Friday, 21 April 2023

Vigorously Independent? Not Really.

Government-Funded Media? Elon Musk has instructed his Twitter minions to describe all the great public broadcasters of the world as “Government-funded Media”. The BBC’s been tagged. So has National Public Radio and the Public Broadcasting Service of the United States. Canada’s CBC has suffered the same indignity, while across the Tasman, the ABC has been similarly humiliated. Even here, at the bottom of the world, RNZ has been tagged as Government-funded Media.

ELON MUSK is on a mission from God. Or, at least he’s on a mission from the godlike position of the world’s second-richest man. Musk’s colossal wealth, and what it permitted him to discover, is the inspiration behind his mission. What did he discover? He discovered that Twitter, the social media platform he outmanoeuvred himself into purchasing, had allowed itself to become – without disclosing the fact – an arm of the United States national security apparatus.

It really pissed him off.

So much so, that Musk has instructed his Twitter minions to describe all the great public broadcasters of the world as “Government-funded Media”. The BBC’s been tagged. So has National Public Radio and the Public Broadcasting Service of the United States. Canada’s CBC has suffered the same indignity, while across the Tasman, the ABC has been similarly humiliated. Even here, at the bottom of the world, RNZ has been tagged as Government-funded Media.

To say these august bodies resent being so described would be a considerable understatement.

Megan Whelan, RNZ’s head of content, has gone on Twitter to denounce Musk’s description.

“RNZ’s editorial independence is enshrined in our charter and editorial policy. Twitter’s own policy defines government-funded media as cases where the government “may have varying degrees of government involvement over editorial content”, which does not apply to RNZ.”

According to Whelan: “Not only is our independence protected by the law, we guard it vigorously.”

Those familiar with the history of public broadcasting in New Zealand would probably balk at the word “vigorously”. They might even have some difficulty with the word “independence”.

As Wellington lawyer and Free Speech Union executive member, Stephen Franks, tweeted in response to Whelan’s protestations:

“Who determines your charter, appoints your Board, determines how much you can spend?”

When the answer to all three of these questions is: “the government of the day”; it’s hard to fault Musk’s designation.

What Whelan fails to acknowledge is that the public broadcasters’ social licence derives from the ordinary citizen’s well-founded suspicion of private media. At the time the great public broadcasters were being set up, in the 1920s and 30s, it seemed reasonable to offset the growing power of private media by establishing publicly-owned and funded networks answerable, ultimately, to the people’s elected representatives.

What that meant, however, was that public broadcasters could never be truly independent. Indeed, any assertion of editorial freedom that threatened to become excessively “vigorous” was bound to raise political eyebrows. The persons appointed to run public broadcasting networks necessarily required considerable diplomatic skills. The trick was to convey the appearance of editorial independence, while ensuring the organisation remained safely within the boundaries of political and cultural tolerance.

The very worst thing a public broadcaster can do is allow its audience to form the opinion that “their” broadcaster has an “agenda”. The moment the audience begins to feel that it is being preached to, and that those who refuse to convert to the new religion will no longer be heard, then public broadcasting is doomed. That’s why the principles of fairness and balance are so crucial to the survival of state-owned networks. People of all political persuasions (or nearly all) need to see and hear their ideas and beliefs carried on the public airwaves.

Elon Musk’s rage at the social media giants’ willingness to co-operate with the US national security apparatus is readily understood. Their active censorship of individuals and organisations accused of disseminating “misinformation, disinformation and malinformation” – as defined by the state – raises the spectre of totalitarianism. That the state-owned news media has actively colluded in what amounts to a public-private partnership dedicated to protecting the political narratives of the Powers-That-Be, can have only one outcome – the forfeiture of its social licence.

That public broadcasters all over the world are responding furiously to Musk’s “Government-funded media” tag merely confirms their estrangement from the public they are supposed to serve. Being government-funded is only a problem if the citizen’s faith in the state is being steadily eroded.

Back in the days of the NZBC (which quietly ran a political blacklist to ensure its National Party paymasters never became too alarmed by what was carried on the airwaves) being described as government-funded media would have been an unremarkable statement of fact.

