Friday, July 22, 2011

Murdoch scandal has exposed the scale of elite corruption...

The Tory operation to bury the phone-hacking scandal in spin and official inquiries is now in full flow. On his way back from Africa, David Cameron declared it was essential to get the whole business into perspective, echoing Rupert Murdoch's insistence that his competitors had got up "this hysteria". Today, the prime minister chided Ed Miliband for "chasing conspiracy theories" and claimed it was really Gordon Brown who had been in the pocket of the global media billionaire.

Meanwhile, News International pundits and others with their own reasons to stem the flood of revelations have been loudly insisting that the political clout of Murdoch's corporate colossus has been exaggerated. The hyper-regulated BBC is the real media monopoly, they say, and in any case the current fixation with phone hacking has meant no one is discussing bankers' bonuses and the threat of another financial meltdown. This is a "frenzy that has grown out of control", the Daily Mail complained.

(...)

If it were not for the uncovering of this cesspit, the Cameron government would be preparing to nod through the outright takeover of BSkyB by News International, taking its dominance of Britain's media and political world into Silvio Berlusconi territory. But what has been exposed now goes well beyond the hacking of murder victims and dead soldiers' families – or even the media itself. The scandal has lifted the lid on how power is really exercised in 21st-century Britain – in which the unreformed City and its bankers play a central part. Full story...

Don't miss:
  1. One after another, our institutions are tumbling... 
  2. 'Rupert Murdoch's only the start, the psyche of British politics has changed'
  3. Is there a more sickening sight than leaders sucking up to King Murdoch? 
  4. Murdoch and the rule of the oligarchy, and how elections are controlled... 
  5. Obama the puppet is irrelevant...
  6. Shut up! You're disturbing the elite...
  7. The Coca-colonisation of Swaziland... 
  8. Her name was Africa. His was France. Her name was silence. His was power. 

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