impact of legislation or politics on people's lives. Nearly all concerned the struggle for individual advancement among candidates.

Peter Jennings, who met with Clinton as the Gingrich-Dole Congress was getting under way, asked whether Clinton had been eclipsed as a political leader by the Republicans. Dan Rather did interviews through January with prominent politicians—Senators Edward Kennedy, Phil Gramm, and Bob Dole—building up to a profile of Clinton two days after the State of the Union address. Every question he asked was about popularity or political tactics. He asked Phil Gramm to guess whether Newt Gingrich would enter the race (no) and whether Bill Clinton would be renominated by his party (yes). He asked Bob Dole what kind of mood the President seemed to be in, and whether Dole and Gingrich were, in effect, the new bosses of Washington. When Edward Kennedy began giving his views about the balanced-budget amendment, Rather steered him back on course: "Senator, you know I'd talk about these things the rest of the afternoon, but let's move quickly to politics. Do you expect Bill Clinton to be the Democratic nominee for re-election in 1996?"

The CBS Evening News profile of Clinton, which was narrated by Rather and was presented as part of the series Eye on America, contained no mention of Clinton's economic policy, his tax or budget plans, his failed attempt to pass a health-care proposal, his successful attempt to ratify NAFTA, his efforts to "reinvent government," or any substantive aspect of his proposals or plans in office. Its subject was exclusively Clinton's handling of his office—his "difficulty making decisions," his "waffling" at crucial moments. If Rather or his colleagues had any interest in the content of Clinton's speech as opposed to its political effect, neither the questions they asked nor the reports they aired revealed such a concern.

Tom Brokaw's questions were more substantive, but even he concentrated mainly on politics of the moment. How did the President feel about a poll showing that 61 percent of the public felt that he had no "strong convictions" and could be "easily swayed"? What did Bill Clinton think about Newt Gingrich? "Do you think he plays fair?" How did he like it that people kept shooting at the White House?

When ordinary citizens have a chance to pose questions to political leaders, they rarely ask about the game of politics. They want to know how the reality of politics will affect them—through taxes, programs, scholarship funds, wars. Journalists justify their intrusiveness and excesses by claiming that they are the public's representatives, asking the questions their fellow citizens would ask if they had the privilege of meeting with Presidents and senators. In fact they ask questions that only their fellow political professionals care about. And they often do so—as at the typical White House news conference—with a discourtesy and rancor that represent the public's views much less than they reflect the modern journalist's belief that being independent boils down to acting hostile.

Reductio Ad Electionem: The One Track Mind

The limited curiosity that elite reporters display in their questions is also evident in the stories they write once they have received answers. They are interested mainly in pure politics and can be coerced into examining the substance of an issue only as a last resort. The subtle but sure result is a stream of daily messages that the real meaning of public life is the struggle of Bob Dole against Newt Gingrich against Bill Clinton, rather than our collective efforts to solve collective problems.

The natural instinct of newspapers and TV is to present every public issue as if its "real" meaning were political in the meanest and narrowest sense of that term—the attempt by parties and candidates to gain an advantage over their rivals. Reporters do, of course, write stories about political life in the broader sense and about the substance of issues—the pluses and minuses of diplomatic recognition for Vietnam, the difficulties of holding down the Medicare budget, whether immigrants help or hurt the nation's economic base. But when there is a chance to use these issues as props or raw material for a story about political tactics, most reporters leap at it. It is more fun—and easier—to write about Bill Clinton's "positioning" on the Vietnam issue, or how Newt Gingrich is "handling" the need to cut Medicare, than it is to look into the issues themselves.

Examples of this preference occur so often that they're difficult to notice. But every morning's newspaper, along with every evening's newscast, reveals this pattern of thought.

* Last February, when the Democratic President and the Republican Congress were fighting over how much federal money would go to local law-enforcement agencies, one network-news broadcast showed a clip of Gingrich denouncing Clinton and another of Clinton standing in front of a sea of uniformed police officers while making a tough-on-crime speech. The correspondent's sign-off line was "The White House thinks 'cops on the beat' has a simple but appealing ring to it." That is, the President was pushing the plan because it would sound good in his campaign ads. Whether or not that was Clinton's real motive, nothing in the broadcast gave the slightest hint of where the extra policemen would go, how much they might cost, whether there was reason to think they'd do any good. Everything in the story suggested that the crime bill mattered only as a chapter in the real saga, which was the struggle between Bill and Newt.

* Last April, after the explosion at the federal building in Oklahoma City, discussion changed quickly from the event itself to politicians' "handling" of the event. On the Sunday after the blast President Clinton announced a series of new anti-terrorism measures. The next morning, on National Public Radio's Morning Edition, Cokie Roberts was asked about the prospects of the proposals' taking effect. "In some ways it's not even the point," she replied. What mattered was that Clinton "looked good" taking the tough side of the issue. No one expects Cokie Roberts or other political correspondents to be experts on controlling terrorism, negotiating with the Syrians, or the other specific measures on which Presidents make stands. But all issues are shoehorned into the area of expertise the most-prominent correspondents do have:the struggle for one-upmanship among a handful of political leaders.

* When health-care reform was the focus of big political battles between Republicans and Democrats, it was on the front page and the evening newscast every day. When the Clinton Administration declared defeat in 1994 and there were no more battles to be fought, health-care news coverage virtually stopped too—even though the medical system still represented one seventh of the economy, even though HMOs and corporations and hospitals and pharmaceutical companies were rapidly changing policies in the face of ever-rising costs. Health care was no longer political news, and therefore it was no longer interesting news.

* After California's voters approved Proposition 187 in the 1994 elections, drastically limiting the benefits available to illegal immigrants, the national press ran a trickle of stories on what this would mean for California's economy, its school and legal systems, even its relations with Mexico. A flood of stories examined the political impact of the immigration issue—how the Republicans might exploit it, how the Democrats might be divided by it, whether it might propel Pete Wilson to the White House.

* On August 16 last year Bill Bradley announced thap after representing New Jersey in the Senate for three terms he would not run for a fourth term. In interviews and at the news conferences he conducted afterward Bradley did his best to talk about the deep problems of public life and economic adjustment that had left him frustrated with the political process. Each of the parties had locked itself into rigid positions that kept it from dealing with the realistic concerns of ordinary people, he said. American corporations were doing what they had to do for survival in international competition: they were downsizing and making themselves radically more efficient and productive. But the result was to leave "decent, hardworking Americans" more vulnerable to layoffs and the loss of their careers, medical coverage, pension rights, and social standing than they had been in decades. Somehow, Bradley said, we had to move past the focus on short-term political maneuvering and determine how to deal with the forces that were leaving Americans frustrated and insecure.

That, at least, was what Bill Bradley said. What turned up in the press was almost exclusively speculation about what the move meant for this year's presidential race and the party lineup on Capitol Hill. Might Bradley challenge Bill Clinton in the Democratic primaries? If not, was he preparing for an independent run? Could the Democrats come up with any other candidate capable of holding on to Bradley's seat? Wasn't this a slap in the face for Bill Clinton and the party he purported to lead? In the aftermath of Bradley's announcement prominent TV and newspaper reporters competed to come up with the shrewdest analysis of the political impact of the move. None of the country's major papers or networks used Bradley's announcement as a news peg for an analysis of the real issues he had raised.

The day after his announcement Bradley was interviewed by Judy Woodruff on the CNN program Inside Politics. Woodruff is a widely respected and knowledgeable reporter, but her interaction with Bradley was like the meeting of two beings from different universes. Every answer Bradley gave was about the substance of national problems that concerned him. Every one of Woodruff's responses or questions was about short-term political tactics. Woodruff asked about the political implications of his move for Bill Clinton and Newt Gingrich. Bradley replied that it was more important to concentrate on the difficulties both parties had in dealing with real national problems.

Midway through the interview Bradley gave a long answer to the effect that everyone involved in politics had to get out of the rut of converting every subject or comment into a political "issue," used for partisan advantage. Let's stop talking, Bradley said, about who will win what race and start responding to one another's ideas.

As soon as he finished, Woodruff asked her next question: "Do you want to be President?" It was as if she had not heard a word he had been saying—or couldn't hear it, because the media's language of political analysis is utterly separate from the terms in which people describe real problems in their lives.

The effect is as if the discussion of every new advance in medicine boiled down to speculation about whether its creator would win the Nobel Prize that year. Regardless of the tone of coverage, medical research will go on. But a relentless emphasis on the cynical game of politics threatens public life itself, by implying day after day that the political sphere is nothing more than an arena in which ambitious politicians struggle for dominance, rather than a structure in which citizens can deal with worrisome collective problems.

Pointless Prediction: THe Political Experts

On Sunday, November 6, 1994, two days before the congressional elections that swept the Republicans to power, The Washington Post published the results of its "Crystal Ball" poll. Fourteen prominent journalists, pollsters, and all-around analysts made their predictions about how many seats each party would win in the House and Senate and how many governorships each would take.

One week later many of these same experts would be saying on their talk shows that the Republican landslide was "inevitable" and "a long time coming" and "a sign of deep discontent in the heartland." But before the returns were in, how many of the fourteen experts predicted that the Republicans would win both houses of Congress and that Newt Gingrich would be speaker? Exactly three.

What is interesting about this event is not just that so many experts could be so wrong. Immediately after the election even Newt Gingrich seemed dazed by the idea that the forty-year reign of the Democrats in the House had actually come to an end. Rather, the episode said something about the futility of political prediction itself—a task to which the big-time press devotes enormous effort and time. Two days before the election many of the country's most admired analysts had no idea what was about to happen. Yet within a matter of weeks these same people, unfazed, would be writing articles and giving speeches and being quoted about who was "ahead" and "behind" in the emerging race for the White House in 1996.

As with medieval doctors who applied leeches and trepanned skulls, the practitioners cannot be blamed for the limits of their profession. But we can ask why reporters spend so much time directing our attention toward what is not much more than guesswork on their part. It builds the impression that journalism is about what's entertaining—guessing what might or might not happen next month—rather than what's useful, such as extracting lessons of success and failure from events that have already occurred. Competing predictions add almost nothing to our ability to solve public problems or to make sensible choices among complex alternatives. Yet such useless distractions have become a specialty of the political press. They are easy to produce, they allow reporters to act as if they possessed special inside knowledge, and there are no consequences for being wrong.

Spoon Feeding: The White House Press Corps

In the early spring of last year, when Newt Gingrich was dominating the news from Washington and the O. J. Simpson trial was dominating the news as a whole, The Washington Post ran an article about the pathos of the White House press room. Nobody wanted to hear what the President was doing, so the people who cover the President could not get on the air. Howard Kurtz, the Post's media writer, described the human cost of this political change:

Brit Hume is in his closet-size White House cubicle, watching Kato Kaelin testify on CNN. Bill Plante, in the adjoining cubicle, has his feet up and is buried in the New York Times. Brian Williams is in the corridor, idling away the time with Jim Miklaszewski.

An announcement is made for a bill-signing ceremony. Some of America's highest-paid television correspondents begin ambling toward the pressroom door.


"Are you coming with us?" Williams asks.


"I guess so," says Hume, looking forlorn.


The White House spokesman, Mike McCurry, told Kurtz that there was some benefit to the enforced silence: "Brit Hume has now got his crossword puzzle capacity down to record time. And some of the reporters have been out on the lecture circuit."

The deadpan restraint with which Kurtz told this story is admirable. But the question many readers would want to scream at the idle correspondents is Why don't you go out and do some work?

Why not go out and interview someone, even if you're not going to get any airtime that night? Why not escape the monotonous tyranny of the White House press room, which reporters are always complaining about? The knowledge that O.J. will keep you off the air yet again should liberate you to look into those stories you never "had time" to deal with before. Why not read a book—about welfare reform, about Russia or China, about race relations, about anything? Why not imagine, just for a moment, that your journalistic duty might involve something more varied and constructive than doing standups from the White House lawn and sounding skeptical about whatever announcement the President's spokesman put out that day?

What might these well-paid, well-trained correspondents have done while waiting for the O.J. trial to become boring enough that they could get back on the air? They might have tried to learn something that would be of use to their viewers when the story of the moment went away. Without leaving Washington, without going farther than ten minutes by taxi from the White House (so that they could be on hand if a sudden press conference was called), they could have prepared themselves to discuss the substance of issues that affect the public.

For example, two years earlier Vice President Al Gore had announced an ambitious plan to "reinvent" the federal government. Had it made any difference, either in improving the performance of government or in reducing its cost, or was it all for show? Republicans and Democrats were sure to spend the next few months fighting about cuts in the capital-gains tax. Capital-gains tax rates were higher in some countries and lower in others. What did the experience of these countries show about whether cutting the rates helped an economy to grow? The rate of immigration was rising again, and in California and Florida it was becoming an important political issue. What was the latest evidence on the economic and social effects of immigration? Should Americans feel confident or threatened that so many foreigners were trying to make their way in? Soon both political parties would be advancing plans to reform the welfare system. Within a two-mile radius of the White House lived plenty of families on welfare. Why not go and see how the system had affected them, and what they would do if it changed? The federal government had gone further than most private industries in trying to open opportunities to racial minorities and women. The Pentagon had gone furthest of all. What did people involved in this process—men and women, blacks and whites—think about its successes and failures? What light did their experience shed on the impending affirmative-action debate?

The list could go on for pages. With a few minutes' effort—about as long as it takes to do a crossword puzzle—the correspondents could have drawn up lists of other subjects they had never before "had time" to investigate. They had the time now. What they lacked was a sense that their responsibility involved something more than standing up to rehash the day's announcements when there was room for them on the news.

Glass Houses: Journalists and Financial Disclosure

Half a century ago reporters knew but didn't say that Franklin D. Roosevelt was in a wheelchair. A generation ago many reporters knew but didn't write about John F. Kennedy's insatiable appetite for women. For several months in the early Clinton era reporters knew about but didn't disclose Paula Jones's allegation that, as governor of Arkansas, Bill Clinton had exposed himself to her. Eventually this claim found its way into all the major newspapers, proving that there is no longer any such thing as an accusation too embarrassing to be printed if it seems to bear on a politician's "character."

It is not just the President who has given up his privacy in the name of the public's right to know. Over the past two decades officials whose power is tiny compared with the President's have had to reveal embarrassing details about what most Americans consider very private matters: their income and wealth. Each of the more than 3,000 people appointed by the President to executive-branch jobs must reveal previous sources of income and summarize his or her financial holdings. Congressmen have changed their rules to forbid themselves to accept honoraria for speaking to interest groups or lobbyists. The money that politicians do raise from individuals and groups must be disclosed to the Federal Election Commission. The information they disclose is available to the public and appears often in publications, most prominently The Washington Post.

No one contends that every contribution makes every politician corrupt. But financial disclosure has become commonplace on the "Better safe than sorry" principle. If politicians and officials are not corrupt, the reasoning goes, they have nothing to fear from letting their finances be publicized. And if they are corrupt, public disclosure is a way to stop them before they do too much harm. The process may be embarrassing, but this is the cost of public life.

How different the "Better safe than sorry" calculation seems when journalists are involved! Reporters and pundits hold no elected office, but they are obviously public figures. The most prominent TV-talk-show personalities are better known than all but a handful of congressmen. When politicians and pundits sit alongside one another on Washington talk shows and trade opinions, they underscore the essential similarity of their political roles. The pundits have no vote in Congress, but the overall political impact of a word from George Will, Ted Koppel, William Safire, or any of their colleagues who run the major editorial pages dwarfs anything a third-term congressman could do. If an interest group had the choice of buying the favor of one prominent media figure or of two junior congressmen, it wouldn't even have to think about the decision. The pundit is obviously more valuable.

If a reporter is sued for libel by a prominent but unelected personality, such as David Letterman or Donald Trump, he or she says that the offended party is a "public figure"—about whom nearly anything can be written in the press. Public figures, according to the rulings that shape today's libel law, can win a libel suit only if they can prove that a reporter knew that what he or she was writing was false, or had "reckless disregard" for its truth, and went ahead and published it anyway. Public figures, according to the law, pay a price for being well known. And who are these people? The category is not limited to those who hold public office but includes all who "thrust themselves into the public eye." Most journalists would eloquently argue the logic of this broad definition of public figures—until the same standard was applied to them.

In 1993 Sam Donaldson, of ABC, described himself in an interview as being in touch with the concerns of the average American. "I'm trying to get a little ranching business started in New Mexico," he said. "I've got five people on the payroll. I'm making out those government forms." Thus he understood the travails of the small businessman and the annoyances of government regulation. Donaldson, whose base pay from ABC is reported to be some $2 million a year, did not point out that his several ranches in New Mexico together covered some 20,000 acres. When doing a segment attacking farm subsidies on Prime Time Live in 1993 he did not point out that "those government forms" allowed him to claim nearly $97,000 in sheep and mohair subsidies over two years. William Neuman, a reporter for the New York Post, said that when his photographer tried to take pictures of Donaldson's ranch house, Donaldson had him thrown off his property. ("In the West trespassing is a serious offense," Donaldson explained.)

Had Donaldson as a journalist been pursuing a politician or even a corporate executive, he would have felt justified in using the most aggressive reportorial techniques. When these techniques were turned on him, he complained that the reporters were going too far. The analysts who are so clear-eyed about the conflict of interest in Newt Gingrich's book deal claim that they see no reason, none at all, why their own finances might be of public interest.

Last May one of Donaldson's colleagues on This Week With David Brinkley, George Will, wrote a column and delivered on-air comments ridiculing the Clinton Administration's plan to impose tariffs on Japanese luxury cars, notably the Lexus. On the Brinkley show Will said that the tariffs would be "illegal" and would merely amount to "a subsidy for Mercedes dealerships."

Neither in his column nor on the show did Will disclose that his wife, Mari Maseng Will, ran a firm that had been paid some $200,000 as a registered foreign agent for the Japan Automobile Manufacturers Association, and that one of the duties for which she was hired was to get American commentators to criticize the tariff plan. When Will was asked why he had never mentioned this, he replied that it was "just too silly" to think that his views might have been affected by his wife's contract.

Will had, in fact, espoused such views for years, since long before his wife worked for the JAMA and even before he had married her. Few of his readers would leap to the conclusion that Will was serving as a mouthpiece for his wife's employers. But surely most would have preferred to learn that information from Will himself.

A third member of the regular Brinkley panel, Cokie Roberts, is, along with Will and Donaldson, a frequent and highly paid speaker before corporate audiences. She has made a point of not disclosing which interest groups she speaks to or how much money she is paid. She has criticized the Clinton Administration for its secretive handling of the controversy surrounding Hillary Clinton's lucrative cattle-future trades and of the Whitewater affair, yet like the other pundits, she refuses to acknowledge that secrecy about financial interests undermines journalism's credibility too.

