Sandra Finley

Sep 022018
 

Leaks.

Huge volumes of Data.

Leaker and Publisher.

A TRUE picture of the wars – – data is objective.  It is not “opinion”, nor is it propaganda.

 

– – – – – – – –

On-line Vigil for Assange.    I thought of

  • Assange, of course.
  • Daniel Ellsberg,  a participant in the vigil.

Chelsea Manning naturally came up.

I did not think “WARS“.  That is a take-away for me,  I needed to be reminded.   The connection to WARS.

There is more in the “Vigil” that I want to listen to (selectively) – – what did Ray McGovern have to say?

– – – – – – – –

The PURPOSE of the Vigel is to protect Julian Assange.

  • The Leakers put their lives, their freedom,  on the line.
  • Without a Publisher,  as in a totalitarian regime,  the truth will not see the light of day.
  • Without the truth (of the Vietnam War, or of the Iraq, the Afghan, and other Wars)  we are all mere pawns.

I don’t know who we’re protecting, Julian Assange or ourselves.   We do it by making sure that our friends and neighbours receive the information.

If we allow the Publisher, Julian Assange, to go on trial for doing what Publishers in a democracy are SUPPOSED to do, to safeguard the democracy,  I have no sympathy for us.

Janet E sent this (Feb 2015):

From an  an interview with Goring in his jail cell during the Nuremberg War Crimes Trials (18 April 1946).  Goring’s statement  about  dragging people into war bears repeating given present day fears.

http://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Hermann_G%C3%B6ring

Göring: Why, of course, the people don’t want war. Why would some poor slob on a farm want to risk his life in a war when the best that he can get out of it is to come back to his farm in one piece?

Naturally, the common people don’t want war; neither in Russia nor in England nor in America, nor for that matter in Germany. That is understood. But, after all, it is the leaders of the country who determine the policy and it is always a simple matter to drag the people along, whether it is a democracy or a fascist dictatorship or a Parliament or a Communist dictatorship.

Gilbert: There is one difference. In a democracy, the people have some say in the matter through their elected representatives, and in the United States only Congress can declare wars.

Göring: Oh, that is all well and good, but, voice or no voice, the people can always be brought to the bidding of the leaders. That is easy. All you have to do is tell them they are being attacked and denounce the pacifists for lack of patriotism and exposing the country to danger.  It works the same way in any country.

– – – – – – – –

The vigil for Assange is below.   First,  some CONTEXT:

The granting of asylum by Correa was not his only “sin”.   He was a staunch defender of the rights of the Ecuadorean people, against corporate interests.

To me,  American interference is written all over the situation for Julian Assange today, at the Ecuadorean Embassy in London.

EXCERPT:

Ecuador’s Ailment:   Ecuador suffers from an abundance of natural resources that The Corporations want.    It always kills me – – if you want to see how much at risk a nation is for U.S. Interference,  you have only to go to the CIA website:  . . .

Also happening at this moment, Augus t- September 2018.  Amid rumors that the US and the UK are about to move on Assange:

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THE ON-LINE VIGIL FOR JULIAN ASSANGE, NOTES

There are black spaces in the video, between interviewees.   Push past them.

Recommend,   skip past the first stuff to:

Bill Binnie —  speaks to, for example, NSA “customers” who are the corporations.   The NSA doing spy work for the Monsanto’s of the world.  “Economic” spying, nothing to do with national security.   The corruption is breath-taking.

After Binnie, I pushed through to Daniel Ellsberg  – – you’ll see the white-haired guy in the video frames (leaker of The Pentagon Papers).

Ellsberg is remarkable in his ability to make clear WHY the publisher (Julian Assange, Wikileaks) must be protected.   Which to me meant:   I have to get this posting to you!

Chelsea Manning (leaker) enters the conversation.

Edward Snowden (leaker) is discussed.

Ellsberg himself, is a leaker.

 The reasons that large volumes of data were leaked, in all 3 cases:

Data is objective,  not an “opinion” and not propaganda.

There are patterns in the data.   Are we looking at an isolated incident, or is it commonplace?   Is a behavior unique, or is it endemic?   How are breaches handled?   Who are the players?   and so on.   A one-time leak related to an incident, out-of-context,  doesn’t reveal a lot.  Its longevity is short-lived.