That RNZ is affronted by Musk’s description smacks of an institutional guilty conscience.


This essay was originally published in The Otago Daily Times and The Greymouth Star of Friday, 21 April 2023.

30 comments:

  1. Well said Chris Trotter, Radio New Zealand actively cancels opinions that run counter to it's editorial policies that happen to coincide with some government policies. This most apparent with censorship of debate about gender and racial tensions. RNZ has effectively banned the woman's rights group Speak Up For women, Broadcast standards rules largely back up media's political. biases, This\happens across all media.But RNZ is taxpayer funded and has additional obligations that it largely ignores, Megan Whelan quotes obligation to allow a full range of opinions. But these obligations largely ignored by Public radio,Any complaints about breachesofn have to be lodged with the Ombudsman's office which is infamously overworked and under-resourced

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  2. A well-deserved guilt conscience too. While there’s no evidence of direct government involvement the progressive tilt of Radio NZ is readily apparent. The BSA statement accepting my complaint, over National Programme vehement denials, is quite clear. Newstalk, on the other hand, is quite open about its bias.

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  3. Thank you Chris, I did enjoy your chat with Sean on these issues. A great conversation; reasoned, enlightening and entertaining.
    For those that missed it, 30 minutes: https://youtu.be/g7QdVul0hmU

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  4. "That’s why the principles of fairness and balance are so crucial to the survival of state-owned networks. People of all political persuasions (or nearly all) need to see and hear their ideas and beliefs carried on the public airwaves."

    Got it in one. This is exactly what you no longer hear on RNZ. They have become increasingly aligned with the government over the past five years. They may guard their "independence" jealously, but it probably only means the government has no need to give RNZ detailed direction because they eagerly anticipate and preach the government line of their own accord. Government-funded? Yep, yep that's what it is.

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  5. Bit ironic Musk bitching about bias and censorship when he censors everyone who doesn't agree with him. I still prefer to believe anything on radio NZ then half the shite that's on private radio. I wonder if some of our private media could stand up to the scrutiny that Fox has had to undergo in the last year or so. Unfortunately, by settling Dominion has not only let down America, it's let down democracy. What Musk thinks I really don't care about, his is not an opinion that I value.

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  6. GS: "Musk ....... censors everyone who doesn't agree with him."

    Really? Last I looked on Twitter there was an abundance of views and opinions I'm sure Musk wouldn't agree with. The place seems remarkably, delightfully, heterodox; in marked contrast to the likes of RNZ etc.

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  7. To what extent can the media, the government and our institutions really be held to account when people are afraid to speak, under their own name, genuine, reasonable views for fear of damaging repercussions? What does it say about us and the free and generous society we thought we lived in?
    Karl du Fresne has been wrestling with the question of anonymity for commentators on his blog; his thoughtful piece, and the readers comments, are well worth a read.

    Excerpt: "The striking thing about all this is that if the commenters are to be believed, and I have no reason to doubt them, freedom of speech in New Zealand is far more precarious than most of us imagined. When people are afraid to speak their minds for fear of adverse consequences, we are effectively no better than Putin’s Russia or Xi Jinping’s China. You could be excused for wondering how long it will be before people start circulating New Zealand-style samizdats - the clandestine newsletters published by dissenters in the Soviet Union.

    Things may not be so bad here that people risk arrest or imprisonment for speaking out, but the chilling effect is no less real. The threat of ostracism, career derailment or denunciation on social media can be almost as powerful as the fear of a knock on the door from the secret police in the middle of the night.

    In fact in some ways it’s more insidious because it’s not declared or overt. Limitations on free speech are imposed not by statute or government edict, but by unwritten rules policed by vindictive zealots determined to make an example of anyone who challenges the dominant ideological consensus.