Out of Touch With America

In the week leading up to a State of the Union address White House aides always leak word to reporters that this year the speech will be "different." No more laundry list of all the government's activities, no more boring survey of every potential trouble spot in the world. This time, for a change, the speech is going to be short, punchy, and thematic. When the actual speech occurs, it is never short, punchy, or thematic. It is long and detailed, like all its predecessors, because as the deadline nears, every part of the government scrambles desperately to have a mention of its activities crammed into the speech somewhere.

In the days before Bill Clinton's address a year ago aides said that no matter what had happened to all those other Presidents, this time the speech really would be short, punchy, and thematic. The President understood the situation, he recognized his altered role, and he saw this as an opportunity to set a new theme for his third and fourth years in office.

That evening the promises once again proved false. Bill Clinton gave a speech that was enormously long even by the standards of previous State of the Union addresses. The speech had three or four apparent endings, it had ad-libbed inserts, and it covered both the details of policy and the President's theories about what had gone wrong with America. An hour and twenty-one minutes after he took the podium, the President stepped down. 

Less than a minute later the mockery from commentators began. For instant analysis NBC went to Peggy Noonan, who had been a speechwriter for Presidents Ronald Reagan and George Bush. She grimaced and barely tried to conceal her disdain for such an ungainly, sprawling speech. Other commentators soon mentioned that congressmen had been slipping out of the Capitol building before the end of the speech, that Clinton had once more failed to stick to an agenda, that the speech probably would not give the President the new start he sought. The comments were virtually all about the tactics of the speech, and they were almost all thumbs down.

A day and a half later the first newspaper columns showed up. They were even more critical. On January 26 The Washington Post's op-ed page consisted mainly of stories about the speech, all of which were withering. "All Mush and No Message" was the headline on a column by Richard Cohen. "An Opportunity Missed" was the more statesmanlike judgment from David Broder. Cohen wrote: "Pardon me if I thought of an awful metaphor: Clinton at a buffet table, eating everything in sight."

What a big fat jerk that Clinton was! How little he understood the obligations of leadership! Yet the news section of the same day's Post had a long article based on discussions with a focus group of ordinary citizens in Chicago who had watched the President's speech. "For these voters, the State of the Union speech was an antidote to weeks of unrelenting criticism of Clinton's presidency," the article said.

"Tonight reminded us of what has been accomplished," said Maureen Prince, who works as the office manager in her husband's business and has raised five children. "We are so busy hearing the negatives all the time, from the time you wake up on your clock radio in the morning. . . ."

The group's immediate impressions mirrored the results of several polls conducted immediately after the president's speech.

ABC News found that eight out of 10 approved of the president's speech. CBS News said that 74 percent of those surveyed said they had a "clear idea" of what Clinton stands for, compared with just 41 percent before the speech. A Gallup Poll for USA Today and Cable News Network found that eight in 10 said Clinton is leading the country in the right direction.

Nielsen ratings reported in the same day's paper showed that the longer the speech went on, the larger the number of people who tuned in to watch.

The point is not that the pundits are necessarily wrong and the public necessarily right. The point is the gulf between the two groups' reactions. The very aspects of the speech that had seemed so ridiculous to the professional commentators—its detail, its inclusiveness, the hyperearnestness of Clinton's conclusion about the "common good"—seemed attractive and worthwhile to most viewers.

"I'm wondering what so much of the public heard that our highly trained expert analysts completely missed," Carol Cantor, a software consultant from California, wrote in a discussion on the WELL, a popular online forum, three days after the speech. What they heard was, in fact, the speech, which allowed them to draw their own conclusions rather than being forced to accept an expert "analysis" of how the President "handled" the speech. In most cases the analysis goes unchallenged, because the public has no chance to see whatever event the pundits are describing. In this instance viewers had exactly the same evidence about Clinton's performance that the "experts" did, and from it they drew radically different conclusions.

In 1992 political professionals had laughed at Ross Perot's "boring" and "complex" charts about the federal budget deficit—until it became obvious that viewers loved them. And for a week or two after this State of the Union speech there were little jokes on the weekend talk shows about how out of step the pundit reaction had been with opinion "out there." But after a polite chuckle the talk shifted to how the President and the speaker and Senator Dole were handling their jobs.

Term Limits

As soon as the Democrats were routed in the 1994 elections, commentators and TV analysts said it was obvious that the American people were tired of seeing the same old faces in Washington. The argument went that those who lived inside the Beltway had forgotten what it was like in the rest of the country. They didn't get it. They were out of touch. The only way to jerk the congressional system back to reality was to bring in new blood.

A few days after the new Congress was sworn in, CNN began running an updated series of promotional ads for its program Crossfire. (Previous ads had featured shots of locomotives colliding head-on and rams locking horns, to symbolize the meeting of minds on the show.) Everything has been shaken up in the capital, one of the ads began. New faces. New names. New people in charge of all the committees.

"In fact," the announcer said, in a tone meant to indicate whimsy, "only one committee hasn't changed. The welcoming committee."

The camera pulled back to reveal the three hosts of Crossfire—Pat Buchanan, John Sununu, and Michael Kinsley—standing with arms crossed on the steps of the Capitol building, blocking the path of the new arrivals trying to make their way in. "Watch your step," one of the hosts said.

Talk about not getting it! The people who put together this ad must have imagined that the popular irritation with inside-the-Beltway culture was confined to members of Congress—and didn't extend to members of the punditocracy, many of whom had held their positions much longer than the typical congressman had. The difference between the "welcoming committee" and the congressional committees headed by fallen Democratic titans like Tom Foley and Jack Brooks was that the congressmen can be booted out.

"Polls show that both Republicans and Democrats felt better about the Congress just after the 1994 elections," a Clinton Administration official said last year. "They had 'made the monkey jump'—they were able to discipline an institution they didn't like. They could register the fact that they were unhappy. There doesn't seem to be any way to do that with the press, except to stop watching and reading, which more and more people have done."

Lost Credibility

There is an astonishing gulf between the way journalists—especially the most prominent ones—think about their impact and the way the public does. In movies of the 1930s reporters were gritty characters who instinctively sided with the common man. In the 1970s Robert Redford and Dustin Hoffman, starring as Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein in All the President's Men, were better-paid but still gritty reporters unafraid to challenge big power. Even the local-TV-news crew featured on The Mary Tyler Moore Show had a certain down-to-earth pluck. Ted Knight, as the pea-brained news anchor Ted Baxter, was a ridiculously pompous figure but not an arrogant one.

Since the early 1980s the journalists who have shown up in movies have often been portrayed as more loathsome than the lawyers, politicians, and business moguls who are the traditional bad guys in films about the white-collar world. In Absence of Malice, made in 1981, an ambitious newspaper reporter (Sally Field) ruins the reputation of a businessman (Paul Newman) by rashly publishing articles accusing him of murder. In Broadcast News, released in 1987, the anchorman (William Hurt) is still an airhead, like Ted Baxter, but unlike Ted, he works in a business that is systematically hostile to anything except profit and bland good looks. The only sympathetic characters in the movie, an overeducated reporter (Albert Brooks) and a hyperactive and hyperidealistic producer (Holly Hunter), would have triumphed as heroes in a newspaper movie of the 1930s. In this one they are ground down by the philistines at their network.

In the Die Hard series, which started in 1988, a TV journalist (William Atherton) is an unctuous creep who will lie and push helpless people around in order to get on the air. In The Bonfire of the Vanities (1990) the tabloid writer Peter Fallow (Bruce Willis) is a disheveled British sot who will do anything for a free drink. In Rising Sun (1993) a newspaper reporter known as "Weasel" (Steve Buscemi) is an out-and-out criminal, accepting bribes to influence his coverage. As Antonia Zerbisias pointed out in the Toronto Star in 1993, movies and TV shows offer almost no illustrations of journalists who are not full of themselves, shallow, and indifferent to the harm they do. During Operation Desert Storm, Saturday Night Live ridiculed American reporters who asked military spokesmen questions like "Can you tell us exactly when and where you are going to launch your attack?" "The journalists were portrayed as ignorant, arrogant and pointlessly adversarial," Jay Rosen, of New York University, wrote about the episode. "By gently rebuffing their ludicrous questions, the Pentagon briefer [on SNL] came off as a model of sanity."

Even real-life members of the Washington pundit corps have made their way into movies—Eleanor Clift, Morton Kondracke, hosts from Crossfire—in 1990s releases such as Dave and Rising Sun. Significantly, their role in the narrative is as buffoons. The joke in these movies is how rapidly the pundits leap to conclusions, how predictable their reactions are, how automatically they polarize the debate without any clear idea of what has really occurred. That real-life journalists are willing to keep appearing in such movies, knowing how they will be cast, says something about the source of self-respect in today's media: celebrity, on whatever basis, matters more than being taken seriously.

Movies do not necessarily capture reality, but they suggest a public mood—in this case, a contrast between the apparent self-satisfaction of the media celebrities and the contempt in which they are held by the public. "The news media has a generally positive view of itself in the watchdog role," wrote the authors of an exhaustive survey of public attitudes and the attitudes of journalists themselves toward the press. (The survey was conducted by the Times Mirror Center for the People and the Press, and was released last May.)But "the outside world strongly faults the news media for its negativism. . . . The public goes so far as to say that the press gets in the way of society solving its problems. . . ." According to the survey, "two out of three members of the public had nothing or nothing good to say about the media."

The media establishment is beginning to get at least an inkling of this message. Through the past decade discussions among newspaper editors and publishers have been a litany of woes: fewer readers; lower "penetration" rates, as a decreasing share of the public pays attention to news; a more and more desperate search for ways to attract the public's interest. In the short run these challenges to credibility are a problem for journalists and journalism. In the longer run they are a problem for democracy.

Turning a Calling Into a Sideshow

Even if practiced perfectly, journalism will leave some resentment and bruised feelings in its wake. The justification that journalists can offer for the harm they inevitably inflict is to show, through their actions, their understanding that what they do matters and that it should be done with care.

This is why the most depressing aspect of the new talking-pundit industry may be the argument made by many practitioners:the whole thing is just a game, which no one should take too seriously. Michael Kinsley, a highly respected and indisputably talented policy journalist, has written that his paid speaking engagements are usually mock debates, in which he takes the liberal side.

Since the audiences are generally composed of affluent businessmen, my role is like that of the team that gets to lose to the Harlem Globetrotters. But Ido it because it pays well, because it's fun to fly around the country and stay in hotels, and because even a politically unsympathetic audience can provide a cheap ego boost.

Last year Morton Kondracke, of The McLaughlin Group, told Mark Jurkowitz, of The Boston Globe, "This is not writing, this is not thought." He was describing the talk-show activity to which he has devoted a major part of his time for fifteen years. "You should not take it a hundred percent seriously. Anybody who does is a fool." Fred Barnes wrote that he was happy to appear in a mock McLaughlin segment on Murphy Brown, because "the line between news and fun barely exists anymore."

The McLaughlin Group often takes its act on the road, gimmicks and all, for fees reported to be about $20,000 per appearance. Crossfire goes for paid jaunts on the road. So do panelists from The Capital Gang. Contracts for such appearances contain a routine clause specifying that the performance may not be taped or broadcast. This provision allows speakers to recycle their material, especially those who stitch together anecdotes about "the mood in Washington today." It also reassures the speakers that the sessions aren't really serious. They won't be held to account for what they say, so the normal standards don't apply.

Yet the fact that no one takes the shows seriously is precisely what's wrong with them, because they jeopardize the credibility of everything that journalists do. "I think one of the really destructive developments in Washington in the last fifteen years has been the rise in these reporter talk shows,"Tom Brokaw has said. "Reporters used to cover policy—not spend all of their time yelling at each other and making philistine judgments about what happened the week before. It's not enlightening. It makes me cringe."

When talk shows go on the road for performances in which hostility and disagreement are staged for entertainment value; when reporters pick up thousands of dollars appearing before interest groups and sharing tidbits of what they have heard; when all the participants then dash off for the next plane, caring about none of it except the money—when these things happen, they send a message. The message is: We don't respect what we're doing. Why should anyone else?

James Fallows

James Fallows is a national correspondent for The Atlantic and has written for the magazine since the late 1970s. He has reported extensively from outside the United States, and once worked as President Carter's chief speechwriter.
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What the President Knows (and When He Knew It)

Early this morning I quoted reader DM's argument that, despite appearances of President Obama being pushed around and treated like a doormat by more aggressive Republicans, his debt-and-deficit policy actually reflected a shrewd, progressive, long-term strategic view. Here are words of accord from reader DF:
>>You quote your reader who believes he knows what Obama is doing.  I agree with his assessment.  But perhaps more importantly, I think that Obama knows what he is doing.
 
I believe that, when we elect a President, we should be voting for someone who (1) shares one's general political philosophy and orientation and (2) has the intellectual ability, judgment, discipline and personality to make decisions which are as good as they can be under the circumstances.  In other words, we should elect someone who we believe has good judgment, not someone who we would like to share a beer with (GWB), whose personal history we like (John McCain) or whose stump speech touches the right bases (John Edwards).    It's a truism of national politics that the issues and problems the President has to deal with are largely going to be issues not debated during the election.
 
By this measure, I fully support Obama, even if I don't like some of his actions.  It may sound naïve and childish, but I trust him.   Despite some of the yahoo comments we read from right wingers on blog sites, he is obviously really, really smart--perhaps one of the smartest guys on the national political scene in years.  Based on all we read, he has put together a team which is capable and works well together; there appears to be relatively little of the infighting and drama that has afflicted prior administrations.  Decisions seem to be made in a thoughtful, analytic way, with an opportunity for all views to be heard.  While political considerations are inevitably taken into account, unlike the prior Administration, this Administration appears to make decisions based on policy and principle, rather than politics, as the primary concern.  (It doesn't hurt that Obama was fortunate in being able to draw upon a reserve of competent Democratic talented men and women who gained valuable experience during the Clinton Administration.)  The man obviously has a healthy ego (what successful politician doesn't), but it seems to be under control.
 
Let's also bear in mind that Obama has had to govern in the face of two unprecedented difficulties:  the worst recession since the Great Depression and a ferociously obstructive, hyper-partisan and hyper-ideological Republican Party.  Both of these have made governance nearly impossible and, since the Republicans regained a majority in the House, essentially impossible at the legislative level.<<
The last few sentences do highlight what is a long-term problem for the country -- the shift of a checks-and-balance system toward one of frequent dysfunctional paralysis -- and a huge near-term tactical challenge for the Obama Administration. By next year, we'll have a chance to judge whether the President's (apparent) negotiating strategy has "worked" in terms of arresting an economic downturn and thereby making his re-election possible. Within five or six years, we'll see whether it's had the progressive effect these two readers envision. As a reminder, here was the best-case forecast in the previous note:
>>If he succeeds in his big picture deficit plan, he'll go into 2012 having tamed the long term deficit.  He'll be in a position to lambast the Republicans and hopefully, gain more control of Congress, and, when he's reelected, he'll have a powerful mandate to pursue his more adventuresome and long-term beneficial programs. It'll take a few more years, but he's  a long-term strategic thinker, and I think he'll get us there. The Republicans look like a lot of power-addled men who are really out of touch with the electorate.

I'm now very optimistic; and, particularly if he succeeds, then with his 2nd term programs, perhaps the economy will recover to the extent that he can re-instate the things he cut before such time as the cuts actually take effect. Because, as we all know, with the long-term structural deficit fixed, if the economy were back to the size it was before 2007, we could have our cake and be eating it too.  You go, Barack. Sir.<<
Judge for yourself. I'm highlighting these messages because they're interesting and because the "Obama is a strategic 18-dimension chess-game genius" theme is not exactly conventional wisdom right now.

News of the World Collapse Causes Gaping Hole in David Cameron

There was always something lacking in David Cameron's judgement that I could not put my finger on, could you?



June 22, 2011 4:30 PM Climate change, Gore, and politics over substance

By Steve Benen

James Fallows had an interesting item this afternoon, noting the “Why Americans Hate the Media” thesis, and highlighting a case study that came into focus today.

Al Gore’s new essay in Rolling Stone, about impending climate disasters, is mainly about the failure of the media to direct adequate attention to the issue, and to call out paid propagandists and discredited phony scientists. That’s where the essay starts, and what it covers in its first 5,000 words. The second part, less than half as long, and much more hedged in its judgment, is about the Obama Administration’s faltering approach on climate change. But of course the immediate press presentation on the essays has been all “OMG Gore attacks Obama!” For instance at Slate, TPM, NY Mag, the AP, and the Atlantic’s own Wire site. […]

Yes, the news value here is Gore-v-Obama; yes, that’s part of the story. But the theme I tried to lay out in that essay is that the media’s all-consuming interest in the “how” and “who’s ahead” of politics, and “oh God this is boring” disdain for the “what” and “why” of public issues, has all sorts of ugly consequences. It makes the public think that politics is not for them unless they love the insider game; it makes the “what” and “why” of public issues indeed boring and unapproachable; and as a consequence of the latter, it makes the public stupider than it needs to be about the what and why.

After writing several thousand words on the crisis itself, Gore actually praised President Obama, lauding the fact that the White House “included significant climate-friendly initiatives in the economic stimulus package he presented to Congress during his first month in office. With the skillful leadership of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and committee chairmen Henry Waxman and Ed Markey, he helped secure passage of a cap-and-trade measure in the House a few months later. He implemented historic improvements in fuel-efficiency standards for automobiles, and instructed the Environmental Protection Agency to move forward on the regulation of global-warming pollution under the Clean Air Act. He appointed many excellent men and women to key positions, and they, in turn, have made hundreds of changes in environmental and energy policy that have helped move the country forward slightly on the climate issue. During his first six months, he clearly articulated the link between environmental security, economic security and national security — making the case that a national commitment to renewable energy could simultaneously reduce unemployment, dependence on foreign oil and vulnerability to the disruption of oil markets dominated by the Persian Gulf reserves. And more recently, as the issue of long-term debt has forced discussion of new revenue, he proposed the elimination of unnecessary and expensive subsidies for oil and gas.”

In the next paragraph, however, Gore wrote, “But in spite of these and other achievements, President Obama has thus far failed to use the bully pulpit to make the case for bold action on climate change.”

On CNN’s political page right now, well below a top-of-the-page piece about Bristol Palin’s memoir, CNN’s headline reads, “Gore: Obama has ‘failed.’”

As Fallows put it, “The reaction to Gore’s essay illustrates the pattern: from his point of view, it’s one more (earnest) attempt to say ‘Hey, listen up about this problem!’ As conveyed by the press, it’s one more skirmish on the ‘liberals don’t like Obama’ front, and one more illustration of the eyes-glazing-over trivia and details about melting icebergs and scientific disputes.”

Steve Benen is a contributing writer to the Washington Monthly, joining the publication in August, 2008 as chief blogger for the Washington Monthly blog, Political Animal.


