Anti-social media
Are academics against social media? Continue reading
Evan ‘elp us
Wonderful moment for Evan Davies on R4’s Today programme this morning. They’d found him a deserving poor person to pour scorn on the government’s plans to cap benefit payments to large families.
Or so they thought. But it all went a bit wrong.
The poor are always with us
It is axiomatic at the BBC the poor are downtrodden, oppressed, aching to be liberated by their betters, etc. etc; and that the women in particular are all moneyless versions of Lady Toynbee.
Alas, the interviewee proved to be neither.
Eileen McCoy, a robust and articulate Catholic mother of ten, wasted no time in informing Evan that her construction-worker husband had been priced out of his job by immigrants; and that the council had given all the large houses to the ethnic minorities.
And she blamed the previous government! Way off-message!
Nurse! Nurse!
You could hear Evan almost fainting with horror as he tried to move the discussion on.
Lazy blogger!
Time to start blogging here again, I think.
Yes, I have other blogs. But I’ve neglected this one, and it needs some attention.
My readers (lol) don’t appear to have missed my posts, it’s true.
Still…one more free-market voice crying in the statist wilderness…I mean, it can’t hurt.
AOL to hire hundreds of journalists
Job lots
The company will be “the largest net hirer of journalists in the world next year,” Eun said.
The letter of the Laws
New politics
Above the Laws
This is almost a conditioned reflex amongst the nomenklatura. It betrays a total lack of interest in what is right and a belief that there is always a way out via the fine print.
Against the Laws
What is astonishing, however, is the following paragraph in the Daily Telegraph’s story:
But the whole story hinges on the fact that Laws was paying rent to a landlord who was also his long-standing lover.
Laws wasn’t exposed in the original expenses scandal because he didn’t tell the truth about this.
So how do you do the story without mentioning it?
And why should he get a pass?
Equal before the Laws
Would the Telegraph have been so ludicrously fastidious had Laws been paying rent to his female lover?
(That’s a rhetorical question, by the way. There are no prizes. Read the terms and conditions carefully, though, and…well, you never know…)
The importance of a good school
Sorry…sorry…
I meant to say, as yet more MPs enter the Labour Party leadsdship contest, this piece in the Guardian shows how important it is to get a decent education to succeed in politics today.
The brothers grim
The piece reports, inter alia, on the Ed Balls campaign launch, commenting on the similarity between Balls and the other candidates, the Milliband brothers: PPEs at Oxford, jobs in the Labour apparat, then a parachute drop into a safe seat.
When I were a lad…
In response, Ed “Man of the People” Balls says that he “was born in Norwich, grew up just down the road in Nottingham”.
Fee by gum
He might have added that he went to a fee-paying school, Nottingham High School. (I expect he forgot.)
Well schooled
So, if he wins, it will mean nearly all of the Westminster parties will have leaders who went to fee-paying schools: Balls, Cameron, Clegg and Lucas.
Well, it’s equality of a sort, I suppose.
Here be dragons
An aside: the Guardian says:
Basildon isn’t in the Midlands. Unless you live in N4.
Will paywalls save the press?
Will they, won’t they?
Rusbridger thinks they won’t; Witherow is gambling that they will. But both admitted they were sailing in uncharted waters.
Rusbridger was candid enough to say that if the paywalls worked, then the Guardian would have to rethink its view.
Fee at the point of need
And he also made a telling point about the proposed charges: the subscription fees, though trivial to UK readers, could be prohibitive to readers in poor countries – which would undermine the global reach of the UK media.
Someday my print won’t come
It wasn’t long, of course, before someone asked the obvious question: why not just dump print and all its associated costs – production, distribution, and disposal? Wouldn’t that be the best way to save money?
CSM goes weekly
There’s a model out there: the Christian Science Monitor, an internet pioneer among newspapers, printed its last daily edition on on March 27, 2009 after announcing losses of $18.9 million per year. The CSM now runs its news operation on the web, and prints once a week.
Could be the shape of things to come? Listen to the show and see what you think.
Guardian leaps off fence…sort of…in a way
As the editorial put it, with typical Guardian humility: General election 2010: The liberal moment has come.
Except, of course, in constituencies where the Tories might win, where it is backing Labour.
Rattus rats ‘r’ us
My advice: jump. It’s going down.
Link-shrinking at Lincoln: update
Also, it’s a first-class example of collaboration between CERD, the Library, and two students (Nick Jackson and Daniel Ionescu) from different disciplines.
Isn’t this just the kind of joint project we need more of?