    This is something new. Even during the prime ministership of Robert Muldoon, which is generally considered the high-water mark of authoritarian government in modern New Zealand history, people didn’t feel this intimidated. You have to go back to the Public Safety Conservation Act, which was used to criminalise pro-wharfie comment during the 1951 waterfront dispute, to find a more oppressively censorious political environment – and that legislation was invoked on that occasion in response to a singular and relatively short-lived event. This time it’s open-ended. There’s no fixed time frame beyond which we can assume free speech will be permitted to flourish again."
    https://karldufresne.blogspot.com/2023/04/we-are-no-better-than-putins-russia-or.html

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  8. After the Mosque attack RNZ had a program Hidden in Plain Sight. Giles Beckford descended into "the sewer" to listen in.
    I made a complaint to the BSA about balance.
    I quoted one Chris Trotter:

    It wasn’t just the awfulness of life in the Labour Party in the late-1980s and early-90s that depressed Sonja Davies. As a shrewd observer of both local and international politics, she rapidly became aware that New Zealand was passing through a period of fundamental cultural and economic re-orientation. What concerned her most was how little New Zealanders were being told and, therefore, how little they knew, about the changes that were radically reshaping what it means to be a New Zealander.

    “If people had any idea about the scale of these changes,” she confided to me early in her first term as MP for Pencarrow,” they’d be horrified. It’s been decided that New Zealand’s future lies in Asia. That’s got massive implications – but most people haven’t a clue. No one asked them and certainly no one’s telling them.”

    http://bowalleyroad.blogspot.com/2015/07/chinese-whispers.html

    and Paul Spoonley quoting Heeringa

    Put simply, the government embarked on an optimistic plan of social engineering to transform New Zealand into an 'Asian' country; unfortunately, it did a poor job of publicising its intent or rationale. Under the slogan that a global economy required global citizens, an ambitious plan was hatched to restructure society around an Asian axis. But these initiatives moved too quickly for most people, ignored the need to consult or convince people of the importance of any fundamental shift, and did little to monitor the impact of immigration on public perception (Heeringa 1996).

    Heeringa, V. 1996, ‘The European Invasion’, Metro, June pp. 54-61

    I'm just watching a video of Paul Spoonley to the Fabians
    The Tea Party is working class (whereas he earned at least 10x what a bus driver earned)
    "on line extremism has real world consequences" [have to laugh at that]
    He would rather pull the plug on anti-Semites than expose the radical right to Jon Haidt [Why Nationalism beats Globalism] Eric Kaufmann, Gad Saad, Isaiah Berlin or Stephan Pinker.

    Under RNZ we are in that situation where we are having the neighbors over and have to hold our tongue until they are out of earshot.

    My metaphor is twin engined jet
    RNZ - Progressive upper class educated
    Commercial stations - Mitre10, Resene Mike Greer Homes, Bob Jones

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  9. I can live with the extreme bias but contrast and interview with Chris Luxon or any opposition MP on RNZ or State TV with the recent interview on Sky News Australia. The dislike from NZ journalists is barely concealed with constant interruptions and talking over replies.

    Link for any who missed it.

    https://www.skynews.com.au/world-news/global-affairs/nzs-opposition-leader-sits-down-with-sky-news-australia-in-wideranging-interview/video/fcc88d007062763ccc6d294e7c5dad52

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  10. A National Radio listener all my life, I have not listened for nearly 2 years, emailing my 'old friends' that it was not because of what they say, but because of what they don't say. To be honest though, this is mainly because the PIJF made the issue of government control of information so topical. Perhaps the public broadcaster has always been pretty middle of the road.
    Now we have the benefit of so many blogs, podcasts, political commentators, forums and private institutions etc. which list their members and their qualifications - from all over the world - that we can check, compare, investigate further. I don't subscribe to Twitter or Facebook, but always get a lot from lists of comments such as this. I ponder what all this means for 'society'- and think hard about Karl du Fresne's justified complaint about the cowardice of anonymity. Hmmm. It's a different world.

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  11. "Expand the floor of the cage*!" has been the appropriate quote from the libertarian left on government. The government is the cage that protects us from even worse predators of corporate and privately funded media - like Musk's who is now leaning libertarian far-right. The governments of various nations have protected us to some degree against some most egregious misinformation by the far-right (from Qanon to those that embraced the January sixth riot and its Kiwi mini-me last year. The increasingly proto-fascist former left (Russell Brand, Tim Pool et all) have, in turn, attacked this as totalitarian overreach - while cosying up to Trump supporters, climate deniers (Brand), and even promoting Pizzagate and Sandy Hook conspiracists (as Tim Pool did with a couple of days ago with Alex Jones). Some on the left, like Mussolini back in the day have shifted easily into a very dark place.