Steve Benen, Political Animal

Blog

July 16, 2011 12:10 PM The ceiling and the damage done

As congressional Republicans inch ever closer to crashing the American economy on purpose, it’s tempting to start looking at the calendar and wondering when we’ll see the real-world effects. We’re all aware of the Aug. 2 deadline, but we’re also aware of the fact that some credit-rating agencies aren’t prepared to wait that long.

But even if we’re fortunate, and Congress somehow manages to prevent a calamity sometime very soon, this breathtakingly stupid game of chicken has already made an important statement. Felix Salmon had a piece the other day that continues to linger.

The base-case scenario is, still, that the debt ceiling will be raised, somehow. But already an enormous amount of damage has been done: the US Congress has demonstrated clearly that it can’t be trusted to govern the country in a responsible manner. And the tail-risk implications for markets are huge. Think of the speed with which the Egyptian government collapsed earlier this year, or the incredible downward velocity of News Corporation right now.

When you build up large stocks of mistrust and ill will, nothing can happen for a very long time. But when something does happen, it’s much quicker and much worse than anybody could have anticipated. The markets might not be punishing the US government at the moment. But the mistrust and ill will is there, believe me. And when it appears, it will appear with a vengeance.

I don’t know if Republican lawmakers are aware of any of this. Worse, I also don’t know if they care. But American leadership on the global stage rests on certain pillars that took generations to build and strengthen — credibility, reliability, stability, the integrity of our institutions, sound judgment. The Republican Party severely undermined these pillars in the Bush era, most notably in areas of foreign policy and the use of military force. The Republican Party is now severely undermining them again, this time in the area of global finances.

No one can say with any confidence what’s going to happen over the next 17 days, but we already know the world is watching. We also know the world sees the actions of congressional Republicans and suspects the sanity of the world’s greatest superpower is very much in doubt.

July 16, 2011 11:05 AM Methods and madness

While we understand all too well what Republican officials are thinking in the debt-ceiling fight, there’s been considerable discussion of late about President Obama’s approach. Most notably, many on the left have a very hard time grasping why in the world the president would agree to take money out of the economy, knowing this would make matters worse and imperil his re-election prospects.

Matt Yglesias had a smart piece on this the other day, which as I understand it, helps accurately capture the thinking of many administration officials.

It’s generally wise to assume that the White House isn’t blind to that obvious potential political problem. Part of what they’re thinking is that a 2011 agreement to long-term spending cuts is the best way to avoid the need to reduce spending during the election season. How’s that? Well, it’s because the fiscal consolidation plans being discussed are for trillions of dollars worth of cuts over a 10-year horizon. Since you’ve got that horizon, it’s not strictly necessary for any of them to come between September 2011 and November 2012. On the contrary, in principle spending could go up in the short-term consistent with any long-term cuts.

By contrast, what happens if the White House winds up getting a “clean” debt ceiling increase is that we then head into the September lapse in appropriations. It’ll be a replay of the “government shutdown” fight in which the GOP goal has to be short-term cuts. And the White House isn’t going to get away without giving something up in that fight. In other words, clean debt ceiling increase = guarantee of fiscal anti-stimulus, whereas a 10-year spending cut plan leaves open room to avoid that.

There’s obviously all kinds of room for debate about the wisdom of this approach, but it’s entirely coherent, not at all crazy, and hardly evidence of a Democratic White House that secretly supports a Republican economic agenda.

In January of last year there was a chance to see how well the lesson had sunk in. In the days just before and after Bill Clinton delivered his State of the Union address to the new Republican-controlled Congress, he answered questions in a wide variety of forums in order to explain his plans.

On January 31, a week after the speech, the President flew to Boston and took questions from a group of teenagers. Their questions concerned the effects of legislation or government programs on their communities or schools. These were the questions (paraphrased in some cases):

* "We need stronger laws to punish those people who are caught selling guns to our youth. Basically, what can you do about that?"

* "I notice that often it's the media that is responsible for the negative portrayal of young people in our society." What can political leaders do to persuade the media that there is good news about youth?

* Apprenticeship programs and other ways to provide job training have been valuable for students not going to college. Can the Administration promote more of these programs?

* Programs designed to keep teenagers away from drugs and gangs often emphasize sports and seem geared mainly to boys. How can such programs be made more attractive to teenage girls?

* What is it like at Oxford? (This was from a student who was completing a new alternative-school curriculum in the Boston public schools, and who had been accepted at Oxford.)

* "We need more police officers who are trained to deal with all the other different cultures in our cities." What can the government do about that?

* "In Boston, Northeastern University has created a model of scholarships and other supports to help inner-city kids get to and stay in college. . . . As President, can you urge colleges across the country to do what Northeastern has done?"

Earlier in the month the President's performance had been assessed by the three network-news anchors: Peter Jennings, of ABC; Dan Rather, of CBS; and Tom Brokaw, of NBC. There was no overlap whatsoever between the questions the students asked and those raised by the anchors. None of the questions from these news professionals concerned the impact of legislation or politics on people's lives. Nearly all concerned the struggle for individual advancement among candidates.

Peter Jennings, who met with Clinton as the Gingrich-Dole Congress was getting under way, asked whether Clinton had been eclipsed as a political leader by the Republicans. Dan Rather did interviews through January with prominent politicians—Senators Edward Kennedy, Phil Gramm, and Bob Dole—building up to a profile of Clinton two days after the State of the Union address. Every question he asked was about popularity or political tactics. He asked Phil Gramm to guess whether Newt Gingrich would enter the race (no) and whether Bill Clinton would be renominated by his party (yes). He asked Bob Dole what kind of mood the President seemed to be in, and whether Dole and Gingrich were, in effect, the new bosses of Washington. When Edward Kennedy began giving his views about the balanced-budget amendment, Rather steered him back on course: "Senator, you know I'd talk about these things the rest of the afternoon, but let's move quickly to politics. Do you expect Bill Clinton to be the Democratic nominee for re-election in 1996?"

The CBS Evening News profile of Clinton, which was narrated by Rather and was presented as part of the series Eye on America, contained no mention of Clinton's economic policy, his tax or budget plans, his failed attempt to pass a health-care proposal, his successful attempt to ratify NAFTA, his efforts to "reinvent government," or any substantive aspect of his proposals or plans in office. Its subject was exclusively Clinton's handling of his office—his "difficulty making decisions," his "waffling" at crucial moments. If Rather or his colleagues had any interest in the content of Clinton's speech as opposed to its political effect, neither the questions they asked nor the reports they aired revealed such a concern.

Tom Brokaw's questions were more substantive, but even he concentrated mainly on politics of the moment. How did the President feel about a poll showing that 61 percent of the public felt that he had no "strong convictions" and could be "easily swayed"? What did Bill Clinton think about Newt Gingrich? "Do you think he plays fair?" How did he like it that people kept shooting at the White House?

When ordinary citizens have a chance to pose questions to political leaders, they rarely ask about the game of politics. They want to know how the reality of politics will affect them—through taxes, programs, scholarship funds, wars. Journalists justify their intrusiveness and excesses by claiming that they are the public's representatives, asking the questions their fellow citizens would ask if they had the privilege of meeting with Presidents and senators. In fact they ask questions that only their fellow political professionals care about. And they often do so—as at the typical White House news conference—with a discourtesy and rancor that represent the public's views much less than they reflect the modern journalist's belief that being independent boils down to acting hostile.

Reductio Ad Electionem: The One Track Mind

The limited curiosity that elite reporters display in their questions is also evident in the stories they write once they have received answers. They are interested mainly in pure politics and can be coerced into examining the substance of an issue only as a last resort. The subtle but sure result is a stream of daily messages that the real meaning of public life is the struggle of Bob Dole against Newt Gingrich against Bill Clinton, rather than our collective efforts to solve collective problems.

The natural instinct of newspapers and TV is to present every public issue as if its "real" meaning were political in the meanest and narrowest sense of that term—the attempt by parties and candidates to gain an advantage over their rivals. Reporters do, of course, write stories about political life in the broader sense and about the substance of issues—the pluses and minuses of diplomatic recognition for Vietnam, the difficulties of holding down the Medicare budget, whether immigrants help or hurt the nation's economic base. But when there is a chance to use these issues as props or raw material for a story about political tactics, most reporters leap at it. It is more fun—and easier—to write about Bill Clinton's "positioning" on the Vietnam issue, or how Newt Gingrich is "handling" the need to cut Medicare, than it is to look into the issues themselves.


BBC.com  - CNN.com

http://www.reuters.com

Rupert Murdoch and Mr Wijat Go Head to Head

                         

Mr Wijat (left) v Rupert Murdoch (Right)
High Court of Justice Chancery Division Strand London

Rueters: Special Report:

Click here to read:

Inside Rebekah Brooks' News of the World


  •  


  • News Of The World  -World Internet  Alexa Traffic Rank: is  8,094
  • United Kingdom Flag News Of The World - Alexa Traffic Rank in Great Britain is  318
  • www.newsoftheworld.bz/MurdochsHackingScandalP1
  • BBC Stop Press: News Of The World that the Murdochs said was closing because of the Murdoch Phone Hacking and Police Bribery Scandal
  •  allegations is now being relaunched by Rupert's arch media enemy Mr Wijat
  • through Mr Wijats INL News Group 
  • (International News Limited Group) under
  •  INL News Group owned
  •  www.NewsOfTheWorld.bz  and  www.NOTW.bz
  •  

Mr Wijat

Click here to find the full run 
down on the phone Murdoch-News Corp.-News International-Phone Hacking Police Bribery Scandal and what the real reason not disclosed to the public as to why Rupert and James Murdoch News International and News Corp. had to close the News of the World

7 July 2011

This Sunday's edition of the News of the World will be its last, News International chairman James Murdoch has said, after days of increasingly damaging allegations against the paper.

The 168-year-old tabloid is accused of hacking into the mobile phones of crime victims, celebrities and politicians.

On Thursday, the Met Police said it was seeking to contact 4,000 possible targets named in seized documents.

Its editor Colin Myler said it was "the saddest day of my professional career".

He added that "nothing should diminish everything this great newspaper has achieved".

The News of the World, which sells about 2.8million copies a week, is famed for its celebrity scoops and sex scandals, earning it the nickname, the News of the Screws.

Downing Street has said it had no role or involvement in the decision to close.

Mr Murdoch said no advertisements would run in this weekend's paper - instead any advertising space would be donated to charities and good causes, and proceeds from sales would also go to good causes.

News International has refused to comment on rumours that the Sun could now become a seven-day-a-week operation.

"What happens to the Sun is a matter for the future," a spokeswoman for News International said. The Sun, another News International tabloid, is currently published from Monday to Saturday.

The spokeswoman also refused to say whether the 200 or so employees at the paper would be made redundant, saying: "They will be invited to apply for other jobs in the company."

The News of the World's political editor, David Wooding, who joined 18 months ago, said it was a fantastic paper.

"They cleared out all the bad people. They bought in a great new editor, Colin Myler, and his deputy, Victoria Newton, who had not been sullied by any of the things that had gone on in the past.

"And there's nobody there, there's hardly anybody there who was there in the old regime."

The Guardian says that Andy Coulson, formerly David Cameron's director of communications, will be arrested on Friday morning over suspicions that he knew about, or had direct involvement in, the hacking of mobile phones during his time as editor of the News of the World.

The Guardian also says that a former senior journalist at the paper will also be arrested in the next few days.

There have been repeated calls for Rebekah Brooks - the former editor, now News International's chief executive - to resign. But in an interview Mr Murdoch stood by her again, saying he was satisfied with her conduct.

'Serious regret'

In a statement made to staff, Mr Murdoch said the good things the News of the World did "have been sullied by behaviour that was wrong - indeed, if recent allegations are true, it was inhuman and has no place in our company".

"The News of the World is in the business of holding others to account. But it failed when it came to itself."

He went on: "In 2006, the police focused their investigations on two men. Both went to jail. But the News of the World and News International failed to get to the bottom of repeated wrongdoing that occurred without conscience or legitimate purpose.

"Wrongdoers turned a good newsroom bad and this was not fully understood or adequately pursued.

"As a result, the News of the World and News International wrongly maintained that these issues were confined to one reporter.

"We now have voluntarily given evidence to the police that I believe will prove that this was untrue and those who acted wrongly will have to face the consequences. This was not the only fault.

"The paper made statements to Parliament without being in the full possession of the facts. This was wrong.

"The company paid out-of-court settlements approved by me. I now know that I did not have a complete picture when I did so. This was wrong and is a matter of serious regret."

He said: "So, just as I acknowledge we have made mistakes, I hope you and everyone inside and outside the company will acknowledge that we are doing our utmost to fix them, atone for them, and make sure they never happen again.

"Having consulted senior colleagues, I have decided that we must take further decisive action with respect to the paper. This Sunday will be the last issue of the News of the World."

He reiterated that the company was fully co-operating with the two ongoing police investigations.

He added: "While we may never be able to make up for distress that has been caused, the right thing to do is for every penny of the circulation revenue we receive this weekend to go to organisations that improve life in Britain and are devoted to treating others with dignity."

The BBC's political editor, Nick Robinson, said that Rupert Murdoch has sacrificed the News of the World - or, at least, its title - instead of the chief executive of News International, Rebekah Brooks.

"Team Murdoch must have realised that it would be referred to again and again over the next few months in connection with the alleged phone-hacking of a murdered girl, grieving parents and war widows," he said.

"The question now is whether this will make the government's dilemma about the takeover of BSkyB easier or harder."

Mark Pritchard, secretary of the influential Conservative backbench 1922 committee and vice-chairman of the parliamentary media group, has told the BBC he wants the government to delay a decision on the BskyB takeover.

"The government should take the political and moral lead - and announce a delay to the BSkyB decision until all outstanding legal impediments have been removed," he said.

Labour MP Tom Watson told Sky News it was "a victory for decent people up and down the land, and I say good riddance to the News of the World".

But Justice Secretary Ken Clarke said: "All they're going to do is rebrand it."

And former deputy prime minister Lord Prescott, who alleged his phone was hacked, thought the decision was simply a gimmick.

In April, the News of the World admitted intercepting the voicemail messages of prominent people to find stories.

It came after years of rumours that the practice was widespread and amid intense pressure from those who believed they had been victims.

Royal editor Clive Goodman and private investigator Glenn Mulcaire were jailed for hacking in January 2007 after it was found they targeted Prince William's aides.

Detectives recovered files from Mulcaire's home which referred to a long list of public figures and celebrities.

The scandal widened this week when it emerged that a phone belonging to the murdered schoolgirl Milly Dowler had also been hacked into, and some messages deleted.

Leading brands, including Sainsbury's, Ford and O2, pulled their newspaper advertising and shares in BSkyB fell on fears that the scandal could hinder parent company News Corp's bid for the broadcaster.

On Wednesday, the government promised an inquiry in the hacking allegations, but the nature of it is undecided.





Rupert Murdoch says no free news.
Click here to find out why?

http://www.inlnews.com/MurdochSaysNoFreeNews.html

Click here to find out why Rupert Murdoch wants to sue the BBC for losses


http://www.inlnews.com/MurdochToSueBBCForLosses.html

Murdoch Papers Open Fire on the BBC


http://www.inlnews.com/MurdochPapersOpenFireBBC.html

Murdoch Buying UK Election
http://www.inlnews.com/MurdochBuyingUKElection_5QL.html

ABC Slams Murdoch's Attack on the BBC


http://www.inlnews.com/MurdochBuyingUKElection_5QL.html

The World's Most Powerful Men
http://www.inlnews.com/WorldsMostPowerfulPeople.html


JAMES MURDOCH MAY FACE JAIL 
FOR NEWS OF THE WORLD HACKING SCANDAL


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NEWS-OF-THE WORLD.COM: Russell Brand kept uttering 
“Hare Krishna” in public

Although people are deeply stuck in sinful life the maha-mantra is gradually getting popular.


.....Brand also tried to explain why he kept uttering “Hare Krishna” 
in public at the height of the storm last November. 
“It spreads positivity,” he said. “People were saying, 
‘You can’t say anything now, Russell.’ So I just thought 
I’d say something positive and difficult to analyse.” 



source: http://www.newsoftheworld.co.uk/show...s-a-month.html 

NEWS-OF-THE WORLD.COM: Russell Brand kept uttering

 “Hare Krishna” in public




Tom Cruise blames bag lady

James Murdoch Ushers in www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Kel snogging Brad
Gordon Ramsey breaking bread with complete stranger, sources say


Breaking News of the World


Good weather alleged in
Newgate--www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Beck in bitter feud with denizen of council house
Wills caught in the act with pol, royals believe


Rupert Murdoch Recognizes fearsome power of www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Harry trysting with Heidi Klum
Victoria Beckham says BreakingNewsOfTheWorld.com is favorite website, according to Scouse, reveals childhood trauma key to recent mishbehavior

Invisiguy LOVES www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Aging wunderkind attacked bad egg
Beyonce privately hates flying, according to Natalie Portman

James Murdoch Ushers in www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Harry Potter star fuming over Spice Girl
Fading United goalie left kids in Ibiza dive while clubbing with babe magnet


James Murdoch Ushers in www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Aging wunderkind chuffed about flower shop owner
Beckham pair mulling lavish nuptials with pizza deliverman

Rupert Murdoch Recognizes fearsome power of www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Beck snogging small animal
Rosie breaking bread with Madge



Invisiguy LOVES www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Paris had epic bender with babe magnet
Ronnie Wood admonished mum to avoid erstwhile BFF, seen in dive with Amy Winehouse after supposed 'rehab'

Good weather alleged in Newgate--www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Rumer Willis fuming over Kate
George Clooney seen holding hands with Rosie

Rupert Murdoch Recognizes fearsome power of www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Apprentice Loser never even met bag lady
Russell Brand said 'only my mother-in-law' was worse than Rumer Willis




















Victoria Beckham blames Wills

Glee Star seen hoovering up white powder with ex-stripper and friend's mum, discredited Murdoch employee

Good weather alleged in Newgate--www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Liverpool's Pepe Reina still can't stand Jeremy Clarkson
Wills broke off negotiations with bag lady



Rupert Murdoch Recognizes fearsome power of www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Fergie blames Liverpool lothario Xabi Alonso
Robert Pattinson over the moon about sex book author

Rupert Murdoch Recognizes fearsome power of www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Aging wunderkind never even met denizen of council house
Stella McCartney slams Tory MP, agrees with Simon




















Robert Pattinson fuming over ex-landlord

Jessica Simpson leaves Surrey mansion in a huff 'escort', may come out of closet in big interview next week

Good weather alleged in Newgate--www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Spice Girl suppered with bad egg
Jessica Simpson 'actually kicked the dog' when scandal was revealed, says babe magnet

Rupert Murdoch Recognizes fearsome power of www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Beyonce never even met erstwhile BFF
Madge leaves Surrey mansion in a huff wedding guest, despite cancer scare

 


James Murdoch Ushers in www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Penelope Cruz never even met denizen of council house
Prince's new girlfriend still can't stand Fading United goalie

