Trotta appeared to have no remorse whatsoever for what she had said.
Is this what Rupert Murdoch's petty, spiteful, poisonous media have brought us to in this country, jokes about killing our presidential candidates and pairing their names with those of mass murderers? Under the rules of the Federal Communications Commission as they existed before the Supreme Court gutted the Fairness Doctrine in 1987, Fox would have been hugely fined or closed as a thinly disguised Republican Party House organ...
Some are petitioning for Trotta to be banned from Fox, but it seems to me what is actually appropriate is an apology, from Rupert Murdoch himself, for all the false and vicious things he has purveyed to the American people through his phony bought and paid for "journalism." And if he won't apologize and reform, maybe it is time for a consumer boycott of Fox's major advertisers.
Monday, May 26, 2008
Viva Juan Cole!
The professor takes on Rupert Murdoch:
Tuesday, May 20, 2008
Murdoch's Zionist Crusade Continues
A former Australian government minister gets Murdoch media oxygen:
Now can I talk about the evils of militant Zionism?
Selective indignation, dear readers, is anti-Semitism.I hereby roundly denounce all violence, oppression and lies from all nations, parties, individuals and institutions. M'kay?
Now can I talk about the evils of militant Zionism?
Sunday, May 18, 2008
Who Bribed Bob Brown?
Greens senator Bob Brown says he was offered a $1 million bribe to support John Howard's media ownership laws in 2000. At the time, Brown and a handful of others held the balance of power in the Senate.
Update: Brown's gone to the cops with details of three offers. I've offered a few thoughts to Tim Dunlop. For example:
Senator Brown says he rejected the offer.Of course it could just as easily have been The Goanna who offered Mr Brown the big bribe. But it's worth noting that the story is being reported in Fairfax but not a word of it in the Murdoch media.
"I said no," he told ABC Radio National's Background Briefing.
"I just told the person putting the offer that I don't sleep too well - fortunately I sleep a lot better these days but I wasn't at the time - and if were to take up that offer I wouldn't sleep at all. I left it at that."
Update: Brown's gone to the cops with details of three offers. I've offered a few thoughts to Tim Dunlop. For example:
Brown has now detailed to police not one, not two, but three bribe offers. If the leader of a minor party is getting this many offers, we can only imagine what happens to those with real power. And yet we never hear anything about this dark side of Canberra politics.
Tim says Brown's "reasons for not mentioning it until now were pretty unconvincing". But does anyone really wonder why?
We Aussies live with the comfortable illusion that our nation is somehow above such base chicanery. It's an illusion propagated by a tightly controlled (not by the government) media.
And so it's no coincidence that the bribe allegedly on offer to Brown came in the form of free media coverage for his much-maligned party, who are routinely ignored by the mainstream media.
Thursday, May 1, 2008
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