20/03/2013

SAMIZDAT APPROACHES




Ever since the ‘expenses scandal’ MPs have been champing at the bit to bring retribution to the ‘gentlemen of the press’. Admittedly, the press are not perfect and yes, at times, they get things wrong. They sometimes attack the wrong people and for that they are punished. 

However, with the phone hacking and bribery accusations and the consequential criminal findings, it became clear that certain high profile media people sanctioned and presided over a regime of unforgivable intrusion and had inflicted untold harassment on vulnerable families and other individuals. That situation had to be stopped! Yes, press regulation need a major overhaul.


However, most of the things that the media did, and of which were quite rightly being complained about, were already offences under our current laws which simply weren’t enforced; which begs the question as to why the police were not enforcing the laws earlier and why the politicians were not asking the police to enforce those laws.


My only comments on the existing laws concerned the totally unbalanced rulings in respect of libel which for years have been stacked in favour of the well-heeled. This situation should have been addressed years ago, and should have been made more easily accessible to the ordinary person rather than being the preserve of the rich.


Nevertheless, for years ‘the freedom of the press’ has been a fundamental part of our freedom, and our freedom, through these political shenanigans, has now, in my mind, been diminished. All this political back biting and double-dealing which has dominated the news this week, is because of the frantic efforts to draw the Leveson proposals on press regulation to some kind of satisfactory conclusion that is satisfactory to all, including the ‘Hacked off’ brigade, who have their own reasons to get back at the press!


In my opinion, any legislation with the potential to inhibit freedom of speech is worrying. It evokes memories of Alexander Solzhenitsyn and the KGB.


It’s time Cameron, Clegg and young Wallace took a look across the pond and studied what the Americans call the ‘First Amendment to the US Constitution’ which says, ‘congress shall make no law abridging freedom of speech or of the press’ and if our political masters have forgotten that, then presumably, they’re also totally ignorant of the UN Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which says in Article 19: "Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and to seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers.


If Leveson has taught us anything it should be that we all should be prepared to suffer the occasional insult and upset in order to preserve a free market for the exchange of ideas, for it is from the resulting debate, that improvement results, and a better understanding of truth flows.


This so-called ‘Royal Charter’ is, in my opinion, yet another sinister development in the suppression of dissent and opinion, because it provides future politicians with the tools for control of the media.


Unfortunately, we appear to be governed by a generation of political pygmies and if they pass this Bill and invoke the underpinning of the charter with legislation, it's another nail in the coffin of freedom of a once great country.

Don't get me wrong, I was totally disgusted when I heard of some of the things that the press have done in the past; such as Hillsborough and the McCann's the Dowler's and Christopher Jefferies, to name but a few, however, a free press is and always will be needed. 


These are terrible times for British democracy and once again David Cameron proves that the answer is UKIP, who are the only party which opposes 'The State Regulation of the Press.'

3 comments:

  1. Indeed, these are young Mr Farages views upon it:

    Farage: We must not create anything that restricts freedom

    In the light of the deal on a Royal Charter for the restriction of the press, Nigel Farage MEP, the UKIP leader has reiterated UKIP’s absolute opposition to any political interference with the operations of a free press.

    “For this government, or any bunch of so-called politicians to support the legislative underpinning of a voluntary agreement to oversee the press is a huge mistake, and the first step on a very slippery slope”.

    He pointed out that he is himself a victim of the hacking scandal,

    “My own phone was hacked, but that is neither here nor there. Things go wrong in the press, as they do in every walk of life and business, but we already have legal redress. Criminal actions are criminal actions, and are already covered by the law. Those of us in my position already have recourse to the law. We must not create anything that restricts freedom”.

    “The fact that in the proposed regulation all things and all people are covered, is very disturbing, in Schedule 4 it says that it covers any printed document that includes “ containing news-related material” or any “website containing news-related material (whether or not related to a newspaper or magazine). That is your blog, your forum, your twitter feed, your Facebook page, in fact almost the whole of contemporary discourse. The only place left to speak out will be in the pub… and they are closing at 10 a week due to a series of ill thought out government measures”.

    “The code is required to deal with “preventing the public from being seriously misled”. One man’s misleading information is another man’s factual account. It will be used to suppress proper investigative journalism that informs the public.”

    “And then, when this all goes terribly wrong, as it will, it will require at least two-thirds of the members of each House to vote through a motion to amend or dissolve the Charter. Our Constitution has always set itself against the entrenching of laws, yet here is the Political Class trying to set this thing in stone. One must ask why a simple majority no longer suffices.”

    He went on,

    “Control of the media should not now, or ever, be in any way the responsibility of self-interested politicians. Any Government intervention almost always fails: this will fail. It is about politicians creating a cozy world of silence where they can live and act in peace and behave without public accountability. It is a huge mistake and is laughable in the age of the Internet. It is just completely the wrong thing to do. This is a Charter for the Suppression of the Press, not for its regulation. UKIP will fight these proposals as hard as we can, particularly through the leadership of Lord Stevens of Ludgate in the House of Lords”.

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  2. Did you know that Ukip officials passed on their memberers details to extreme left groups like Searchlight.?

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  3. I'll vote for anyone who can stop Taylor talking/writing about dog mess. He's at it again in the Labourtiser this week.

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