    Musk has joined the fray. So has Sean Plunket once a mainstay of RNZ opinion.
    I’m not sure what you are getting at. You seem to be attacking the centre left far more than the right these days. Have you too joined the fray
    *https://chomsky.info/199704__/

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  12. Regarding your interview with Sean Plunkett. He in fact is leading the way in gaslighting. Like a pickpocketer screaming “thief, thief!!“ to distract attention away from his crimes. "All the polls" show that the media are perceived to be "very, very left"? No. ...marginally liberal on social issues, perhaps. For example, a minority, 44% of Americans, believe the media to be "too liberal" - mostly regarding social issues, according to the Gallup poll. But not on economics.

    As neoliberal agendas advance throughout the world, aided and abetted by the media, even supposed Left" media (including Sean's when he was on RNZ way back when). Taxing and spending have become bad words, and the government is not to be trusted. Someone recently created a study of the Herald op-ed pieces...placing all political op-ed's within a table with bais leanings and links to the articles for one month. Those that clearly attacked the Labour government were two to one centre right anti-government to pro-centre-left government. Twice as many right-wing op-eds as left. Twice as many.
    Why would a media business funded and owned by conservative business interests (and the public media who are funded mostly by advertising) be anything but conservative? TV1 has an ex National MP as a CEO.

    I thought that the Posi Parker debacle was clearly presented in NZ media. But she was shown unwittingly being supported by neo-Nazis.. several times. You can’t decouple that unless you think that the footage was fabricated. Regarding universities pushing “one truth? So, we need to present “two sides” of the holocaust now in universities? Sure, some are overzealous. But “truth” can in fact be truth. And sometimes, the state gets it right.
    But then I think what you are saying Chris is that we are too distracted by social issues to the detriment of economic issues. That, too is a truth.

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  13. Anonymous said,
    "and think hard about Karl du Fresne's justified complaint about the cowardice of anonymity."

    Is something not quite adding up here?

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  14. Britbunkley, I don't know what common ground the Neo Nazi's have with the Speak Up For Women ladies, probably bugger all. Just trying to get noticed? A lot like the actual communists, complete with hammer and sickle flags, that were at the Albert Park debacle on the other side.

    That survey Sean was talking about was a Curia poll of 1,000 New Zealanders asked whether eight media outlets are seen as right leaning, left leaning or neutral. It is a survey of "perceptions", subjective not analytical IOW. Here it is: https://nzissues.com/Community/threads/media-bias-survey.42180/

    There is detailed analysis work being done, however not exactly up to date and doesn't include The Platform: https://mediabias.co.nz/

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  15. @britbunkley

    Whenever I hear this sort of "analysis" from a Far Lefter to whom everyone to their right is Far Right, I simply point out that if all these sources were as right-wing and Labour-bashing as you claim then RWNJ's like me would be paying attention to them: reading, watching, listening, and buying/subscribing.

    Instead, most of us abandoned them long ago and we're not coming back. If the Left are too then that's great news as it will kill them, which will be excellent.

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  16. You obviously haven't read widely enough David. I'm sure there are a wide variety of opinions that musk actually agrees with – the use of the N word seems to have increased, neo-Nazi comment seems to have gone berserk. But others aren't so fortunate.

    https://edition.cnn.com/2022/12/16/tech/musk-censors-press/index.html
    https://theintercept.com/2023/03/28/twitter-modi-india-punjab-amritpal-singh/
    https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2022/dec/16/twitter-rulebook-elon-musk-banning-journalists

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  17. "Karl du Fresne has been wrestling with the question of anonymity for commentators on his blog; his thoughtful piece, and the readers comments, are well worth a read."

    Yes, Karl's got a great free speech policy for people who write under their own name, who are allowed to insult ready much anybody any way they want, yet those who don't write under their own name for various good reasons, are not allowed to reply in kind.
    And I'm not misinterpreting, he actually said that in one of his pieces.