Penelope Cruz never even met denizen of council house
Prince's new girlfriend still can't stand Fading United goalie

Invisiguy LOVES www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Peaches in bitter feud with Penelope Cruz
Katie Perry claims alchol 'not a factor' in Chelsea car crash with bad egg

Good weather alleged
in Newgate--www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Kate chuffed about Paris
Bardem breaking bread with erstwhile BFF



James Murdoch Ushers in
www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Pussycat Doll never even met ex-landlord
Wills never even met hooker

Rupert Murdoch Recognizes fearsome power of www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Fergie suppered with Beyonce
Liverpool lothario Xabi Alonso in bitter feud with unnamed celeb, announces spokesman

Rupert Murdoch Recognizes fearsome power of www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Penelope Cruz chuffed about Kate
Bardem had to be helped into waiting car after all-nighter with flower shop owner 

Invisiguy LOVES www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Liverpool's Pepe Reina blames unnamed celeb
Ronnie Wood over the moon about Rosie

Good weather alleged in Newgate--www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Harry blames Liverpool's Pepe Reina
Jeremy Clarkson fuming over Tom Cruise



Kerry in bitter feud with Glee Star
Katie Perry admonished mum to avoid Heidi Klum

Invisiguy LOVES www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Beckham pair still can't stand Paris
Harry Potter star in drunken brawl with Jeremy Clarkson



James Murdoch Ushers in www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Kel snogging Brad
Gordon Ramsey breaking bread with complete stranger, sources say

Rupert Murdoch Recognizes fearsome power of www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Kerry still can't stand wedding guest
Pussycat Doll reveals painful secrets about ex-landlord, scuppers yacht trip

Rupert Murdoch Recognizes fearsome power of
www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Fergie attacked Kel
Glee Star broke off negotiations with one of the Murdochs

Invisiguy LOVES www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Fergie snogging ex-landlord
Harry bungled 90s relationship with denizen of council house

eSnipe Horns In on www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Bikini beauties in the other picture learn eBay rocket science
Underground eBay auction sniper rankles merchants, built by same team of robots that tirelessly labor 'Breaking' site;eBay snipe technology rocks their worlds

Good weather alleged in Newgate--www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Harry still can't stand Russell Brand
Natalie Portman privately hates flying, according to Manchester United goalkeeper David De Gea

James Murdoch Ushers in www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Beck had epic bender with pizza deliverman
Emma Watson caught in the act with Spice Girl

Rupert Murdoch Recognizes fearsome
power of www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Jeremy Clarkson in rehab, blames hooker
Rumer Willis says BreakingNewsOfTheWorld.com is favorite website, according to JK Rowling

Invisiguy LOVES www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Kel fuming over one of the Murdochs
Fading United goalie quietly spirited to clinic after wild night with bag lady

eSnipe Horns In on www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Bikini beauties in the other picture learn eBay rocket science
Underground eBay auction sniper rankles merchants, built by same team of robots that tirelessly labor 'Breaking' site;eBay snipe technology rocks their worlds


Good weather alleged in Newgate--www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Benicio in bitter feud with Fergie
Paris slipped out of recent screening with Mos Def, but linked with sex book author, according to ex
 
James Murdoch Ushers in www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
JK Rowling trysting with Kerry
Liverpool's Pepe Reina said to be 'incoherent' at recent awards show while presenting with unnamed celeb, not racist, polls say

Rupert Murdoch Recognizes fearsome power of www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Beckham pair had epic bender with erstwhile BFF
Madge admits to on-again, off-again relationship with Russell Brand

Rupert Murdoch Recognizes fearsome power of www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
George Clooney chuffed about pol
Brangelina blames bad egg, family wowed

Stella McCartney fuming over Ronnie Wood
Ronnie Wood in drunken brawl with flower shop owner, police officer points out
 
Good weather alleged in Newgate--www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Kel in bitter feud with Bardem
Survivor star snogging Johnny Depp

Invisiguy LOVES www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Jessica Simpson never even met babe magnet
Paris bungled 90s relationship with 'escort'

James Murdoch Ushers in www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Prince's new girlfriend never even met Liverpool lothario Xabi Alonso
Natalie Portman slipped out of recent screening with Mos Def, but linked with Ronnie Wood

Rupert Murdoch Recognizes fearsome power of www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Liverpool lothario Xabi Alonso had epic bender with Survivor star
Pussycat Doll left kids in Ibiza dive while clubbing with Beckham pair

Rupert Murdoch Recognizes fearsome power of www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Fergie still can't stand hooker
Rumer Willis slams Tory MP, agrees with unnamed celeb

Invisiguy LOVES www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Angelina trysting with Penelope Cruz
Brad suppered with cabby, blames money woes on former drug habit

eSnipe Horns In on www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Bikini beauties in the other picture learn eBay rocket science
Underground eBay auction sniper rankles merchants, built by same team of robots that tirelessly labor 'Breaking' site;eBay snipe technology rocks their worlds

Good weather alleged in Newgate--www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Emma Watson never even met hooker
Fergie said 'only my mother-in-law' was worse than babe magnet

James Murdoch Ushers in www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Rumer Willis blames Rumer Willis
Rosie said to 'obessed with' Prince's new girlfriend

Rupert Murdoch Recognizes fearsome power of
www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Survivor star suppered with erstwhile BFF
Aging wunderkind had to be helped into waiting car after all-nighter with Stella McCartney

Rupert Murdoch Recognizes fearsome power of www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Tom Cruise in rehab, blames Prince's new girlfriend
Kate seen hoovering up white powder with ex-stripper and babe magnet

Invisiguy LOVES www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Kate suppered with small animal
Brad blows air kisses at pizza deliverman

Good weather alleged in Newgate--www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Aging wunderkind in rehab, blames unnamed celeb
Brad totally knackered after night with Heidi Klum

 James Murdoch Ushers in www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Ronnie Wood fuming over Rumer Willis
Penelope Cruz couldn't stay faithful to ex-landlord, blames money woes on former drug habit

Rupert Murdoch Recognizes fearsome power of
www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Jeremy Clarkson fuming over Glee Star
Benicio seemed tipsy at bat mitzvah of friend's daughter, reports hooker

Rupert Murdoch Recognizes fearsome power of www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Heidi Klum attacked Kate
Apprentice Loser reveals 'stinky foot' problem with cabb

Good weather alleged in Newgate--www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Madge still can't stand George Clooney
Natalie Portman defends against rape charges by Prince's new girlfriend

Invisiguy LOVES www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Rumer Willis in rehab, blames Simon
Emma Watson seemed tipsy at bat mitzvah of friend's daughter, reports cabby, police officer points out

James Murdoch Ushers in www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Glee Star still can't stand unnamed celeb
Victoria Beckham enjoyed one too many pints with sad sack

Rupert Murdoch Recognizes fearsome power of www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Brangelina blames unnamed celeb
Wills left kids in Ibiza dive while clubbing with 'escort'

Rupert Murdoch Recognizes fearsome power of www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Ex-Big Brother Star fuming over Jessica Simpson
Natalie Portman fuming over Pussycat Doll

Good weather alleged in Newgate--www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Beyonce had epic bender with Paris
Rumer Willis leaves Surrey mansion in a huff bad egg, not racist, polls say

 Invisiguy LOVES www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Brangelina had epic bender with unnamed celeb
George Clooney reveals 'stinky foot' problem with one of the Murdochs, no longer wears wedding ring

James Murdoch Ushers in www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Aging wunderkind snogging Paris
Manchester United goalkeeper David De Gea can't stop thinking about Madge


Rupert Murdoch Recognizes fearsome
power of www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Harry chuffed about bag lady
Liverpool's Pepe Reina sported horrendous new haircut, unfazed by flashbulbs pointed at ex-landlord

Invisiguy LOVES www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Beckham pair still can't stand Paris
Harry Potter star in drunken brawl with Jeremy Clarkson

Good weather alleged in Newgate--www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Kerry in bitter feud with Glee Star
Katie Perry admonished mum to avoid Heidi Klum



     Outside High Court of        
        JusticeLondon 
      Julian Assange Extradition Appeal
 
                     12th July 2011











                                                             CIA Agent Marko watching all the proectors all day

  Marko, a self confessed CIA agent
   admitted to News of the World  
   reporter that the CIA were  funding the  extradition hearings of
Julian Assange for the Swedish Government
        Marko said 'I do not personally
         like what the CIA are doing...'      
              but says, 

          "...I am just doing my job...."


  News of the World           
   Read the full story of News of the World and  why it closed.. at

http://awn.bz/NewsofTheWorld_ClosedP1.html

The oldest Newspaper in the world Establish 1843...
 to be continued under new ownership ....     with the original staff..   why should the staff, the     News of the World readers and general public be punished for the owners wrong doings?

http://awn.bz/NewsofTheWorld_ClosedP1.html
Click here to find our why The Management of Edinburgh Fringe Festival and the Fringe Shows Have Talent Team are offering a 'Breath of Life' to the now closed News of the World and what was the real reason why the Murdochs closed down News of the World on a few days notice to the the creditors, debtors, staff and the readers of News of the World, and general public..
The Management of Edinburgh Fringe Festival and the Fringe Shows Have Talent Team  are hoping to re-employ all the original straff, except those that are in jail, to help them run  News of the World to make sure it lasts another over 150 years...

http://awn.bz/NewsofTheWorld_ClosedP1.html
 




                     Goodbye and hello again
         from News Of The World

                                  undefinedHi!! I'm Mr Wijat! 
                 
Welcome back to Mr Wijat's   
                         News Of The World
              
                                www.NOTW.bz
                                www.NewsOfTheWorld.bz
 
              Stay tuned for the adventures of
          Mr Wijat
WIJAT and his WIJAT Team
     fighting for Just Truth and Justice and  the British Way
 




 Mr Wijat's INL News Limited UK not in any way connected to Rupert Murdoch's News Corp., has given   'a Breath of Life' to
                                        News of theWorld, with their new websites 
              
 www.NOTW.bz and www.NewsOfTheW.bz  
                so to the 168 year old newspaer will not live on. Mr Wijat is keen to buy all of Rupert Murdoch's newspapers in Britain now Mr Wijat's arch enemy in the media world, 'Rupert the Bear' ,is finally keen to leave Britain and sell and his Britsh Newspapers, with headlines in  British Newspapers like
'Brown's sick babies targeted by hackers'
by John Higginson -London MetroTuesday 12th July 2011
who says:
" Journalists working for Rupert Murdoch's newspapers 'blagged' detaild of Gordon Brown's sich children, it was alleged yesterday. They obtained details from the medical files of Mr Brown's four month-old son, Fraser, showing he eas sufefreing from cystic fibrosis. They also attemoted to access the former prime minister's voice mail, his legal file and hisbank account, the latest reports show. The claims, involving, The Sun and the SundayTimes, suggested for the first time thatthe hacking scandal was spreading beyond the now-closed News Of The World. It also cast further serious doubt over Mr Murdoch's bid to obtan full control of BSkyB; yesterday the move was referred by ministrs to competition wtachdogs. Last night, Mr Brown ans h wife, Sarah, spoke of their sadness and shock at the 'level of criminality' used to prociure some of their children's most intimate details... The scandal, which erupted last week when it emerged that the News of the World had hacked the phone of murdered schollgirl Milly Dowler, took another dark twist with the latest allefations publish by the Guardian. In 2006, Sun editor Rebekah Brooks contacted the Browns to ell them they had detaild formRaser's mefical files, the paper claimed. Five years earluer, sensitive information about the couple's first child, Jennifer, who died at ten days old, also found its way to newspapers.  The Sunday Times was also linked to an actor impersonating Mr Brown trying to get access to his Abbey National account and legal file. The claims were even more devistating to Mrs Brown who considered Mrs Brooks a friend and even organised her 40th birthday party in 2008. She said yesterday: 'So sad to learn about all I have about my family's provacy. It is really sad if true,' It is being cliamed that a royal protection officer was paid to provide the News of the World with information and phone numbers of memebrs of the royal family."
' Westminster goes to
 war on Murdoch..'
by Higginson, political editor of the
London Metr0 Wednesday 13th July 2011..who says:
" RUPERT MURDUCH'S 40 year grip on Britains's political system looks certian to be broken today when MP's of all parties join forces to halt the expnansion of his empire.
The media barrob will feel the backlash from the phon ehacking scandal when Conservative, Liberal Democrat and Labour MP's vot against him gaining control of BSkyB.
Their vote on a Commons motion may carry little legal weight but will send out a clear signal that his days as political kingmaker are numbered.
Labour leader Ed Milband, who put forward the motion said: 'There are times when thehouse of Commons has got to rise to the occasion and speak for the public.'
David Cameron's spokesman said 'the 80-year-old tytoon, whoe papers claimed the power to sway elections, should 'heed the will of parliament.'
The vote comes in a deeply damaging week for Mr Murdoch, beginning with the revelation that his News Of The World hacked the phone of murdered schoolgirl Milly Dowler.
On Monday, it emerged News International national titles targeted the medical records pf Gordon Brown's children...Amid the crisis, Mr Murdoch managed to halt the slide in News Corp's share price but mounted he would sell all his Britsh newspaper titles...."

                                            

                  If you have any issues, worries and/or problems
                          please email Mr Wijat and Mr Wijat's
            Weekend News Investigative Journalistic Action Team  .... 
                                        
WIJAT 
                                                at
                                  MrWijat@NOTW.bz 
                         with a copy to
MrWijat@gmail.com





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News of the World to shut down! This Sunday will be the last
 issue of the paper … and all revenue from the weekend to be donated 2 charity




World Socialist Website


News of the World phone hacking scandal escalates

By Paul Bond 
7 July 2011

The disclosure that an investigator working for 

the News of the World may have hacked the mobile phone of murdered 

schoolgirl Milly Dowler has intensified the political crisis surrounding

 the hacking scandal.

The police knew the phone was being hacked, but did not investigate. 

The police have also admitted that some officers received payment from 

journalists for information. An emergency debate was held in the House

 of Commons yesterday, and Prime Minister David Cameron has been

 forced to call a public inquiry into the phone hacking.

Dowler’s voicemail was hacked sometime after her disappearance 

in March 2002. An investigator from the NoW is alleged to have

 hacked messages from anxious relatives, deleting some to make

 space in the mailbox. Dowler was already dead by this time, 

and this encouraged the family’s hopes that she would be found alive.

The list of alleged targets of the NoW’s phone hacking has now widened

 considerably. Alongside politicians, it includes some families of 

those killed in the London bombings on July 7, 2005, and the family 

of Madeleine McCann, who disappeared in 2007.

Three months ago News International offered a limited admission

 of liability for hacking during the period 2003-2006, but these latest

 revelations considerably widen that time frame.

Other targets reportedly included the families of Holly Wells and

 Jessica Chapman, two schoolgirls murdered in Soham in 2002, and

 a phone connected to schoolgirl Danielle Jones, who was murdered in 2001. 

Colin Stagg has also been advised that he was a target of hacking in 2000. 

Stagg was acquitted of the 1992 murder of Rachel Nickell in 1994, and 

awarded £700,000 compensation for wrongful arrest.

For all the expressions of outrage by politicians in all the major parties, 

and claims of the media being out of control, these developments have 

laid bare the real relations between Rupert Murdoch’s News Corporation, 

its British subsidiary News International, the police and the political class.

 The picture painted is of politicians dependent on the support of Murdoch’s

 empire and other vast media corporations, while these corporations 

operate with a certain legal impunity thanks to their intimate relation

with government and the police.

For the Labour Party, Ed Miliband has called for News International’s chief

 executive Rebekah Brooks (née Wade), formerly editor of the NoW and sister

 paper, The Sun, to “reconsider her position”. Yet Labour prided itself on 

having secured the support of the Murdoch press, including The Sun

theNoW and The Times, in order to win office in 1997. 

Former Prime Minister Tony Blair did nothing significant without 

first consulting with Murdoch’s people, and he and wife Cherie 

attended many social gatherings alongside Brooks/Wade.

Cameron has called the practices allegedly carried out by 

the NoW“absolutely disgusting”, but Brooks’s successor at the NoW 

from 2003 to 2007, Andy Coulson, was appointed by Cameron as 

his communications director, despite having been forced to resign at 

the NoW due to earlier revelations of phone hacking.

The government is even now considering a bid by News Corporation for

 a majority takeover of BSkyB. As he announced a public inquiry into

 the hacking scandal, Cameron told parliament that the BSKyB takeover 

will go ahead regardless. Asked if the News Corporation should pull its bid,

 a Downing Street spokeswoman said, “That’s a matter for Rupert Murdoch”.

Metropolitan Police Commissioner Sir Paul Stephenson yesterday 

acknowledged, on the basis of information received three weeks ago

 from News International, that “a small number of MPS officers” 

had allegedly received “inappropriate payments”. Brooks had admitted 

this to MPs in 2003. News International subsequently issued a denial, 

and Brooks claimed she was speaking generally, not about her own paper.

The phone hacking scandal initially centred on intrusion into the 

private lives of celebrities. The practice first came to light in 2006 with 

stories about members of the royal family. The following year the NoW’s 

royal editor, Clive Goodman, and a private investigator, Glenn Mulcaire, 

were jailed for illegally accessing Royal mobile phone messages. 

Mulcaire is now accused of hacking Milly Dowler’s phone. 

The director of Public Prosecutions at the time of the convictions, 

Ken MacDonald QC, has been taken on as part of 

News International’s legal team.

Coulson resigned, but denied any wider phone hacking had taken place. 

In subsequent court evidence, Mulcaire said he had been asked to hack 

voicemails by Ian Edmondson, the NoW’s assistant editor (news)

 under Coulson. Coulson resigned as Cameron’s aide on January 21 this year.

 The prime minister defended Coulson to the hilt, saying he had been

 “punished twice for the same offence”.

Although Mulcaire had details of 91 phone PIN codes and nearly 3,000 

phone numbers at his home, the Metropolitan Police in 2007 somehow 

managed to identify only “8 to 12” possible victims. Andy Hayman, 

who led that inquiry, later resigned from the police to write a column 

for the Times, another News International title.

When the Guardian, from 2009, published extensive further details of

 the hacking, the Metropolitan Police concluded that this constituted

 no new evidence for investigation. An investigation by the

 Press Complaints Commission (PCC) accepted the line put forward by 

News International. Lady Buscombe, chair of the PCC, has now said

 she thinks the NoW was “lying” then.

Evidence continued to mount, directly implicating senior figures

 within News International. The Metropolitan Police confronted a rising

 wave of civil litigation by celebrities over matters they had refused to

 investigate in 2006. They also faced a judicial review of that earlier in

vestigation. In response, they launched Operation Weeting in January

 this year. Five journalists have been arrested since April.

