THE GREEK GOVERNMENT INTIMIDATES BRITISH MEDIA!

Minister Dendias announces the Greek government plans to file a lawsuit against
the Guardian! The Guardian published protesters were tortured by Greek police
officers. Protesters told the Guardian that police officers had slapped them,
spat on them, burned their arms with cigarettes, and kept awake throughout the
night through the use of shining torches and lasers. Dendias notes that
forensics reports due to be published, would demonstrate that no such torture
ever took place, and the protesters' injuries were sustained following scuffles
and clashes during riots.
Rabblerousers are obsessed with newspapers. Ken Clarke points out politics is
now a mass media-dominated activity, the press is now far more powerful than
parliament, and many citizens are put off by politics due to the level of
exposure.
Gordon Brown has been utterly obsessed by his relations with the media. Margaret
Thatcher never read a newspaper from one week to the next. Clarke implores
rabblerousers to pay no attention to the papers if they are upset by their
content.
Clarke muses newspaper editors and proprietors can drive a weak government like
a flock of sheep before them when lobbying on certain topics, and he slams the
idea of currying favor with the press as a waste of time. Media are good at
changing sides when it's obvious the horse they're riding is about to collapse.
Clarke says newspaper campaigns are often based on partial accounts of
high-profile cases. If the tone of newspapers had been different in the last 20
years, UK would have 30,000 fewer prisoners. Clarke is deeply suspicious of
government control in a new system. He does not have confidence in letting the
press regulate itself. A regulator should be independent of both the industry
and the government.
Most newsrooms of America and Europe are infested with socialist apes, and their
mindset spills over into the news coverage, producing biased news stories on
many issues, such as kleptocracy, taxes, environment, government, insurance, and
health. Infamous Greek journalists received huge hush money, in order to keep
their mouths shut about the astronomical kickbacks to Graecokleptocrats! Omerta
galore!
Having a revolving door between politics and journalism is not necessarily a bad
thing. Indeed, persons with extensive experience, regardless of ideology, can be
a great asset, but only if they are honest. However, many times a package of
partisan ideology as news is the ticket to the revolving door! Many disgusting
parrots eventually become MPs.
Mainstream media are unfair, unbalanced, banal, vane, and hoipolloi trash.
Newspapers have become screed wraps of DVDs. TV news has sold its soul to
rabblerousers and pullpeddlers and is full of set-up arguments. Reporters have
been transformed to statist parrots who doubledip in the state treasury.
Anchormen have become the czars of statist banality and propaganda. Omerta
galore! The truth can be found only on the Internet.
Greek journalists are rewarded for their disgusting support of
Graecokleptocracy with aggeliosimo, an unfair 20% charge on all advertising,
going to the pension fund of their union. All advertisers now have to pay 43%
surcharge, 23% VAT and 20% aggeliosimo. This abuse of advertisers and the media
is condoned by Fourth Reich, and it puts many media out of business.
Against the backdrop of Graecokleptocracy, a very deep crisis of confidence has
developed between the media and the Greek public. Seen as corrupt parrots,
journalists are often identified with kleptocrats. Many journalists now fear
physical violence and some use protection. The targets of smear campaigns that
mix sarcastic slogans with death threats, journalists now think twice about
going out on to the streets to report.
The impact of Graecokleptocracy has radicalized all Greeks, who express their
anger and frustration in increasingly violent demonstrations. Journalists are
more and more at risk as they encounter situations of civil war in the course of
trying to cover the activities of grass-roots movements. Caught between the
violence of revolters and the brutality of police, journalists pay a high price
for the coverage of Greek revolt they give us.
Forestalling logic, mainly by bluff, intimidation, mudslinging, innuendos,
quoting out of context, and getting out of issue, is characteristic of most
political debates. Staged argument is the new trend of TV news, in order to
raise their audience ratings with melodramatic excitement. Four channels
dominate the Greek TV market, brainwashing Greeks in whatever direction they
wish, and establishing their own agenda. Their reporters doubledip in the Greek
treasury, in order to promote socialist propaganda and nonsense.
Greek nudnik anchors misinform hoi polloi surrounded by stupid
parrots. TV stations always invite the same characters, those shrews who repeat
the same nonsense adinfinitum and adnauseam. Most Greek journalists are in
cahoots with the two statist mafias, Pasok and Nea Democratia, to dumb down hoi
polloi, in order to perpetuate the corrupt status quo. That's why Greeks browse
the internet in order to find the truth.
Because our brains retain stories better than any other form of information, we
develop shortcuts to handle all the information we need to in the modern world.
The most important shortcut is the narrative. The narrative is the quick story
that has developed over a long period of time for any organization, company or
important public figure. It's the way we store and organize the information. The
narrative elicits and disseminates knowledge, encourages collaboration,
generates new ideas, and ignites change. All TV parrots use narratives to
promote their nonsense.
Tony Blair points out that if you're a political leader and there are very
powerful media groups and you fall out with one of those groups, the
consequences is such that you are effectively blocked from getting across your
message. Blair decided as a political leader, and this was a strategic decision,
that he was going to manage that and not confront it. Blair notes the close
relationship between politicians and the media was inevitable but that it became
unhealthy when media groups tried to use their newspapers as instruments of
political power.
Blair is renowned for trying to control the media agenda by spinning the news to
gain the most favorable coverage. Blair even became a godfather to Murdoch's
daughter Grace at a ceremony on the banks of the river Jordan. Blair led the way
in having no shame about courting Murdoch. He set the style and the standard and
if you regard Cameron as the heir to Blair then it's not exactly surprising that
he followed suit.
Blair set the tone for his relationship with Britain's press when, before his
first election victory in 1997, he flew to Australia in 1995 to speak before a
gathering of Murdoch's executives, right into the lion's den. Blair's speech to
Murdoch executives received a standing ovation and Murdoch indicated for the
first time that he could be willing to switch the allegiance of his newspapers
to the Labor Party. With the backing of Murdoch's top-selling Sun tabloid, Blair
swept to power in 1997 and again in 2001 and 2005.
Cameron went to a junket to the Greek island of Santorini in 2008 to kowtow to
Rupert Murdoch, because it was a chance to build a relationship with him.
Cameron used to socialize with Brooks and other powerful and wealthy people
connected to Murdoch during weekends at their respective country mansions close
to the picturesque town of Chipping Norton. The circle of friends has been
labeled the Chipping Norton set.
Cameron used to sign his frequent emails to Rebekah Brooks with lots of love.
Cameron received an email of support from Brooks, dated October 2009, which was
a reflection of the fact that the Sun had the previous week switched its support
to the Tories. Brooks's message: I am so rooting for you tomorrow, not just as a
personal friend but because professionally we're definitely in this together.
Smart words are more effective than smart bombs! Mighty words of a charismatic
keynote speaker can transform your people to a new dimension of organizational
climate, efficiency, self-actualization, enthusiasm, belonging, and motivation.
I would like very much to speak at your conference in order to explain critical
points much further. venitis@gmail.com
Δεν υπάρχουν σχόλια:
Δημοσίευση σχολίου
Σημείωση: Μόνο ένα μέλος αυτού του ιστολογίου μπορεί να αναρτήσει σχόλιο.