    It is a widespread myth among the extreme right that somehow radio NZ, and the media in general are biased towards the left. And yet you can easily find articles critical of government policy and government ministers. Honestly David, you are the one that was going on about people not being able to think – with conservatives "every accusation is an admission" as they say.
    It's the same with cancel culture. I can and have given numerous examples of the right cancelling people and yet you ignore this and carry on as if it's strictly a left-wing phenomenon. Which only reinforces my perception that you are not really thinking.

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  18. britbunkley
    "But she was shown unwittingly being supported by neo-Nazis.. several times. You can’t decouple that unless you think that the footage was fabricated."

    I'm not sure what the reasoning is here. Let's assume that neo-Nazis support her (in fact, let's say that Posie Parker is herself a neo-Nazi) – so what? What does (or would) that have to do with anything she may have to say?

    Either argument X is valid and sound, or it isn't. Who does and doesn't support argument X seems wholly irrelevant (although focusing on personalities rather than ideas is always favoured by those who are themselves without a good counter-argument).

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  19. David George said ", I don't know what common ground the Neo Nazi's have with the Speak Up For Women ladies'...I don't know what common ground they have, either. But they were clearly trying to establish some common ground. And they seem to succeed. "Parker has failed to distance herself from the far-Right at times." (Nevertheless, I personally agree that preventing Posi Parker from speaking was a travesty.)

    Thank you for the links. Not that I could give these small samples in a single pool much credence. I think that it is a good idea to establish what "left" and right" are before engaging people in a poll. They did not. For example, does "left" mean a belief in scientifically established concepts such as climate change or the efficacy of vaccines? Does "left" mean correcting injustices? What are "injustices"? Biases against groups with less power -Maori, Gay, trans, African Americans, women? It gets complicated.

    Or do we have "left" defining those that want to collectivise all private property? Direct democracy? The social control of the economy? That is the traditional left. I don't think any media in NZ has advocated any such policies. Not close. Even a marginal capital gains tax (like almost every other developed nation in the world has) is a hot "left" topic in the media.

    I believe that the https://mediabias.co.nz/ is deeply biased with a right-wing slant for their understanding of "sentiment" (which is what their analysis is based on. WHO runs this organisation.. David Farrar? There is zero information about those who run it in the "about" link. The methodology is sketchy at best.

    As mentioned, "someone" (me) spent a month on our local op-ed's from the Herald, collating everyone into tables with links (if they had one). About 3/4 had clear political content. Four were written by ACT or ACT sympathisers (Prebble). One by the Greens (Swarbick). One by a labour Minister. One by an NZ1 MP attacking Labour. I then looked at those that clearly attacked the Labour/Greens government or policies. After a month, I added up those that attached the government (or potential Green/Labour policies... or right-wing perceptions such as Labour being weak on crime) against those that might have discussed policies that supported the Greens or Labour. I was surprised to discover that those ope-ed attacking government (or Geens) policies were twice those that supported them. Twice.

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  20. Thanks GS, in that linked post from Karl's blog he clearly states he has rescinded his policies regarding anon comments, and the reasons for it:

    "All this is a long-winded way of saying that I’ve reversed my decision to disallow anonymous comments on this blog. Comments such as those reproduced above have persuaded me that allowing people a voice is more important than taking the moral high ground on whether they identify themselves"

    You've told us, several times, why you prefer to use your "nom de guerre", fair enough and I can sympathise, and for others; especially given the pernicious cancel culture prevalent in many people's work places. I decided to use my given name, I'm probably on some list somewhere as a far right provocateur or something. I'm OK with that.

    BTW I've never said cancel culture is solely a leftist phenomena. It seems to be more prevalent and more unreasonable from that quarter though. There was a big kerfuffle a few days ago when a Nat candidate had previously compared Ardern to Hitler, he was forced to stand down. Minister Woods does the same to John Key, a mumbled apology and she's still there.

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  21. "It seems to be more prevalent and more unreasonable from that quarter though. There was a big kerfuffle a few days ago when a Nat candidate had previously compared Ardern to Hitler, he was forced to stand down. Minister Woods does the same to John Key, a mumbled apology and she's still there."