News International offered a limited admission of liability for the period

 2004-2006, and certain out-of-court settlements with celebrity victims 

as a means of drawing the sting of the allegations. In part this was to 

shield Brooks, NoWeditor between 2000 and 2003. Labour MP Chris Bryant,

 who was responsible for forcing the emergency debate, spoke of pressure

 from News International not to investigate Brooks or use parliamentary

 privilege to raise these matters.

Paul McMullan, a former NoW journalist, told the BBC that phones were 

hacked while Brooks was editor. Asked if she knew about this,

 McMullan said, “Of course”. Channel 4 News this week reported that 

Brooks was approached by police in 2002 over Mulcaire’s targeting of

the senior detective investigating the murder of Daniel Morgan. 

 

News International was unable to confirm or deny this. Referring to

 this meeting, Tom Watson MP told Parliament, “News International 

were paying people to interfere with police officers and were doing so on

 behalf of known criminals”.

The chief suspect for Morgan’s murder was Jonathan Rees, a private

 investigator who worked for the NoW from 1993 to 2000, when he was

 convicted of perverting the course of justice. The collapse this year of his

 trial for Morgan’s murder revealed widespread police corruption. 

According to a police report, Rees was for many years “involved in the

 long-term penetration of police intelligence sources”. He was re-employed 

at the NoW by Coulson in 2005, and his record was made known to Cameron

 before Coulson joined Number 10.

In the event, most of the coalition front bench abstained from the vote 

on the emergency debate.

The Labour Party, it must be noted, relied on Murdoch’s influence even 

while Murdoch-owned corporations were apparently hacking the phones 

of cabinet ministers. David Blunkett suspects phone hacking informed

 publication of details of his private life. He pursued no legal action, 

but began writing a column in Murdoch’s Sun newspaper.

On April 10 the Guardian reported that Sir Gus O’Donnell, the cabinet

 secretary, had blocked an attempt by then Prime Minister Gordon Brown 

to hold a judicial inquiry into allegations of hacking by the NoW, with 

targets including himself and Peter Mandelson. “O’Donnell told Brown, 

who lost the support of the News of the World and its sister paper, 

the Sun, in the autumn of 2009, that it would be inappropriate to hold

 a judicial inquiry so soon before the election”, the newspaper stated.

News International is still pushing the line that Mulcaire was a lone 

figure working as a “rogue operator”. At the same time, the company has

 provided the police with emails alleged to show that Coulson, while editor 

of the NoW, condoned payments to police officers. The Guardian report that 

News International is likely to claim Brooks was on holiday during the

 periods when Milly Dowler’s phone and those belonging to the 

Soham families were hacked. Coulson, her deputy at the time, would thus

 be responsible in those cases.

News International is attempting to limit the commercial impact of these 

revelations, with the NoW losing advertising from high-profile clients 

such as Ford Motors, and News Corporation’s share prices falling. 

The attack on Coulson remains a high-risk defence, however. 

One journalist tweeted that “dumping on Coulson” was “Not wise. 



He knows where the bodies are buried”.



Website: Title
The News of the World
Keywords:
-= Keyword Not Found =-
Description:
-= Description Not Found =-
Worth:
£71,729
Daily Pageview:
14,493
Daily Earning:
£2



UK media groups rush to fill News of the World Void


UK Media groups rush to fill News of the Word Void 

LONDON | Fri Jul 15, 2011 9:11am EDT

(Reuters) - Britain's media groups are rushing to fill the 

void created by the closure of the best-selling 

News of the World, the News International Sunday

 tabloid that shut last week following allegations of 

phone hacking.


Associated Newspapers, the national titles division of the

 Daily Mail & General Trust, is doing an internal dummy run on a

 mass-market Sunday tabloid this weekend and will launch next 

weekend if it is a success, a source close to the situation told Reuters.

The Daily Mail group declined to comment.

Names under consideration for the new title are The Sunday and

 The Sunday Lite, the source said, adding that ex-Sun editor 

Kelvin MacKenzie had been mooted as a columnist.

"This should be seen as a bold, opportunistic response to the demise 

of the News of the World," said Panmure Gordon analyst Alex DeGroote 

said on Friday.

The Daily Mail already has printing and distribution covered, so launch

 costs would likely be modest, he said.

The Internet domain name thesunday.co.uk was registered on July 7 by

 a party called Colin Wilson Engineering. Sundaylite.co.uk, which 

was originally registered in 2007, was renewed on July 8 by an individual 

named Simon Dooner, according to the Whois domain names database.

Meanwhile, Rupert Murdoch's News International - 

the UK arm of News Corp - has taken control of internet domain names 

thesunonsunday.co.uk and sunonsunday.co.uk, fuelling speculation

 that it aims to launch a 'Sun on Sunday' version of its daily tabloid,

 The Sun.

The name 'Sunday Sun' is already in use by a regional newspaper in

 northern England.

Daily Mail already publishes the Mail on Sunday for the mid-market, 

which it dominates. Its circulation was 1.9 million in May, 

the latest month for which figures are available.

The News of the World was Britain's most popular Sunday newspaper, 

with a circulation of about 2.7 million, until it was shut down after

 168 years to try to contain an escalating phone hacking scandal.

Its previous editor, Rebekah Brooks, became the most high

-profile name to lose her job over the scandal when she resigned as 

News International chief executive on Friday.

Britain's other mass-market national tabloids are the Sunday Mirror, 

The People (both owned by Trinity Mirror), the Sunday Sport, recently 

bought out of administration by its founder, and

 the Sunday Express, owned by media baron Richard Desmond.

Earlier on Friday, Euromoney, the financial information unit of the 

Daily Mail group, said its overall trading performance was in line, 

with its niche events business driving revenue growth.

Daily Mail shares were up 1.7 percent to 429 pence at 1219 GMT, 

valuing the group at around 1.6 billion pounds ($2.6 billion).

($1 = 0.620 British Pounds)

(Reporting by Georgina Prodhan  and Rosalba O'Brien; Editing 

by Erica Billingham)

http://www.websitevalue.co.uk/www.newsoftheworld.com



NEWS-OF-THE WORLD.COM: Russell Brand kept uttering 
“Hare Krishna” in public

Although people are deeply stuck in sinful life the maha-mantra is gradually getting popular.


.....Brand also tried to explain why he kept uttering “Hare Krishna” 
in public at the height of the storm last November. 
“It spreads positivity,” he said. “People were saying, 
‘You can’t say anything now, Russell.’ So I just thought 
I’d say something positive and difficult to analyse.” 



source: http://www.newsoftheworld.co.uk/show...s-a-month.html 





NEWS-OF-THE WORLD.COM: Russell Brand kept uttering

 “Hare Krishna” in public



Tom Cruise blames bag lady

James Murdoch Ushers in www.breakingthenewsoftheworld.com
Kel snogging Brad
Gordon Ramsey breaking bread with complete stranger, sources say


http://blog.livedoor.jp/ markzu/archives/51264181.html

F1 boss Max Mosley has sick Nazi orgy with 5 hookers

 News of the World: New Max Mosley orgy clips released

also.
Last week, the tabloid removed a video of Mosley – the son of the British fascist Sir Oswald Mosley – from its website, pending the outcome of a high court injunction banning the tabloid from showing images from the clip.

News of the World in legal battle with Mosley





008年03月31日

マックス・モズレーのセックス・スキャンダル

Max Mosley faces calls to quit as Formula One chief after ‘Nazi’ orgy

マックス・モズレー、「ナチ」的乱交でFIA会長辞任要求を突きつけられる
モータースポーツ界で最も強い権力を持つ人物のひとりであるマックス・モズレー(67歳)は、5人の売春婦とナチ風の乱交を楽しんだとされ、FIA会長の辞任を突きつけられている。

イギリス・ファシスト党の党首でありアドルフ・ヒトラーの友人だったサー・オズワルドを父親に持つモズレーのこの行動に対して、ユダヤ人グループが非難している。

"News of The World" 紙は、チェルシーにあるアンダーグラウンドの「拷問部屋」で5人の女性と一緒にいるモズレー氏をビデオ撮影した。彼はここで数時間サド-マゾ的セックスにふけったとされている。

オックスフォード大学を卒業した元法廷弁護士であるFIA会長は、看守と囚人の両方の役を務めて強制収容所の様子を再現した。

彼は、ドイツ語で話しながら革の鞭で女性を打ち据えた後、今度は自身がノミの検査を受け、鎖でつながれて尋問を受けた。

同紙は、F1の商業権保有者であるバーニー・エクレストンの親友であるモズレー氏は、このセックス・サービスに2,500ポンド(49万8,500円*)を支払ったと述べている。

彼の行動は、ユダヤ人指導者とモータースポーツの内部関係者を驚かせた。ホロコースト教育基金の事務総長カレン・ポロックは「悪趣味で下品だ」と語った。「彼のような影響力と権力を持つ人物の行動としては信じがたい。愕然としている」

ホロコースト・センターの所長スティーヴン・スミスは「モズレー氏はモータースポーツにおける人種差別を非難しており、自分の定めた基準を守るべきだ。こ れは何百万人の犠牲者、生存者、そしてその家族に対する侮辱である。彼は謝罪するべきだ。F1から身を引くべきだろう」と述べた。

ユダヤ人の父親を持つ元ワールドチャンピオンのサー・スターリング・モスは「FIA会長を続けることはできないだろう。正直なところ、彼は会長として非常 に優れているので、続けて欲しい。舞台裏での出来事は彼自身の問題だと思うが、このような形で明るみに出ると...非常にショックを受けている」と語っ た。

10代前半にドイツで2年間過ごしたモズレー氏は、ドイツ語が流暢であり、1993年にFIA会長に就任して以来、F1を数十億ポンドのビジネスに発展させる力となってきた。FIAは非営利団体で、世界中の自動車関連団体と自動車ユーザーの利益を代表している。

エクレストン氏は、この記事にショックを受けているが、モズレー氏の立場に影響はないだろうと述べた。「彼のことは大昔から知っている。証拠もなしにこのような話を聞かされたら信じなかっただろう」

「たとえ全てが本当だとしても、私生活での行動は本人の自由だ。正直なところ、これがF1に影響するとは思わない。マックスのことを知っていれば、すべてがちょっとしたジョークだとわかるだろう。ユダヤ人に悪意があるのではなく、単なるおふざげのひとつだ」

モナコ在住のモズレー氏は、プライバシーの侵害で "News of The World" 紙を告訴するものと見られている。彼のスポークスマンは「これはモズレー氏と新聞社との問題であり、FIAはコメントしない」と述べた。

ドライバーから評論家に転身したマーティン・ブランドルは、最近モズレー氏から名誉毀損訴訟を起こされているが、「FIAという世界的組織にとってこのような行動は不適切だ」と述べた。

かつて保守党の国会議員を目指していたモズレー氏は、変人かつ辛口で有名である。モータースポーツ界では「マッド・マックス」ともあだ名されており、常に激しい批判にさらされていた一族の出身なので、批判など気にならないと述べていた。

ヨーゼフ・ゲッベルスの応接間で行われた彼の父親オズワルドと母親ダイアナの結婚式にはヒトラーが参列した。両親はファシストとの関係によりホロウェイとブリクストンの刑務所に収容された。

今シーズン前のバルセロナのテストで、F1唯一の黒人ドライバーであるルイス・ハミルトンに人種差別行為があったとき、モズレー氏は、再発すれば即時処分を行うとしてF1における人種差別に反対したばかりである。

マックス・モズレーの機知と知恵
失読症のサー・ジャッキー・スチュワートについて
「1930年代の芸人みたいな服装をして歩き回っている。折り紙つきの間抜けだ」

サー・オズワルド・モズレーの息子であることについて
「モーターレーシングの世界に来るまで、常に何らかのトラブルがあった。『モズレー、マックス・モズレー。こいつは車体メーカーのアルフ・モズレーと関係 があるに違いない』 わたしは『オズワルド・モズレーを知らない世界を見つけたぞ』と思った。モーターレーシングでは常にそういうところがあった。誰も気 にしないのだ」

英国のモーターレーシング界のスター、ルイス・ハミルトンについて
「新人は常に登場する。彼がいなくても別の新しいスターが生まれただろう...ルイス・ハミルトンの重要性は誇張される傾向にあると思う」

-Source: Times Online
-Mobile: Amazonモバイル

F1 boss Max Mosley has sick Nazi orgy with 5 hookers

マックス・モズレー

マックス・モズレーマックス・モズレー

マックス・モズレーマックス・モズレーのセックス・スキャンダル

マックス・モズレー

バーニー・エクレストンとマックス・モズレーバーニー・エクレストンとマックス・モズレー

マックス・モズレーの妻ジーン  オズワルド・モズレー
マックス・モズレーの妻ジーンオズワルド・モズレー

NEWS OF THE WORLD vide
マックス・モズレーのセックス・スキャンダル
New Max Mosley orgy clips released
Max Mosley and News Group Newspapers Limited



静止画36枚
マックス・モズレー、サド-マゾ的乱交


+関連記事
2006年03月27日
マックス・モズレー(1940年4月13日生まれ)
2006年11月24日
マックス・モズレーの遺産
2007年11月03日
マックス・モズレー:人物像
2008年02月10日
マックス・モズレー 「モータースポーツでの人種差別は絶対に認めない」

マックス・モズレーのセックス・スキャンダル関連リンク集

*日本時間2008年03月31日10:09 の為替レート:Yahoo!ファイナンス 外国為替情報

2011年07月18日
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2011年07月17日
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2011年07月16日
マイケル・ウォルトリップ・レーシング、コフランとウィリアムズを告訴
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F1、コックピット用のキャノピーやスクリーンの提案を却下

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Edit LastUpdate:07/18 12:10
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誤字脱字誤訳誤変換その他間違いご指摘お願いします

M15 is behind. I don't think Only that reason.....?

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/ tol/sport/formula_1/ article3712614.ece

From Times Online
April 9, 2008

Mosley loses bid to block orgy video

Alexi Mostrous

Max Mosley has failed to prevent the News of the World from posting a video on its website of him apparently indulging in a Nazi-style sex orgy with five prostitutes.

The president of the world governing body of motorsport, the Fédération Internationale de l’Auto mobile (FIA), went to court to try and prevent the video’s publication.

Mr Mosley intially managed to force the newspaper to remove the video the day after it was originally posted on 30 March. But by then many other sites had copied the footage - making it available to a wide audience.

Today a High Court Judge overturned his application on the grounds that images of the orgy were “already in the public domain”. Mr Justice Eady said that preventing the paper from republishing them on its website would be like King Canut holding back the waves.

The judge said: "I have come to the conclusion that the material is so widely accessible that an order in the terms sought would make very little practical difference.

"One may express this conclusion either by saying that Mr Mosley no longer has any reasonable expectation of privacy in respect of this now widely familiar material or that, even if he has, it has entered the public domain to the extent that there is, in practical terms, no longer anything which the law can protect. The dam has effectively burst.

"I have, with some reluctance, come to the conclusion that although this material is intrusive and demeaning, and despite the fact that there is no legitimate public interest in its further publication, the granting of an order against this respondent at the present juncture would merely be a futile gesture."

Mr Mosley had not objected to the words written about him, a News of the World source said. But the embattled son of Sir Oswald Mosley, the British Fascist leader, claimed that the video of the orgy, coupled with still images apparently showing him whipping the prostitutes while dressed in military uniform, invaded his privacy.

The FIA president was said to have re-enacted an alleged concentration camp scene in which he played the role of both guard and inmate and, speaking in German, beat the women and allowed himself to be inspected for lice and “interrogated” in chains. The revelations shocked Jewish groups and leading figures in Formula One.

He is now suing the News of the World for substantial damages in a trial which will take place in June.

Lawyers for the paper said they were confident they would win the case, claiming that it was in the public interest for Mr Mosley’s activities to be exposed.

“He’s the governing head of a global body wth 100 million members,” said Tom Crone, the News of the World’s legal Manager.

“The FIA takes in so many cultures and creeds around the world that the sensitivities of what he was doing are grossly offensive to various categories.”


April 9, 2008

Mosley loses bid to block orgy video





http://www.timesonline.co.uk/ tol/sport/formula_1/ article4221219.ece

From The Times
June 27, 2008

Max Mosley was 'warned of plot against him'

Edward Gorman, Motor Racing Correspondent

Max Mosley, the president of the FIA, was warned by Bernie Ecclestone two months before his private life was exposed in a Sunday newspaper that people had been hired to discredit him and that they had been given an “unlimited budget” to do so, according to an intelligence consultant.

Rather than being a party to a conspiracy to destroy his old friend, as Mosley's spokesman has hinted this week, The Times can reveal that Ecclestone did his best to tell Mosley that he was being targeted and was astonished and angry when it became obvious that Mosley had ignored the advice he was given.

Ecclestone discovered that there was a plot to bring down the FIA president through Dean Attew, a London-based business intelligence consultant who used to work for the Formula One rights-holder and has also advised Mosley. In an exclusive interview with The Times, Attew disclosed that he was contacted in the third week of January this year by someone representing people who wanted Mosley removed from office.

The approach came more than two months before the News of the World published its first revelations and a video showing Mosley taking part in a five-hour sadomasochistic bondage session with five prostitutes in a “torture dungeon” in Chelsea, West London, which included alleged Nazi prison camp role play.

Attew, a co-founder of Titon International, the corporate intelligence company, said: “In January this year I received a call from a friend. We had a meeting and I was approached and told there was an open budget to effectively go out and source material that would bring Max to his knees and, more importantly, remove him from office and discredit him publicly.

“During the conversation I said to the guy, 'What's your budget?' and he said, 'It's an open budget,' and I said, 'OK, be specific here, are you after Max, are you after the FIA or are you after Bernie?' They then went back and they came back a little while later and said, 'We are not going to pursue it for the time being.' The person contacted me because they knew of my relationship with Bernie but did not know of my relationship with Max. The reason they contacted me was to find out whether I had any loyalty to Max and whether I knew anything of value.”

Attew said that he considered the contact to be credible and he took the conversation seriously. Rather than assist the contact, Attew informed Ecclestone. “I sat down with Bernie and told him what I'd heard,” Attew said. “Bernie then told Max - I know this because Max later confirmed this to me. Because of the relationship I have with both of them, and Max knowing who I was, I assumed that the warning would be taken seriously.”

Attew recalls that at that stage Ecclestone doubted that Mosley had any secrets to hide and had no idea about Mosley's predilection for orgies with prostitutes. “When I sat down with Bernie I said to him, 'Is there anything anyone is going to find out about Max?'” Attew said. “And Bernie said, 'Dean, you are not going to find anything because there's nothing there - he's Mr Boring in that sense.' Mosley had kept this a good secret.”

Two days after the first story on the scandal had been published, Attew contacted Mosley after being asked to do so by Ecclestone, who, despite his anger at what had transpired, wanted Attew to give whatever assistance or advice he could to the FIA president. During this phone call, Attew says that Mosley admitted that he had received the warning from Ecclestone in January and that he had been warned by someone else, too. Attew also says that Mosley conveyed to him detailed personal information about his private life during that phone call, which Attew does not wish to disclose.