The role of the press is essential in the distinction between totalitarian and democratic regimes.  In my view, a glimpse behind-the-scenes reveals that we’re hanging by a thread.

It would be good if there were shorter excerpts from the Vigil.   The insights are importantl  there’s too much to listen to.

Unity for Julian:   unity4J.com

– – – – – – – –

An Online Vigil in Defense of Julian Assange With Daniel Ellsberg . . .

Joe Lauria, editor-in-chief of Consortium News, on Saturday helped moderate a daylong chain of interviews in defense of WikiLeaks and its publisher Julian Assange, including a discussion with Daniel Ellsberg. 

#Unity4J online vigil was held on Saturday to defend the WikiLeaks editor-in-chief, whose sanctuary at the Ecuadorian embassy in London has turned into torturous solitary confinement.

Among the participants on Saturday were Craig Murray, a former U.K. ambassador; Nat Parry, son of Consortium New’s founder and first editor, Robert Parry; Bill Binney, former technical director at the National Security Agency, and Ray McGovern, a former CIA officer. Joe Lauria interviewed Daniel Ellsberg, the Pentagon Papers whistleblower and author of The Doomsday Machine: Confessions of a Nuclear War Planner. 

The entire 11 hour and 45 minute event can be viewed here:

 

International media have reported that Ecuador may hand over Assange to United Kingdom authorities, with a fear that he then would be extradited to the United States. The U.K. and Ecuadorian sides are engaged in ongoing negotiations, but Jennifer Robinson, a lawyer for Assange and WikiLeaks since 2010, has acknowledged that Assange’s legal team is not part of those talks.

The fate of Assange represents a threat to human rights, asylum rights, liberty and press freedoms. The United Nations Working Group on Arbitrary Detention and the Inter-American Court of Human Rights already have found in Assange’s favor.

#Unity4J originated from an unplanned but timely response to injustice when Assange’s internet access and visitation rights were taken away. The action has grown into a series of high-profile monthly online vigils.

A dynamic new format for the monthly online vigils was introduced on Saturday.  Conceived by organizer Suzie Dawson, the concept is described as a “daisy-chain style digital relay”—which featured more than  twenty guest appearances of 30 minutes duration each. At the conclusion of each segment, the guests transitioned from interviewee to interviewer.

“Every time we witness an injustice and do not act,” Assange reminds us, “we train our character to be passive in its presence and thereby eventually lose all ability to defend ourselves and those we love.”

For more information about Assange and WikiLeak’s legal situation, visit iamwikileaks.org and justice4assange.com  and unity4J.com .

Sep 022018
 
Kids starting back to school.   Time for vaccinations.
I do not envy parents of youngsters, having to make a decision:  to vaccinate for HPV, or not vaccinate.
I looked for current news re Gardasil (HPV).

EXCERPT:

. . .    court case alleging blatant corruption.

There has been documented evidence that the HPV vaccine has caused more injuries than any other vaccination in history. Despite this evidence however, the HPV vaccination has continued to be hailed a success by the pharmaceutical industry and governments alike.

According to the World Health Organisation’s (WHO) VigiAccess database, as of April 09, 2018, a total of 85,329 reports of adverse reactions have been filed regarding the HPV vaccination. These reports include 37,699 reports of nervous system disorders; 2450 cardiac disorders, (including 38 cardiac arrests) 533 reports of Postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome (POTS); over 3200 reports of seizures or epilepsy, 8453 syncope and 389 deaths.

The court case uses international data.

Data on vaccine injury

  • to children
  • in the U.S.  – – IF  a complaint is filed (dependent on parents knowing that the Vaccine Court exists,  and being able to hire lawyers to represent them

is at   National Vaccine Injury Compensation Program, U.S.

– – – – –
Thank you for speaking up re Gardasil vaccination received by your son. You may want to look at this comprehensive documentation. There’s a video, can skip down to (Sacrificial Virgins). If the influence of Big Pharma was not so large in Canada, I think your school would have known about the HPV vaccines. Your son would not have been vaccinated with it, nor would the girls have been, not based on what has happened in many countries.

 

Sep 022018
 

Thanks to Hart,   Shocking.    it is hard to believe but perhaps should not surprise.