    Anecdotes are not data.

    But surely the Nat was cancelled by the right. There is a difference between criticism/holding people to account and firing them. People who express off the wall opinions in public should perhaps be prepared for criticism. And if they bring their organisation into disrepute, to face the consequences. Murdoch has at last fired the arch liar Carlson for instance.

    But if you want anecdotes, nothing seems to compare with what's being cancelled in the US at the moment. The left isn't banning books AFAIK.

    https://www.theguardian.com/books/2023/feb/09/ron-desantis-florida-education-censorship

    https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/florida-schools-directed-cover-remove-classroom-books-vetted/story?id=96884323

    "he clearly states he has rescinded his policies regarding anon comments, and the reasons for it:"

    I know. I was there for the discussion. I explained my reasons. But I haven't been back since I was scurrilously attacked by one of his RWNJ minions and wasn't allowed to reply because I use a nym. Which confirmed my general opinion of the man.

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  22. Amazing parallels; the Canadian Media and "our" lot. Here's a short clip from the great Taibbi/Douglas side in the Munk "trust in media debate; the biggest victory in Munk debate history followed.
    https://youtu.be/lwiJreENzdY?t=164

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  23. GS: "The left isn't banning books AFAIK."

    Really? What could be more "Orwellian" than coming after 1984 and Animal Farm?
    Here's just some of the other great authors and titles that have "offended" some wokesters and been cancelled recently.

    Pretty much all of Dr Seuess, Irreversible Damage: The Transgender Craze Seducing Our Daughters by Abigail Shrier, The Ickabog by J.K. Rowling, Welcome to the Woke Trials: How #Identity Killed Progressive Politics by Julie Birchhill, gone With the Wind by Margaret Mitchell, Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck, Catch-22 by Joseph Heller, For Whom the Bell Tolls by Ernest Hemingway, The Call of the Wild by Jack London...........

    It's a very long list I'm afraid, it's surprising you're unaware of what has been going on. Removing pornographic and deviant grooming material from schools is something entirely different and widely supported by anyone with any sense.

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  24. GS; "the Nat was cancelled by the right"

    Not really, he (Stephen Jack) resigned in response to a media witch-hunt that made his candidacy untenable . Here's how he sees it:
    In a statement issued to RNZ, Jack described the coverage as “character assassination” which would dissuade “good strong hard-working people” from entering Parliament.

    “These attacks have been careless, orchestrated, out of context and demonstrably inaccurate,” Jack wrote.

    “Comprehension of satire has been traded for woke stupidity.”

    https://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/nationals-ex-candidate-stephen-jack-accuses-media-of-woke-stupidity-and-character-assassination/SLS6JQ3K2FBZXBGSTJE6BEBRFQ/

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  25. Comparing Ardern to Hitler is a no-no apparently (even though her barely disguised "yip, yip, that's what it is" glee at creating two classes of Kiwis more than hints at a totalitarian divisiveness many of us find very concerning) but other politicians are fair game.

    A recent cartoon by Garrick Tremain and published by Stuff depicting David Seymour being kissed on the ears by Adolf Hitler and what appears to be David Duke from the Ku Klux Klan is OK? The left's "it's OK when we do it" double standards suck.

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  26. "“These attacks have been careless, orchestrated, out of context and demonstrably inaccurate,” Jack wrote."

    Of course he did. Would you expect him to throw his hands and say gosh yes I'm terribly sorry I resign? Questions were asked quite rightly. If he really didn't think he'd done anything wrong he would have toughed it out.

    Comparing pretty much anyone to Hitler the is to say the least stupid, but Ardern? Because she imposed vaccine mandates? Jesus Christ, George Washington imposed vaccine mandates, I don't see any of you people comparing him to Hitler.

    But as with most conservatives, you mistake criticism for cancelling.

    It would be nice if you provided links for all these books that have apparently been "cancelled". In what context? By whom? Where?

    There's a difference between "cancelling" books that have racist language and opinions in them and cancelling books which you might call deviant, but most of us would consider necessary for inclusivity of LGBTQ students among others.