Attew, who heads Titon International in partnership with Major-General John Holmes, a former director of UK Special Forces, believes that Mosley or his spokesman could have disclosed these details in recent weeks, rather than leave speculation linking Ecclestone to the exposé to fester. It is for this reason that he has taken the unprecedented step of coming out of the shadows to set the record straight.

“I hear things about people suggesting Bernie was behind this, but that is ridiculous,” Attew said. “From the very first indication Bernie and I, with Max's knowledge, have tried to find out who was the source.”

Attew is also angry at the way Mosley ignored the advice that he was given. “It was very clear that Max had disregarded both the advice he had been given and had failed to realise his vulnerability at that stage,” Attew said. “The issue for me was his total disregard for genuine advice from individuals that he knew had his best interests at heart. When we saw what was in the News of the World, Bernie was as flabbergasted as I was.”

Attew was on Ecclestone's staff for four years until 2004 and had a desk at Ecclestone's London office, where he assisted with a wide variety of issues concerning Ecclestone's business and family affairs. Titon International was in the news two years ago when it emerged that Alexander Litvinenko, the murdered former KGB agent, had worked for the company as a consultant on Russian business. Litvinenko was poisoned with polonium-210, traces of which were found at Titon's offices, in Grosvenor Street, Mayfair.

Some more background to the Mosley Scandal

http://www.grandprix.com/ns/ ns20513.html

In recent weeks The Times has become the conduit for the thoughts of Bernie Ecclestone, while Max Mosley has generally kept quiet and said nothing, hoping that silence, coupled with some populist policies, will come across as presidential behaviour and help to rebuild his damaged image. To be fair The Times has done a balanced job in very difficult circumstances.

It has been clear from the start that the Mosley Scandal did not happen by accident. The story has on occasion drifted into a shadowy world of dominatrices, spies and private security firms. The suggestion has always been that someone set Mosley up. This may be true, but thus far we have seen no hard evidence that this is the case.

The latest story in The Times suggests that Ecclestone had nothing to do with organising the Mosley Scandal, as has been hinted at in recent weeks. It even says that Bernie warned Mosley that there were people out to get him. This is a credible claim given the friendship of the two men. The newspaper says that Ecclestone discovered that there was a plot to bring down Mosley from Dean Attew. He is a former employee of the Formula One group who started a security company called Titon International in 2004. Attew claimed that he was contacted in the third week of January this year by someone he knew representing unnamed people who wanted Mosley removed from office and publicly discredited. He claims that he was told there was "an open budget." However, after the initial contact there was no follow-up and Attew reckons that the approach was to establish whether he had any loyalty to Mosley.

Obviously he did, because he told Ecclestone and says that Ecclestone told Mosley.

Attew's story does not make a great deal of sense as there is little logic in anyone who is out to get Mosley approaching a known associate of Ecclestone, knowing that Ecclestone and Mosley had been friends for 40 years. That would be tantamount to telling Mosley directly - as, indeed, it proved to be.

However the story in The Times is clearly designed to deliver a message and to back-up last week's assertion from Ecclestone that he was not involved with the plot against Mosley.

Attew says that it is "ridiculous" to suggest that Ecclestone is involved in the plot and he says that Mosley and the FIA should have said as much, rather than allowing rumours to circulate in F1 circles. The underlying implication is that Mosley is using the intrigue to keep the FIA membership focussed on a threat to the federation rather than the question of whether or not he should still be in office. One might read this as being colluson between Mosley and Ecclestone. Having said that every other source is saying that the pair are now at odds with one another. The article refers to Attew and Mosley having had a conversation after the scandal began, during which, The Times says, "Mosley conveyed to him [Attew] detailed personal information about his private life".

The newspaper said that Attew did not wish to disclose this information, which obviously means that there are things in this affair that are still not in the public domain.

The sport has already suffered enormously and there are many who want it to stop. There are some who say they support one or the other, but a lot of people are simply sitting on the fence waiting to see whether Mosley and Ecclestone will end up taking each other out. One would think that the duo are more intelligent than that, but circumstances may now have put them into positions which offer them no other choices.




By Angela Levin

Last updated at 9:39 AM on 3rd August 2008


They are perhaps the most intriguing and unconventional couple in Britain – the crisply correct MI5 man and his wife, a whip-wielding dominatrix who purveys sado-masochistic sex to the suburbs.

But here they are, in the sedate surroundings of a London tearoom, describing in matter-of-fact terms how an attempt by them to combine their careers ended in high farce, personal disaster and national scandal, with consequences that are genuinely destined to resonate down the ages.

One half of the couple is the sex worker who, at the behest of the News of the World, smuggled a camera into the now-notorious S&M orgy convened at the request of Max Mosley, the president of world motor racing.

woman e - michelle

Michelle - 'Woman E' has broken cover to reveal her extraordinary life as a suburban mistress

Mosley launched a court action over the resultant article, claiming his privacy had been invaded, and secured a victory that has profound implications for free speech in Britain.

The dominatrix, referred to in court as Woman E, had been due to give key evidence at the trial, but in the event went into hiding.

Now, in an exclusive interview with The Mail on Sunday, the dominatrix and her husband describe the background to the Mosley ‘sting’ for the first time.

And they have a revelation, too, that will deepen suspicion that Mosley was the victim of forces beyond those of a greedy sex worker and a scandal-hungry tabloid.

max mosley

Motor racing boss Max Mosley leaves the Royal Courts of Justice, after winning a privacy-invasion lawsuit over a British tabloid's claims he took part in a Nazi-themed orgy

For they disclose that the News of the World  was initially contacted and tipped off not by the dominatrix, but by her husband – a serving officer in MI5, remember – who then negotiated a deal with the newspaper.

Mosley himself is said to believe that his public shaming was brought about by shadowy, unspecified enemies.

The dominatrix Michelle – we cannot publish her full name or that of her husband for both legal and security reasons – told The Mail on Sunday: ‘I was pleased to leave it up to him.

'I might be bossy when I am working, but I’m not in my normal life. In any case, he is much better on the phone than I am.’

dominatrix michelle

Dominatrix Michelle strikes a pose on her website

And the MI5 man admits: ‘I am the one who rang the News of the World offering to sell my wife’s story and sorted out the deal before she got involved.’

The couple are at pains to insist that he was acting without the knowledge of MI5. There is no evidence to the contrary. But as the pair go on to describe their extraordinary, head-spinning story, the questions mount up rather than go away.

Certainly, the couple make an unlikely match. Although Michelle, at 38, is two years younger than him, she looks older and is taller. Born in Birmingham, she left school at 16.

Her first job was as a hairdresser, but it quickly bored her and she moved on to selling windows for conservatories.

michelle's husband

Michelle's husband, who has quit MI5. His face has been obscured for security reasons.

Her career path changed abruptly when she was about 30 after a short relationship.

‘I became a submissive – a woman who gives up control to a man – which I really enjoyed,’ she says.

‘When the relationship ended I went on the internet and found other people in the scene.

‘There are so many websites it was really easy. I also switched from being submissive to being in charge, and realised about seven years ago that I could make a career out of it.’

So Michelle entered a world of leather, pretend chains and seedy basement ‘dungeons’. She gives a stern look, of the kind that must be worth good money at one of her parties.

‘Let me make one thing clear,’ she says.

‘I give out punishment or correction services, but I am not a hooker or a prostitute. I always refer anyone who contacts me to my website so they know what my rules are. Domination is a professional business.’

Professional is a word she uses like a mantra. ‘I don’t offer a sexual service. Clients are not allowed to touch me. They must have total respect and once they come through the door I am in charge because that is what they want.

‘My clients have high-class careers – they are doctors, solicitors and bankers – and want no responsibility for an hour or two.

'What I do for them sets off endorphins – the feelgood hormones released when people exercise – and it’s very relaxing.’

At times she sounds like a cross between a social worker and a psychotherapist.

‘I am just a normal mother of two doing a professional job,’ she elaborates. ‘I am not brutal or nasty and don’t beat people until they bleed. I use just enough pain to release the endorphins.’ I notice that her unvarnished nails are extremely long.

She met her future husband – we shall call him Martin – at a Butlins holiday camp in 2003. She has two children, a girl of 13 and a boy of 15 from a previous relationship. Martin, a former officer in the Royal Marines, has one.

‘I was there with my two children and he had come for a stag party,’ she recalls. ‘We started talking and soon got together. I told him what I did on our third date. He knew exactly what I meant, but he said it wasn’t his scene.

‘Three weeks after we met he told me that he worked for MI5. I was a bit shocked, but then I suppose he had been rather shocked about me.’

Spy thrillers are, of course, filled with key operatives falling for the practised charms of a professional seductress.

But perhaps in real life a man who works for a branch of the intelligence services would see red warning lights flashing in front of his eyes and head off before getting emotionally involved.

Instead Martin decided not to tell his employers about his new potentially dangerous liaison. ‘If he had discussed it with them they would have capped his career straight away,’ insists Michelle.

Martin agrees: ‘Of course Michelle’s work jeopardised my job. If I had told them they would probably have asked her to stop.’

Perhaps the simplest and more respectable solution would have been for her to find something else to do? Martin didn’t think so. And it appears that the agency’s vetting procedures failed to reveal the truth.

So Martin hid Michelle’s activities from MI5. Fine – except now it emerges that, in fact, some of his colleagues did know all about Michelle.

Because, when the couple married a year ago, he invited them to their wedding, telling friends that he regarded her way of earning a living as both ‘fine’ and ‘hilarious’.

Did none of Martin’s colleagues see it as their duty to inform their superiors about the secret life of a senior operative?

Michelle would have us believe they did not. ‘He only invited people on the same level as him,’ she says. ‘They are loyal and no one told their bosses.’

Instead, the loving pair settled down cosily in a modern four-bedroom house in Milton Keynes.

Michelle had also, by then, earned sufficient money working two or three days a week to buy another house on the Buckinghamshire borders, which she used for work.
‘I wanted to keep it well away from my family home,’ she says.

Here, she once ‘entertained’ or perhaps punished Max Mosley. A co-worker introduced them, but his name rang not the tiniest of bells. ‘I thought he was just an ordinary customer,’ she says.

But after he had used her services a couple of times, she casually mentioned his name to Martin over supper.

‘He knew exactly who he was,’ she says proudly, adding quickly: ‘Martin is keen and knowledgeable about motor racing and told me he was a very wealthy, powerful and successful individual.’

A few more meetings took place,  Michelle says, ‘at a flat in Chelsea that I believe he owns and at a party in Euston – he never contacted me directly, it was always through another girl’.

Then Michelle and four other girls were booked by the multi-millionaire, who is the son of Thirties fascist leader Sir Oswald Mosley, from noon to 5pm on March 28 for an orgy.

A few days before it was due to take place Michelle and Martin had a conversation over dinner and agreed – they can’t or won’t remember who suggested it first – that it would make an ‘interesting’ newspaper story.

The following morning, without allegedly bothering to think through the potential devastating consequences, Martin made his dramatic phone calls. Michelle would spank and tell.

Michelle insists that they were simply looking for a way out of debt. ‘Our financial difficulties grew as a result of our marriage,’ Michelle says. ‘We wanted to have a fantastic wedding. I had a beautiful white dress and 100 guests came for dinner and dancing. The problem was that it cost £18,000.’

‘Also, the equipment I needed for my work was very expensive. For example, my throne of dark wood and red leather cost £800. It’s not the sort of thing you can pick up at MFI.

‘So, what with all that and overspending on our credit cards, we found ourselves owing well over £20,000 and couldn’t see any way of clearing it other than by selling

my story. But never in a million years did we think it would cause so many problems.’

And so Michelle turned up for the five-hour orgy with a tiny video camera concealed in her tie, which was part of her uniform. Not in her bra, as has been reported. ‘It was all fixed up for me by the newspaper,’ she says.

Martin, who one assumes is an expert in such matters, apparently didn’t get involved.

‘All I had to do was turn it on,’ says Michelle. ‘I was so nervous beforehand that I was sick and had a panic attack. I also kept thinking, “What am I doing?” ’

And so a festival of corporal punishment was captured in grainy, shaky monochrome.
Martin, who specialised as a mobile surveillance officer tracking terror suspects, categorically denies there was a conspiracy involving MI5.

‘I can’t talk about my work, but no, MI5 weren’t involved,’ he says.

Michelle nods. ‘Nobody from any organisation including MI5 spoke to either my husband or myself before or after he contacted the newspaper. It was entirely our decision and the result of a moment of madness.

‘We were in financial difficulties and saw it as a way of clearing our debt in one go.’

Whitehall sources also stated last night that they had 'nothing to add' to earlier assertions denying MI5 had anything to do with the Mosley affair. 

Now the narrative turns complicated and cruel. After publication of the News of the World article at the end of March, Mosley decided to sue for breach of privacy.

He hired Quest, a private investigation agency run by Lord Stevens, the former Metropolitan Police Commissioner, to provide information about the women at the party.

They traced Michelle and tailed Martin, following him from his home to MI5’s headquarters. He admits he knew he was being followed but denies reports of a car chase.

One can only wonder why such an expert in surveillance didn’t give his tail the slip or alert his superiors.

A letter was then sent to MI5, alerting it to the fact that one of its agents was married to a prostitute. Martin was told that he was being suspended on full pay – about £30,000 a year.

The court case went ahead last month. The night before Michelle, who was referred to as Woman E in the proceedings, was due to appear as a key witness for the newspaper, Martin received a letter from his bosses warning him of his obligations under the Official Secrets Act.

Perhaps this was the last straw for Michelle, who failed to turn up in court. ‘I had another panic attack,’ she explains.

Mosley won his legal action for breach of privacy over the newspaper’s claims that the orgy had Nazi overtones and Mr Justice Eady awarded him £60,000 in damages.

After the case Martin resigned from MI5, so didn’t even get a pay-off, and Michelle dismantled the website advertising her services.

‘My regular clients have been very supportive, saying that any time I want to go back they would be pleased to see me,’ she says. ‘But I don’t know if I want to or if they will be able to trust me.’

No doubt she also knows that, at 38, she is nearing her sell-by date. It’s not a job for an older woman. ‘Nor does Martin know what he is going to do,’ she adds sadly.

‘But he is looking hard for another job. At the moment we are struggling to pay our mortgages and bills. My workplace is empty but I hope to let it to a family. Luckily our relationship is very strong.

‘My family have told me off for being stupid but have stuck by me. I have, though, been worried about my children. My younger one doesn’t really understand it, but keeps putting her arm around me to comfort me, but my son is worried about how his friends will react.

‘The truth is that the only person I am angry with is myself. I have no one else to blame, but most of all I really regret hurting people.’

Not the sort of words you’d expect from a dominatrix.


Max Mosley was 'warned of plot against him'



Who And Why Now ?




Rupert Murdoch's News Corp and Exor reveal F1 plan

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/ news/uknews/1976775/Max- Mosley-orgy-revelation-forces- M15-agent-to-quit.html

Max Mosley orgy revelation forces M15 agent to quit

An MI5 agent has resigned after it emerged his prostitute wife engineered the tabloid sting that exposed Max Mosley, the head of motor racing, as having taken part in a sado-masochistic orgy.

By Andrew Alderson, Chief Reporter, and Sean Rayment, Security Correspondent

10:32PM BST 17 May 2008

The disclosure is deeply embarrassing for Britain's security service and has forced a review of vetting.

The man was a surveillance operative with several years of service. His wife, 38, is believed to have approached the News of the World when she realised that Mr Mosley – a regular client – had booked five prostitutes for a sex session costing £2,500.

It is understood that Jonathan Evans, the director general of MI5, has informed Gordon Brown and Jacqui Smith, the Home Secretary, that one of his agents was caught up in the sting.

Mr Evans gave a categorical assurance that MI5 was not involved and Whitehall officials insist that, because Mr Mosley did not represent a security threat, he would not have been the subject of a covert operation.

The agent, who is in his 40s, is understood to have served in the military before joining MI5. He had responsibility for watching al-Qa'eda suspects, Russian spies, crime bosses and drug lords.

Mr Mosley, 68, faces a vote of confidence over his role as president of the FIA in Paris on June 3. But he insists that his "eccentric" sex life does not render him unfit to run one of the world's most glamorous sports.

He said of the Telegraph's disclosure: "This is an astonishing piece of information, which I will pass on to my legal advisers." Before being recruited by MI5, the agent would have undergone "developed vetting", during which he would have been questioned about every aspect of his private life. Like all potential recruits, he would have been asked if he had a drugs, alcohol or gambling habit.

Other lines of inquiry would include questions on his sex life and whether or not he visited prostitutes. This is meant to determine whether an individual could be blackmailed and might therefore be a security risk.

All agents are vetted throughout their careers. What will worry Thames House, MI5's London HQ, is why the agent was not identified as a potential risk.

It is understood that he resigned on being confronted with evidence of his wife's involvement in the affair. The Telegraph is not naming him on security grounds. His wife is believed to have been paid tens of thousands of pounds by the News of the World for her story and used the newspaper's surveillance equipment. The couple married last year.

The News of the World published its front-page story on Mr Mosley on March 30 under the headline: "F1 boss has sick Nazi orgy with 5 hookers." Mr Mosley has denied the sessions had Nazi overtones and is seeking damages for what he claim was invasion of privacy.

Insiders at the News of the World have suggested that it was nothing more than a coincidence that their source for the story was married to an agent and deny that he played any role in the sting.

More on the Mosely Legacy at  PitPass.com




Bernie Ecclestone rubbishes Rupert Murdoch F1 takeover report

Associated Press

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/ news/uknews/1976775/Max- Mosley-orgy-revelation-forces- M15-agent-to-quit.html

Max Mosley orgy revelation forces M15 agent to quit





Mosley 'knows' who set him up
By Jonathan Noble - February 6th 2009

FIA president Max Mosley is now convinced he knows who was behind the set-up that resulted in the News of the World publishing details about his private life last year.

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Rupert Murdoch's News Corp and Exor reveal F1 plan

Investment firm Exor controls Ferrari through Fiat

Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation and an Italian investment firm linked to Ferrari are working on a possible bid to take control of Formula 1.

"There can be no certainty that this will lead to an approach to F1's current owners."

"Exor and News Corp will approach minority partners and key stakeholders in the sport," a joint Exor and News Corp statement read.

F1's owner CVC Capital Partners insists the sport is not "for sale".

"CVC can confirm that it has recently received an approach from the Exor News Corporation consortium," said private equity firm CVC, which paid £1.8bn to buy F1 in 2006.

The company went on to reveal in a statement that Murdoch's son James had been the News Corp representative.

"James Murdoch has informed us that the approach is friendly, at a very preliminary stage, and that they acknowledge that Formula 1 is privately owned by CVC and not currently for sale.

