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The BBC's bullies can dish it out, but they can't take it

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CatWoman Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-18-03 04:59 PM
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The BBC's bullies can dish it out, but they can't take it
To an American, there is much that sounds awfully familiar about Beebwatch - the series launched last week by the Daily Telegraph editor Charles Moore to root out "soft left" bias in the BBC. Moore's determination to inflict daily humiliation on the network coincides neatly with efforts by Rupert Murdoch and the Tory opposition to deprive Britain's great broadcasting institution of its licence fee, just as its charter is coming up for renewal.
At the very least, this campaign aims to intimidate the BBC's management from broadcasting anything that might offend reactionary sensibilities; but its ultimate goal is the crippling, or even the abolition, of the BBC itself.

Moore's tone echoes the American right's incessant whining about "liberal media bias". And while British broadcasting is structurally (and qualitatively) very different from its US counterpart, the conservative agenda in both countries is identical: to stigmatise dissent and to dominate discourse.

Once upon a time, there were "liberal media" in America - or at least there were major media outlets unafraid of being called liberal. Liberal television correspondents dared to expose the depredations of Joe McCarthy, the awful conditions of migrant farm labourers and the killing effects of tobacco. Liberal newspapers reported hidden truths about the Vietnam war, despite threats and lawsuits from the Nixon White House.

By exposing Nixon's corruption, the American media establishment ultimately forced his resignation. But before he relinquished power, Nixon set the machinery of his revenge in motion. It was the old redbaiter who began a shrill crusade against the "liberal media", using Spiro Agnew, his vice-president.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,3604,1044416,00.html
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