    One of our best young adult writers would be cancelled by you no doubt – Paula Boock. When I volunteered in my son's high school library for a year or so she was in there in spite of the fact that the librarian was an evangelical Christian. Unlike you, she realised that children and young adults need to see themselves in books rather than other people.

    Here is list of books that conservatives want to ban –
    'The Diary of Anne Frank.

    'The Bluest Eye' by Toni Morrison, which was written in 1970 for crying out loud, long before you people started using woke as a snarl word..

    'The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian'

    "To Kill a Mockingbird," by Harper Lee

    "The Catcher in the Rye," by JD Salinger

    "The Color Purple," by Alice Walker

    '"It's Perfectly Normal: Changing Bodies, Growing Up, Sex and Sexual Health," by Robie Harris'

    And pretty much ANYTHING by JK Rowling, who of course writes about magic and fairies and the like – anathema to the religious right.

    Seems to me that under the guise of removing "deviancy you people to want to ban any realism in kids books whatsoever – so there's no gay characters, no child abuse, no racism, no poverty.

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  27. After multiple attempts to contact https://mediabias.co.nz/ through email or Google, I have yet to find out who runs the site and how their methodology of determining bias is structured (by also providing examples). They fail to answer their emails on these simple questions. Their "about" or "contact" pages provide no useful information.

    I think that we need to conclude that this site is a scam by a person or people with a political agenda.

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  28. I don't think mediabias are still operating BB, it hasn't been updated for some time. There is an explanation/outline of their methodology on the website.

    From a recent study it's interesting that 81% of journalists consider themselves left of centre, only 15% right of centre. Of the 81% who said they were left of centre, a quarter (or 20% of all journalists) said they were hard or extreme left.

    If you compare those who say they range from left to extreme left (42%) to those who range from right to extreme right (1%) it shows how the worldview of most journalists is so far out of sync with the population.

    This doesn't necassarily mean they are consciously biased but clearly many have a worldview where they simply don't understand the values of half the population.

    https://www.farmersweekly.co.nz/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/Worlds-of-Journalism-Study-2.0.-Journalists-in-Aotearoa-New-Zealand.pdf

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  29. I wonder why Sean Plunket recently used https://mediabias.co.nz/ as a source for his 'centrist" position on Youtube? The explanation/outline of their methodology on the website is impossibly contrived and ultimately ridiculous.

    The word "left' is fraught. Where is this left-right line drawn?

    The word 'left" remains undefined in that survey in the PDF by Farmersweekly (Farmers Weekly??). As I wrote above - Do we have "left" defining those that want to collectivize all private property? Direct democracy? The social control of the economy? That is the traditional left. I don't think any media or journalist in NZ has advocated any such policies. Do you? A marginal capital gains tax is a hot "left" topic in the media. Meanwhile, in the real world, every other developed nation has either a Capital Gains Tax or a wealth tax (Switzerland) except Italy which has a de facto short-term CGT like ours.

    Additionally, the bottom line lies with the editor (and even with the owners and advertisers who tend to be right-wing corporate entities or individuals), so these well-meaning "left-leaning" journalists self-censor accordingly. Being "left" on social issues is much easier than on economic issues since they rarely affect the bottom line.

    We need to distinguish between economic and social issues.
    A similar survey took place 25 years ago in the USA https://fair.org/press-release/examining-the-quotliberal-mediaquot-claim/ . Only 11% claimed to be left on economic issues. Yes, that was a generation ago and it was the USA. But my perception is that economic issues have remained stagnant, and have even fallen backwards in some instances (taxing and spending, which NZ remains on the low end of the OECD). Certainly, the media has woken up to climate change...30 years too late while still ignoring our largest polluters, livestock farming. New Zealand has the second-highest level of emissions per GDP unit in the OECD and the fifth-highest emissions per capita. https://www.oecd.org/newzealand/environmental-pressures-rising-in-new-zealand.htm

    The "liberal" media can pepper its report with Māori phases, but our awful climate record... in a climate emergency, is till swept under the rug.

    So please, what is "left"?


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