"CVC recognises the quality of Exor and News Corporation as potential investors, but any investment in Formula 1 will require CVC's agreement and will need to demonstrate that it is in the interest of the sport and its stakeholders, taken as a whole."

Any takeover would involve changes to the Concorde Agreement, a commercial arrangement involving the racing teams, CVC and the sport's governing body, the FIA.

This agreement says that the sport should be shown on free-to-air television in major markets.

However, the agreement runs out at the end of 2012, and the signatories are in the process of negotiating a new one.

The BBC has the UK broadcasting rights to F1 until 2013.

Last month Bernie Ecclestone, who runs F1 on behalf of CVC, dismissed reports that News Corporation was in talks with Mexican billionaire Carlos Slim, who sponsors the Sauber team, to buy F1 as "rubbish".

And on Tuesday the 80-year-old Ecclestone questioned the likelihood of a News Corp bid succeeding.

"Personally, I know CVC don't want to sell, so it's going to be a bit difficult," said Ecclestone. "I can see CVC in for the long haul, absolutely, 100%.

"If somebody came along and offered them a lot more money than it's worth, they [CVC] would obviously say 'Sit down, let's have a chat'. But I get the distinct feeling that's not going to happen.

"I can't understand why a company as big as News Corp need to keep looking for partners. First it was Carlos Slim, and now we've a new one."

Exor is the holding company of the Agnelli family and has a controlling 30% stake in carn maker Fiat Group, which is the majority owner of F1 team Ferrari. Exor also holds a 60% stake in Serie A side Juventus.

News Corp, which owns 39% of broadcaster BSkyB and is trying to buy the rest of the company, could face regulatory hurdles if it took on broadcasting rights.

In 1998, News Corp tried to buy the Manchester United football team but was blocked by the Competition Commission because of Sky's dominance in broadcasting the sport.

Analysis

Dan Roan,
BBC sports news correspondent

Any Exor/NewsCorp bid for F1 faces serious challenges. The Concorde Agreement, the contract by which all 12 teams currently agree to race in F1, stipulates that the sport will be shown on free-to-air television in major markets, thus preventing Murdoch from showing F1 on Sky exclusively in the UK. Nor, at present, is a team owner allowed to control the sport. Exor's links to Ferrari via Fiat raises serious questions on that basis too. However, the agreement is up for renewal at the end of next year and the rules could change.


Rupert Murdoch's News Corp considers Formula 1 takeover

News Corporation is in preliminary negotiations with potential partners about forming a consortium to acquire control of Formula 1 motor racing.

Carlos Slim, the world's richest man, sponsors the Sauber team, which has a Mexican driver, Sergio Perez (pictured). Photo

By Ben Harrington, and Helia Ebrahimi

19 Apr 2011

Rupert Murdoch's media empire is understood to have held early-stage talks in recent weeks with Carlos Slim, the Mexican billionaire, and organisations connected with at least one of the sport's major car manufacturers about working together on a prospective takeover.

News Corp's possible bid is at such an early stage that it has not yet made a formal approach to F1's owner, the private equity firm CVC Capital Partners.

Participating in a consortium that would buy F1 is only one of several options that News Corp is examining in relation to the sport, which may be put on the market over the next 18 months.

Rather than buying a direct stake in F1's owner, News Corp could instead attempt in future to buy the rights to broadcast the sport.

"It is at a very, very early point and could lead to nothing or could lead to many different permutations," said one person familiar with the matter.

A News Corp spokesman said the company "does not comment on market speculation".

The involvement of Mr Slim, the world's richest man, is no surprise to those involved in the sport. He already sponsors the Sauber team, which has a Mexican driver, Sergio Perez.

 Apr 20, 2011  Associated Press

LONDON // Bernie Ecclestone insists that Formula One is not for sale, brushing off reports that Rupert Murdoch's News Corp is interested in taking over the sport.

Sky News reported that News Corp, which owns a 39 per cent stake in the broadcaster's parent group BSkyB, has begun talks with the Mexican telecom magnate Carlos Slim about forming a consortium to buy control of F1 from the private equity firm CVC Capital.

But Ecclestone, 80, who runs F1 on behalf of CVC, reiterated his intention to stay in control for some time yet.

"It is all rubbish," Ecclestone told British newspaper The Times. "Formula One is not for sale. And anyway, we would not sell to a media company because it would restrict the ability to negotiate with other broadcasters."

The BBC has an agreement to broadcast the F1 world championship in Britain until 2013.

Satellite broadcaster BSkyB, which runs Sky News and is subject to a full takeover bid by News Corp, could choose to bid for the broadcast rights rather than full control of the sport.

Unlike events like the Wimbledon tennis tournament and football's World Cup, Formula One is not reserved for free-to-air broadcast in Britain by government legislation.

Funds should not be a problem if News Corp does pursue the sport.

BSkyB paid £1.623 billion (Dh9.76bn) for the English Premier League broadcast rights from 2010 to 2013.

Summary

The Formula One rights holder insists that F1 is not for sale, brushing off reports that Rupert Murdoch's News Corp is interested in taking over the sport.


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  8. Bernie Ecclestone rejects Rupert Murdoch F1 talk - Broadcasting ...

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    28 Apr 2011 – F1 supremo Bernie Ecclestone says Rupert Murdoch has "close to zero" chance of taking over the sport.
  9. F1 teams hold key to Rupert Murdoch bid - Daily Mail

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  10. Bernie Ecclestone rubbishes Rupert Murdoch F1 takeover report ...

    www.thenational.ae/.../bernie-ecclestone-rubbishes-rupert-murdoch-... - Cached
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    28 Apr 2011 – BERNIE ECCLESTONE said the chances of an F1 takeover by Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation were "close to zero".
  5. Murdoch's F1 chances 'close to zero' | F1 News | Apr 2011 | Crash.Net

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  8. Bernie Ecclestone denies Rupert Murdoch's News Corp are set to buy F1

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    21 Apr 2011 – Formula One supremo Bernie Ecclestone has dismissed speculation that Rupert Murdoch's News Corp are set to launch a bid to buy the sport.
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    1 May 2011 – F1 : Bernie Ecclestone - EC would block Rupert Murdoch Formula 1 take-over.
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Rupert Murdoch's News Corp and Exor reveal F1 plan


Rupert Murdoch's News Corp considers Formula 1 takeover



FIA president Max Mosley has won his privacy action against the News of the World, 

Mosley wins privacy lawsuit

By Jonathan Noble July 24th 2008

FIA president Max Mosley has won his privacy action against the News of the World, being awarded £60,000 in damages, plus costs believed to total around £1 million.

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07 July 2011 à 19:02
F1 - News of the World shutting down

news from F1 mortor racing site 
Rupert Murdoch is said to be interested in buying F1's commercial rights.
Please see what "News of word " did to 
president of the Fédération Internationale de l’Automobile (FIA),Max Moseley
He is a son of Sir Oswald, was the leader of the British Union of Fascists and a friend of Adolf Hitler. 

http://en.wikipedia. org/wiki/Oswald_Mosley

Video and Pictures of original this news of "News of the word " all erased.

 Only we can see from japanese site...



Jul.7 (GMM) The British newspaper News of the World is shutting down.The scandal-rag is famous in F1 circles for exposing Max Mosley's encounter with five prostitutes, for which the former FIA president won legal action against the newspaper's claim it was a "sick Nazi orgy".Media mogul Rupert Murdoch's son James announced late on Thursday that Sunday will be the last edition in the newspaper's 168 year history, in the wake of the long-running and ultimately tragic phone hacking scandal."Having consulted senior colleagues, I have decided that we must take decisive action with respect to the paper," said Murdoch in an email to staff."In addition, I have decided that all of the News of the World's revenue this weekend will go to good causes," added the News International chairman.Rupert Murdoch is said to be interested in buying F1's commercial rights.


GMM / MadeInMotorSport.com,
MadeInMOTORSPORT.com.

Oswald Mosley

Sir Oswald Ernald Mosley, 6th Baronet, of Ancoats, (16 November 1896 – 3 December 1980) was an English politician, known principally as the founder of the British Union of Fascists. He was a Member of Parliament for Harrow from 1918 to 1924 and for Smethwick from 1926 to 1931, as well as Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster in the Labour Government of 1929–1931.

Sir Oswald Mosley, Bt.
 
Sir Oswald Mosley, Bt.
Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster
In office
7 June 1929 – 19 May 1930
Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald
Preceded by Ronald John McNeill
Succeeded by Clement Attlee
Member of Parliament
for Harrow
In office
1918 – 1924
Preceded by Harry Mallaby-Deeley
Succeeded by Sir Isidore Salmon
Member of Parliament
for Smethwick
In office
1926 – 1931
Preceded by John Davison
Succeeded by Roy Wise
Personal details
Born 16 November 1896
Burton upon Trent, England
Died 3 December 1980 (aged 84)
Orsay, France
Nationality British
Political party Conservative (1918–1922)
Independent (1922–1924)
Labour / Independent Labour Party (1924–1931)
New Party (1931–1932)
British Union of Fascists (1932–1940)
Union Movement (1948–1973)
National Party of Europe (1962–1980)
Spouse(s) Lady Cynthia Mosley (1920–1933)
Diana Mitford (1936–1980)
Children Vivien Mosley (deceased)
Nicholas Mosley
Michael Mosley
(Oswald) Alexander Mosley
Max Mosley
Alma mater  Winchester
 Sandhurst
Military service
Allegiance Flag of the United Kingdom.svg British Empire
Service/branch Flag of the British Army.svg British Army
 16th The Queen's Lancers
 Royal Flying Corps
Years of service 1914–1918
Rank Lieutenant
Battles/wars World War I
 Second Battle of Ypres
 Battle of Loos
Awards Allied Victory Medal BAR.svg Victory Medal
British War Medal BAR.svg British War Medal
1914-15 Star ribbon.jpg 1914–15 Star

Biography


Family and early life


Mosley was the eldest of three sons of Sir Oswald Mosley, 5th Baronet, of Ancoats (29 December 1873 - 21 September 1928), and wife Katharine Maud Edwards-Heathcote (1874–1950), the second child of Captain Justinian Edwards-Heathcote of Market Drayton, Shropshire. Mosley's family were Anglo-Irish. His branch were prosperous landowners in Staffordshire. Through the intermarriage common among the British upper classes, the 5th Baronet was the third cousin of the Earl of Strathmore, which would eventually make Oswald Mosley, the 6th baronet, fourth cousin to Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother, who was the Earl of Strathmore's daughter, and fourth cousin once removed to Queen Elizabeth II.

Mosley was born at Rolleston Hall, near Burton-on-Trent on November 16, 1896. When his parents separated he was brought up by his mother, who initially went to live at Betton Hall near Market Drayton, and his paternal grandfather, Sir Oswald Mosley, 4th Baronet. Within the family and among intimate friends, he was always called "Tom". He lived for many years atApedale Hall near Newcastle-under-Lyme.


Military service

He was educated at West Downs School and Winchester College. In January 1914 he entered the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst but was expelled in June for a "riotous act of retaliation" against a fellow student.[1] During World War I he was commissioned in the 16th The Queen's Lancers and fought on the Western Front. He transferred to the Royal Flying Corps as an observer but while demonstrating in front of his mother and sister he crashed, which left him with a permanent limp. He returned to the trenches before the injury was fully healed and, at the Battle of Loos, he passed out at his post from the pain. He spent the remainder of the war at desk jobs in the Ministry of Munitions and in the Foreign Office.[1]

Personal life


On 11 May 1920 he married Lady Cynthia Curzon (known as 'Cimmie'), (1898 - 1933), second daughter of George Curzon, Lord Curzon of Kedleston, (1859 - 1925), Viceroy of India, 1899 - 1905, Foreign Secretary, 1919 - 1924, and Lord Curzon's first wife, the American mercantile heiress, the former Mary Victoria Leiter.

Lord Curzon had to be persuaded that Mosley was a suitable husband, as he suspected Mosley was largely motivated by social advancement in Conservative Party politics and her inheritance. The 1920 wedding was the social event of the year, attended by many branches of European royalty, including King George V and Queen Mary.

He had three children by Cynthia: Vivien Elizabeth Mosley (25 February 1921 – 26 August 2002), who married on 15 January 1949 Desmond Francis Forbes Adam (27 January 1926 – car crash, 3 January 1958), educated at Eton College, Eton,Berkshire, and at King's College, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, by whom she had two daughters and one son; Nicholas Mosley, 3rd Baron Ravensdale (born 25 June 1923), a successful novelist who wrote a biography of his father and edited his memoirs for publication; and Michael Mosley (born 25 April 1932), unmarried and without issue.

During this marriage he had an extended affair with his wife's younger sister Lady Alexandra Metcalfe, and with their stepmother, Grace Curzon, Marchioness Curzon of Kedleston, the American-born, also, second wife and widow of Lord Curzon of Kedleston.

Cynthia died of peritonitis in 1933, after which Mosley married his mistress Diana Guinness, née Diana Mitford (1910 - 2003, one of the Mitford sisters). They married in secret in Germany on 6 October 1936, in the Berlin home of Nazi propaganda chiefJoseph Goebbels. Adolf Hitler was one of the guests.

By Diana Mitford, he had two sons: Oswald Alexander Mosley (born 26 November 1938), married on 10 May 1975 to Charlotte Diana Marten (born 1952) and father of Louis Mosley (born 1983); and Max Rufus Mosley (born 13 April 1940), who was president of the Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA) for 16 years.

Mosley spent large amounts of his private fortune on the British Union of Fascists (BUF) and tried to establish it on a firm financial footing by negotiating, through Diana, with Adolf Hitler for permission to broadcast commercial radio to Britain from Germany.

Mosley also reportedly struck a deal in 1937 with Francis William Lionel Collings Beaumont, the heir to the Seigneur of Sark, to set up a privately owned radio station on Sark.[2][3]

Elected Member of Parliament


By the end of World War I Mosley decided to go into politics as a Conservative Member of Parliament (MP), although he was only 21 years old and had not fully developed his politics. He was driven by a passionate conviction to avoid any future war and this motivated his career. Largely because of his family background, he was considered by several constituencies; a vacancy near the family estates seemed to be the best prospect.

Unexpectedly, he was selected for Harrow first. In the general election of 1918 he faced no serious opposition and was elected easily. He was the youngest member of the House of Commons to take his seat (Joseph Sweeney, an abstentionistSinn Féin MP was younger). He soon distinguished himself as an orator and political player, one marked by extreme self-confidence. He made a point of speaking in the House of Commons without notes.

Crossing the floor


Mosley was at this time falling out with the Conservatives over Irish policy, objecting to the use of the Black and Tans to suppress the Irish population. Eventually he 'crossed the floor' and sat as an Independent MP on the opposition side of the House of Commons. Having built up a following in his constituency, he retained it against a Conservative challenge in the 1922and 1923 general elections.

The liberal Westminster Gazette wrote that he was "the most polished literary speaker in the Commons, words flow from him in graceful epigrammatic phrases that have a sting in them for the government and the conservatives. To listen to him is an education in the English language, also in the art of delicate but deadly repartee. He has human sympathies, courage and brains."[4] By 1924 he was growing increasingly attracted to the Labour Party, which had just formed a government, and in March he joined. He immediately joined the Independent Labour Party (ILP) as well and allied himself with the left.

When the government fell in October, Mosley had to choose a new seat as he believed that Harrow would not re-elect him as a Labour candidate. He therefore decided to oppose Neville Chamberlain in Birmingham Ladywood. An energetic campaign led to a knife-edge result but Mosley was defeated by 77 votes. His period outside Parliament was used to develop a new economic policy for the ILP, which eventually became known as the Birmingham Proposals; they continued to form the basis of Mosley's economics until the end of his political career.

In 1926, the Labour-held seat of Smethwick fell vacant and Mosley returned to Parliament after winning the resulting by-election on 21 December. Mosley felt the campaign was dominated by Conservative attacks on him for being too rich and claims he was covering up his wealth.[5]

Mosley and his wife Cynthia were ardent Fabians in the 1920s and 1930s. Mosley appears in a list of names of Fabians from Fabian News and Fabian Society Annual Report 1929–31. He was Kingsway Hall lecturer in 1924 and Livingstone Hall lecturer in 1931.

Office


Mosley then made a bold bid for political advancement within the Labour Party. He was close to Ramsay MacDonald and hoped for one of the great offices of state, but when Labour won the 1929 general election he was appointed only to the post of Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster, de facto Minister without Portfolio, outside the Cabinet. He was given responsibility for solving the unemployment problem, but found that his radical proposals were blocked either by his superior James Henry Thomas or by the Cabinet.[citation needed]

Mosley was always impatient and eventually put forward a whole scheme in the 'Mosley Memorandum' to find it rejected by the Cabinet; he then resigned in May 1930. At the time, the weekly liberal paper The Nation described his move: "The resignation of Sir Oswald Mosley is an event of capital importance in domestic politics...We feel that Sir Oswald has acted rightly—as he has certainly acted courageously—in declining to share any longer in the responsibility for inertia."[4] He attempted to persuade the Labour Party Conference in October, but was defeated again.

The memorandum called for high tariffs to protect British industries from international finance, for state nationalisation of industry and a programme of public works to solve unemployment. Thirty years later, in 1961, R. H. S. Crossman described the memorandum: "... this brilliant memorandum was a whole generation ahead of Labour thinking."[4]


New Party


Determined that the Labour Party was no longer suitable, Mosley quickly founded the New Party. Its early parliamentary contests, in the 1931 Ashton-under-Lyne by-election and subsequent by-elections, were successful only in splitting the vote and allowing the Conservative candidate to win. Despite this, the organisation gained support among many Labour and Conservative MPs, who agreed with his corporatist economic policy—among those who agreed were Aneurin Bevan andHarold Macmillan. It also gained the endorsement of the Daily Mail newspaper, headed at the time by Alfred Harmsworth, 1st Viscount Northcliffe.[citation needed]

The New Party increasingly inclined to fascist policies, but Mosley was denied the opportunity to get his party established when the 1931 election was suddenly called. All its candidates, including Mosley, lost their seats. As the New Party gradually became more radical and authoritarian, many previous supporters defected from it. Shortly after the election, he was described by the Manchester Guardian:

When Sir Oswald Mosley sat down after his Free Trade Hall speech in Manchester and the audience, stirred as an audience rarely is, rose and swept a storm of applause towards the platform—who could doubt that here was one of those root-and-branch men who have been thrown up from time to time in the religious, political and business story of England. First that gripping audience is arrested, then stirred and finally, as we have said, swept off its feet by a tornado of peroration yelled at the defiant high pitch of a tremendous voice.[4]

Fascism


After his failure in 1931 Mosley went on a study tour of the 'new movements' of Italy's Benito Mussolini and other fascists, and returned convinced that it was the way forward for him and for Britain. He determined to unite the existing fascist movements and created the British Union of Fascists (BUF) in 1932. The BUF was anti-communist and protectionist. It claimed membership as high as 50,000, and had the Daily Mail[6] and Daily Mirror[7] among its earliest (if, in the case of the Mail, short-lived) supporters.[8]

Among his followers were the novelist Henry Williamson, military theorist J. F. C. Fuller and the future "Lord Haw Haw", William Joyce.

