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June 22, 2006
A SUPERB DEMOLITION - PART 3Squeaky Spleen - Beaumont Strikes BackIn Parts 1 and 2 we analysed what Observer editor, Roger Alton, described as “a superb demolition of Chomsky” by the newspaper’s foreign editor Peter Beaumont. In the event, Beaumont’s review of Chomsky’s book, Failed States,
generated a flood of criticism on the Guardian Unlimited website: http://blogs.guardian.co.uk/observer/archives/2006/ This post from ‘mikeolive’ summed up the reaction of a number of people:
Curiously, the Observer shut down the blog on June 21 - three days after Beaumont’s article appeared in the paper - so that no more comments could be posted. The Observer’s weblog moderator supplied this explanation:
This cannot be taken seriously. A far more plausible explanation is that the Observer was embarrassed by the overwhelming number of critical comments from readers. On the same day as his review appeared, Beaumont published an online article:
‘Microscope on Medialens,’ (Beaumont, June 18, 2006; http://observer.guardian.co.uk/ Whilst Beaumont’s book review was superficial and poorly researched, this was little more than a tantrum. Media Lens, it seems, produces “nasty emails”, is “run by a couple of acolytes of Noam Chomsky, and serviced by a couple of dozen die-hard supporters“. We are an “irritating site” given to “hyper-ventilating” about this and that, targeting journalists and “anyone else who needs an email kicking”. In short, we are e-hooligans stalking the web in size nine boots. As we have noted many times, it matters little how dissidents actually behave, or what they argue, the mainstream will always focus on alleged anger, irrational hatred and other mania as a strategy of demonisation. Beaumont was unwilling to challenge even one of the thousands of arguments and facts published in 2,000 pages of Media Alerts and in our book Guardians Of Power - so, instead, our ‘nastiness’ was the focus of attention. Even the alleged anger of members of the public who read and respond to our Media Alerts was used to discredit us. The reason is clear - Beaumont knows that we ourselves do +not+ send angry abuse to journalists. Very few of our readers do, either, if our inbox is any guide. Beaumont’s smear was so far-fetched that it descended into a kind of literary slapstick. He wrote of our website:
What is so marked is the deep dislike of public participation in even the most urgent and serious political issues of our time. To write an email challenging a journalist’s argument is to “target” them. To encourage readers to send polite comments is to transform journalists into “victims” of “an email kicking”. But there is much here that just doesn’t add up. What, after all, is the difference between scores of individuals sending messages to the Guardian Unlimited blog and sending emails direct to media inboxes? Journalists are not compelled to read either the posts or the emails - both can simply be ignored or deleted. And if our practice of inviting comment is so despicable, why does the Guardian website do the same on its ‘Comment Is Free’ blog?:
This is chilling stuff. Why does Beaumont not rage against his own newspaper for setting him up for “an email kicking”? In reality, Beaumont and Alton resent being subjected to the kind of rational challenges from which they have traditionally been protected. For decades the mainstream media has wielded massive power with minimal accountability and right of reply. Responses have been limited to whichever letters the editors deigned to allow on the letters page. Because readers knew that serious criticism of media performance had little or no chance of being published, few went to the trouble of putting pen to paper. This is surely one reason why mainstream journalism is held in relatively high esteem - there has simply been no means of exposing the superficiality, incompetence and deep structural bias of the media to a wide audience. “The Observer is a conversation,” Beaumont continues. “It is not a commune, so some voices are louder than others, but it remains a conversation. “Which is more than can be said for groups such as Medialens with their endless email campaigns. Because there is no conversation between them and their victims.” The Observer is not primarily a conversation; it is a business. All “conversation” must step carefully around issues threatening this bottom line concern. And so we find no conversation about the impact of the profit motive on freedom of speech. There is no conversation about the Observer’s relationship with fossil fuel advertisers in an age of catastrophic climate change. There is no conversation about the corporate domination of culture, economics, party politics and foreign policy. The point about the conversation we encourage is that it is not constrained by the unwritten rules of corporate employment - where to be seen as overly critical of media companies or the government can damage, stall or wreck careers. Beaumont concludes as damningly as possible:
Our experience has been very different. Time and again we have been dismayed to see sincere and reasonable emails from readers met with breathtaking arrogance and contempt. Beaumont’s criticism of us, for example, could hardly be squeakier! As for “shrill“, in a 2003 Observer online debate, Beaumont advised questioners:
“Shrill” hardly seems adequate in describing Roger Alton’s “voice”. The Observer editor replied thus to one polite emailer:
But this earlier exchange between Alton and a restrained reader from South Korea says it all for us:
Our reader responded:
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