Mosley had found problems with disruption of New Party meetings, and instituted a corps of black-uniformed paramilitary stewards, nicknamed blackshirts. The party was frequently involved in violent confrontations, particularly with Communist and Jewish groups and especially in London.[9] At a large Mosley rally at Olympia on 7 June 1934 mass brawling broke out when hecklers were removed by blackshirts, resulting in bad publicity. This and the Night of the Long Knives in Germany led to the loss of most of the BUF's mass support. The party was unable to fight the 1935 general election.


In October 1936 Mosley and the BUF attempted to march through an area with a high proportion of Jewish residents, and violence resulted between local and nationally organised protesters trying to block the march and police trying to force it through, since called the Battle of Cable Street. At length Sir Philip Game the Police Commissioner disallowed the march from going ahead and the BUF abandoned it.

Mosley continued to organise marches policed by the blackshirts, and the government was sufficiently concerned to pass the Public Order Act 1936, which, amongst other things, banned political uniforms and quasi-military style organisations and came into effect on 1 January 1937.

In the London County Council elections in 1937 the BUF stood in three of its East London strongholds, polling up to a quarter of the vote. Mosley then made most of the employees redundant, some of whom then defected from the party with William Joyce. As the European situation moved towards war, the BUF began nominating Parliamentary candidates and launched campaigns on the theme of Mind Britain's Business. After the outbreak of war he led the campaign for a negotiated peace. He was at first received well but, after the invasion of Norway, public opinion of him gave way to hostility and Mosley was nearly assaulted.

Internment


On 23 May 1940 Mosley, who had continued his peace campaign, was interned under Defence Regulation 18B, along with most active fascists in Britain, and the BUF was later proscribed. His wife Diana Mitford was also interned, shortly after the birth of their son Max; they lived together for most of the war in a house in the grounds of Holloway prison.

Mosley used the time to read extensively on classical civilisations. Mosley refused visits from most BUF members, but on 18 March 1943 Dudley and Norah Elam (who had been released by then) accompanied Unity Mitford to see her sister Diana. Mosley agreed to be present because he mistakenly believed Diana and Unity's mother Lady Redesdale was accompanying Unity.[10]

The Mosleys were released in November 1943, when Mosley was suffering with phlebitis, and spent the rest of the war under house arrest. On his release from prison he stayed with his sister-in-law Pamela Mitford, followed shortly by a stay at the Shaven Crown Hotel in Shipton-under-Wychwood. He then purchased Crux Easton, near Newbury, with Diana. He and his wife were the subject of much media attention.[11] The war ended what remained of his political reputation.


Post-war politics


After the war Mosley was contacted by his former supporters and persuaded to rejoin active politics. He formed the Union Movement, calling for a single nation-state covering the continent of Europe (known as Europe a Nation), and later attempted to launch a National Party of Europe to this end. The Union Movement's meetings were often physically disrupted, as Mosley's meetings had been before the war, and largely by the same opponents.

This led to Mosley's decision, in 1951, to leave Britain and live in Ireland. He later moved to Paris. Of his decision to leave, he said, "You don't clear up a dungheap from underneath it."[citation needed]

Mosley briefly returned to Britain in order to fight the 1959 general election at Kensington North, shortly after the1958 Notting Hill race riots. Concerns over immigration were beginning to come into the spotlight for the first time and Mosley led his campaign on this issue. When Mosley's final share of the vote was less than he expected, he launched a legal challenge to the election on the basis that the result had been rigged. The result was upheld.

In 1961 he took part in a debate at University College London about Commonwealth immigration, seconded by a young David Irving.[12] He contested the 1966 general election at Shoreditch and Finsbury, where he fared even worse than he had in 1959. He wrote his autobiography, My Life (1968), and made a number of television appearances before retiring. In 1977, by which time he was suffering from Parkinson's disease, he was nominated for the post of Rector of the University of Glasgow. In the subsequent election he polled over 100 votes but finished bottom of the poll.

Death

Mosley died of natural causes on 3 December 1980 in his Orsay home, aged 84. He was cremated in Paris and his ashes were scattered on the pond at Orsay. His papers are housed at the University of Birmingham Special Collections.

In popular culture


Mosley's rising influence before the Second World War provoked alarm and reaction against would-be populist dictators by major cultural figures of the time:

  • A character in the novel The Holy Terror (1939) by H. G. Wells is a bombastic British fascist with an aristocratic background, strikingly similar to Mosley.
  • "Sir Roderick Spode" in P.G. Wodehouse's novels parodies Mosley. Spode, a blustering bully who is described as an "amateur dictator", heads a British fascist "Black Shorts" organization.

Mosley's attempts to promote his views after the war resulted in continued critical reaction:

  • In the 1986 film version of Colin MacInnes's book Absolute Beginners, Steven Berkoff appears as a Mosley-esque character billed as "The Fanatic", who delivers a (rhyming) hate speech at a fascist election rally; it is generally assumed this is meant to be Mosley during his brief resurgence in 1958.
  • A semi-fictionalized depiction of Mosley, the BUF, and Battle of Cable Street appears in the 2010 BBC Wales revival of Upstairs, Downstairs, which is set in 1936.
  • The original version of the Elvis Costello song "Less Than Zero" is an attack on Mosley and his politics, but US listeners assumed that the "Mr Oswald" referred to was Lee Harvey Oswald and Costello obligingly wrote an alternative lyric in which it was.[15]:74,84
  • In the popular BBC science fiction sitcom Goodnight Sweetheart, 1990s time traveller Gary Sparrowattempts to educate 1940s East End barmaid Phoebe Bamford on the subject of racism, only to have Phoebe rebut him by saying: "You can be a right twit sometimes Gary. Me and dad were down Cable Street in '36 standing up to Mosley and his Blackshirts. I know all about Fascists, thank you very much!" (Series 3, Episode 25, "The Yanks are Coming").

Mosley appears in alternative history stories:

  • In the film It Happened Here, Mosley is implied to be the puppet leader of German-occupied Britain.
  • In Guy Walters's alternative history novel The Leader, Mosley has taken power as "The Leader" of Great Britain in 1937. King Edward VIII is still on the throne, Winston Churchill is a prisoner on the Isle of Man, and Prime Minister Mosley is conspiring with Adolf Hitler about the fate of Britain's Jewish population.
  • In Philip Roth's alternative history novel The Plot Against America, a secret pact between PresidentCharles Lindbergh and Hitler is said to include an agreement to impose Mosley as the ruler of a German-occupied Britain with America's blessing after a sham attempt by Lindbergh to convince Churchill to negotiate peace with Hitler would fail.
  • In Kim Newman's alternative history novel The Bloody Red Baron, Mosley is shot down and killed in 1918 by Erich von Stalhein (from the Biggles series by W. E. Johns), with a character later commenting that "a career has been ended before it was begun."
See Also:

Notes

  1. ^ a b Philip Rees. Biographical Dictionary of the Extreme Right Since 1890. University Press. Cambridge.
  2. ^ Amato quotes national archive document HO 283/11, which states that among the property seized following Mosley's arrest by the British government in 1940 was correspondence between Mosley and Beaumont dating from 1937. Amato, Joseph Anthony (2002). Rethinking home: a case for writing local history. Berkeley: University of California Press. pp. 278–79. ISBN 9780520232938. 9780520232938.
  3. ^ Barnes, James J.; Patience P. Barnes (2005). Nazis in pre-war London, 1930–1939: the fate and role of German party members and British sympathizers. Brighton: Sussex Academic Press.ISBN 9781845190538. 9781845190538.
  4. ^ a b c d Mosley, Diana (1977). A Life of Contrasts. Hamish Hamilton.
  5. ^ Sir Oswald Mosley, "My Life", Thomas Nelson & Sons, 1968, p. 190.
  6. ^ "Daily Mail". British Newspapers Online.
  7. ^ Chris Horrie, Revealed: the fascist past of the Daily Mirror, The Independent, 11 November 2003
  8. ^ Cameron, James (1979). Yesterday's Witness. British Broadcasting Corporation, p. 52.
  9. ^ Mark Gould (22 February 2009). "Last reunion for war heroes who came home to fight the fascists". The Independent.
  10. ^ McPherson, Angela; McPherson, Susan (2011). Mosley's Old Suffragette - A Biography of Norah Elam.ISBN 978-1-4466-9967-6.
  11. ^ Rules of the Game, Beyond the Pale by Nicholas Mosley p503
  12. ^ http://www.fpp.co.uk/online/08/03/images/Mosley_at_UCL.gif
  13. ^ "'Worst' historical Britons list". BBC News. 2005-12-27. Retrieved 2010-06-21.
  14. ^ Not The Nine O'Clock News: "Baronet Oswald Ernald Mosley", Some of the Corpses are Amusing
  15. ^ Thomson, Graeme (2004). Complicated Shadows: The Life and Music of Elvis Costello. New York: Canongate. ISBN 9781841957968.

[edit] Bibliography

  • My Life, Mosley's autobiography.
  • Oswald Mosley, Robert Skidelsky
  • Fascism in Britain, Richard Thurlow
  • Blackshirt, Stephen Dorril, Viking Publishing, ISBN 0-670-86999-6
  • Rules of the Game, Beyond the Pale, Nicholas Mosley, ISBN 0-7126-6536-6
  • Haw-Haw: the tragedy of William and Margaret Joyce, Nigel Farndale, Macmillan, London, 2005
  • Hurrah for the Blackshirts!': Fascists and Fascism in Britain between the Wars, Martin Pugh, Random House, 2005, ISBN 0-224-06439-8
  • Oswald Mosley and the New Party, Matthew Worley, Palgrave Macmillan, 2010, ISBN 9780230206977
External Links

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/ tol/sport/formula_1/ article3649197.ece

From The Times
March 31, 2008


Max Mosley faces calls to quit as Formula One chief after ‘Nazi’ orgy

Ashling O’Connor and Ed Gorman






Plaque commemorating the Battle of Cable Street



The Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster is, in modern times, a ministerial office[1] in the government of the United Kingdom that includes as part of its duties, the administration of the estates and rents of the Duchy of Lancaster.[2] The Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster is appointed by the Sovereign on the advice of the Prime Minister.[3][4]

The Chancellor is 'answerable to Parliament' for the running of the Duchy.[5] But, the involvement of the Chancellor in the running of the day-to-day affairs of the Duchy is slight, and the office is held by a senior politician whose main role is something quite different. For example, as of 2011 the incumbent is Lord Strathclyde, who is also the Leader of the House of Lords.


History


Originally, the Chancellor was the chief officer in the daily management of the Duchy of Lancaster and the County Palatine of Lancaster (a county palatine merged into the Crown in 1399), but that estate is now run by a deputy, leaving the Chancellor to serve in effect as an additional Minister without Portfolio. The position has often been given to a junior Cabinet minister with responsibilities in a particular area of policy for which there is no department with an appropriate portfolio.

In 1491, an office of Vice Chancellor was also created. The position is now held by the Chancery Division Judge in the north-west, and no longer appointed to that position as legal officer of the Duchy.


Modern times


In recent times, the Chancellor's duties (administrative, financial, and legal) have been said to occupy an average of one day a week. Under the Promissory Oaths Act 1868, the Chancellor is required to take the oath of allegiance and the Official Oath.[6]

The Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster is entitled to a salary under the Ministerial and other Salaries Act 1975, but section 3 of the Act provides that the salary "shall be reduced by the amount of the salary payable to him otherwise than out of moneys so provided in respect of his office".[7] The Office of the Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster is part of the Cabinet Office.[8]

Until recently, the holder of the title also served as one of the Ministers for the Cabinet Office. This was true of Alan Milburn, who was given the title by Labour PM Tony Blair in 2004 and at the same time rejoined the Cabinet.

The current Chancellor is Thomas Galbraith, 2nd Baron Strathclyde, who is also the Leader of the House of Lords. Between 2003 and 2009 the holder of that office had been given the sinecure title of Lord President of the Council while the Chancellorship had been given to the Minister for the Cabinet Office. However, in the reshuffle of 5 June 2009, Lord Mandelson was made Lord President and, as the new Cabinet Office Minister Tessa Jowell retained her previous sinecure asPaymaster General. This left the Chancellorship to the Baroness Royall.[9] In David Cameron's first cabinet, announced on 12 May 2010, the Chancellorship remained with the Leader of the House of Lords as the office of Lord President of the Council was given to the Deputy Prime Minister, Nick Clegg.[10]



http://www.timesonline.co.uk/ tol/sport/formula_1/ article3649197.ece


From The Times
March 31, 2008

Archive Article

Max Mosley faces calls to quit as Formula One chief after ‘Nazi’ orgy

Ashling O’Connor and Ed Gorman

Max Mosley, one of the most powerful men in world sport, was under pressure to resign as boss of Formula One’s governing body last night after he was exposed enjoying a Nazi-style orgy with five prostitutes.

Jewish groups condemned the behaviour of Mosley, 67, whose father, Sir Oswald, was the leader of the British Union of Fascists and a friend of Adolf Hitler.

Mr Mosley was caught on video by the News of the World with five women in an underground “torture chamber” in Chelsea, where he spent several hours allegedly indulging in sado-masochistic sex.

The Oxford-educated former barrister, who is president of the Fédération Internationale de l’Automobile (FIA), reenacted a concentration camp scene in which he played the role of both guard and inmate. 


Speaking in German and brandishing a leather whip, he beat the women after allowing himself to be subjected to a humiliating inspection for lice and an interrogation in chains.

Mr Mosley, a close confidant of Bernie Ecclestone, who holds the commercial rights to Formula One, paid £2,500 cash for the sex services, the Sunday newspaper claimed.

His antics stunned Jewish leaders and motorsport insiders. “This is sick and depraved,” Karen Pollock, chief executive of the Holocaust Educational Trust, said. “For anyone to be in such a position of influence and power beggars belief. I am absolutely appalled.”

Stephen Smith, director of the Holocaust Centre, said: “As Mr Mosley has condemned the racism in motor sport he should live up to the standards he sets. This is an insult to millions of victims, survivors and their families. He should apologise. He should resign from the sport.”

Sir Stirling Moss, the former world champion racing driver whose father was Jewish, said: “I don’t see how he can continue. I hope he can, frankly, because I think he’s very good at what he does. I suppose what goes on behind closed doors is his business but when a thing comes out like this . . . it’s an absolute shocker.”

Mr Mosley, whose two years in Germany as a young teenager gave him fluency in the language, has helped to turn Formula One into a multi-billion-pound business since he became FIA president in 1993. The FIA is a nonprofit association that represents the interests of motoring organisations and car users worldwide.

Mr Ecclestone said that he was shocked by the allegations but did not expect Mr Mosley’s position to be affected. “I’ve known him an awful long time. If somebody had told me this without the evidence I would have found it difficult to believe,” he said.

“Assuming it’s all true, what people do privately is up to them. I don’t honestly believe [it] affects the sport in any way. Knowing Max it might be all a bit of a joke. You know, it’s one of those things where he’s sort of taking the p***, rather than anything against Jewish people.”

Mr Mosley, who lives in Monaco, is understood to be pursuing legal action against the News of The World for breach of privacy. His spokesman said: “This is a matter between Mr Mosley and the newspaper in question and the FIA has no comment.”

Martin Brundle, the driver-turned-pundit who was recently the subject of a libel action brought by Mr Mosley, said: “It’s not appropriate behaviour for the head of any global body such as the FIA.”

Mr Mosley, who once harboured ambitions to be a parliamentary candidate for the Conservative Party, is known for being eccentric and outspoken. Nicknamed “Mad Max” by some in motorsport, he once said he didn’t mind flak because he came from a family used to getting it all the time.

Hitler was present at the wedding of his father, Oswald, and mother, Diana, which took place in Joseph Goebbels’s drawing room. They were interned in Holloway and Brixton prisons for their Fascist connections.

Most recently, Mr Mosley stood up against racism in Formula One by giving warning of immediate sanctions if there was a repeat of the abuse against Lewis Hamilton, the only black driver on the circuit, in Barcelona during testing this season.

The wit and wisdom of Max Mosley

He goes around dressed up as a Thirties music hall man. He’s a certified halfwit” 
On Sir Jackie Stewart (a dyslexic)

There was always a certain amount of trouble until I came into motor racing. ‘Mosley, he must be some relation of Alf Mosley, the coachbuilder'. And I thought to myself, ‘I’ve found a world where they don’t know about Oswald Mosley’. And it has always been a bit like that in motor racing: nobody gives a darn” 
On being the son of Sir Oswald Mosley

There is always somebody new. If it wasn’t him it would be one of the other new stars . . . There is a tendency to exaggerate the importance of Hamilton” 
On British motor racing star Lewis Hamilton



http://www.guardian.co.uk/ media/2008/apr/07/ newsoftheworld. newsinternational


News of the World in legal battle with Mosley



The News of the World is fighting two legal actions by the formula one boss, Max Mosley, after it ran a story accusing him of participating in Nazi-style orgies with prostitutes.

Yesterday the News of the World splash featured more details and transcripts of Mosley's meeting with five prostitutes in London and said it would be sending videos of his visit to a Chelsea flat to the FIA, formula one's governing body, of which he is president.

Last week, the tabloid removed a video of Mosley – the son of the British fascist Sir Oswald Mosley – from its website, pending the outcome of a high court injunction banning the tabloid from showing images from the clip.

Steeles, the law firm acting for Mosley, who is under pressure to step down as president of the FIA, applied for the injunction at a hearing on Friday.

"We had earlier agreed to remove footage from our website pending a decision, which is expected next week," the paper said on its website at the weekend.

Mr Justice Eady is considering the matter and is expected to issue a decision within days.

News of the World lawyer Tom Crone said on the paper's website on Saturday: "Given Mr Mosley's denials as to what we say our film depicts, we are surprised he seeks to stop us giving the public a chance to make up their own minds."

Mosley, who has recruited the former News of the World editor Phil Hall to advise on PR matters, is also suing the tabloid for invasion of privacy.

"The News of the World stands by its story and will vigorously defend all legal action from Mr Mosley," a spokeswoman from the paper said today.

· To contact the MediaGuardian news desk emaileditor@mediaguardian.co.uk or phone 020 7239 9857. For all other inquiries please call the main Guardian switchboard on 020 7278 2332.

· If you are writing a comment for publication, please mark clearly "for publication".

· This article was amended on Tuesday April 8 2008. A spokeswoman for the News of the World said that the paper would "vigorously" (not rigorously, as we said in the article above) defend all legal action from FIA President Max Mosley. This has been corrected.


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