My response:   I have been lax in helping to spread the word, and I want to attend!  Priorities may not permit me to.

#NoWar2018 Conference: Designing a World BEYOND War: Legalizing Peace
September 21 September 22  in Toronto

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Defence groups sponsor lessons that promote building and sale of military hardware

A BAE Typhoon fighter on display at this year’s Farnborough airshow, along with a selection of missiles.
A BAE Typhoon fighter on display at this year’s Farnborough airshow, along with a selection of missiles. Photograph: Adrian Dennis/AFP/Getty Images

Arms manufacturers are spending millions of pounds a year promoting their brands in Britain’s schools, the Observer has learned.

The companies, which between them have sold tens of billions of pounds of weapons to overseas governments, including those with poor human rights records, sponsor a series of school events at which their brands are prominently on display. In addition, they issue teaching materials for use in classrooms that promote the defence sector, sponsor competitions and award prizes.

One company even deployed a high-profile children’s television presenter to promote its activities in a school, while another developed a missile simulator for pupils to “play with”. Critics accuse the companies of trying to “normalise their appalling business” in the minds of the young, but the body representing the defence sector says such an approach is vital if the UK is to produce a future generation of engineers.

“When these companies are promoting themselves to children they are not talking about the deadly impact their weapons are having,” said Andrew Smith of Campaign Against Arms Trade. “Many of these companies have profited from war and fuelled atrocities around the world. Schools are vital to our society and should never be used as commercial vehicles for arms companies. It is time for arms companies to be kicked out of the classroom.”

BAE Systems, Europe’s largest arms company whose fighter jets are currently being used by Saudi forces in Yemen – where there have been large numbers of strikes on civilian buildings – visited 420 schools across the UK last year and prepared lesson plans for children as young as seven.

The company promotes its roadshows on Twitter and other social media. One event included an appearance by CBeebies television presenter Maddie Moate who, according to BAE, was there to “join in the fun and take a few ‘selfies’ for her own personal collection”.

In an online presentation, BAE states that it spends tens of millions of pounds a year on reaching pupils as young as four. Among worksheets issued to schoolchildren were some encouraging them to think about how BAE’s special camouflage system could have “significant advantages on the battlefield” by allowing tanks to become invisible to hostile thermal imaging systems.

Another sheet encourages pupils to look at the company’s past initiatives to find out “more about how shapes of aeroplanes, ships, submarines and tanks have changed over the years”.

CBeebies presenter Maddie Moate.
CBeebies presenter Maddie Moate has appeared at one of BAE Systems’ roadshows. Photograph: Ken McKay/ITV/REX/Shutterstock

Since 2005, 213,000 young people have seen a BAE roadshow, according to the company. BAE also claims to have 845 “ambassadors” – comprised mainly of school governors across Britain.

But its activities have proved controversial. Last year there were complaints from parents whose children were taken out of classes at Glasgow Gaelic School to attend a BAE event.

A spokeswoman for BAE defended its interest in schools. “As a world leader in advanced engineering and technology, our education and skills activities inspire the next generation of engineers to help address the critical skills gap,” she said. “We invest in a diverse portfolio of programmes aimed at encouraging more young people to study STEM (science, technology, engineering, maths) subjects, which is vital for the UK economy.”

Raytheon, the fourth-largest arms company in the world, which has sold bombs and missiles to Israel and Saudi Arabia and whose weapons have been used in Yemen, runs an annual competition across the UK for pupils to build model drones. The US company’s website says it supports science and technology programmes “in primary schools, secondary schools, universities and colleges”.

Thales, the world’s 10th-largest arms company, whose customers include Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Egypt and Kazakhstan, has its own mascots, Raybot and Faybot, who are used to promote the French company’s education tools.

It produces teaching resources and lesson plans for teachers, sponsors the Big Bang Fair and regional events across the country, and has designed a missile simulator as “a new activity for children to play with that related to our work and would help inspire them to consider engineering for a future career”.

French MBDA, whose missiles are also being used by Saudi forces in Yemen, runs a “robot rumble” competition where pupils compete to design and build a robot. Each robot is put through “a shake test to represent the tests MBDA put their missiles through”, according to the promotional website.

Leonardo, an Italian company which makes naval artillery and armoured vehicles, “actively supports education and skills development through partnerships with schools, colleges and universities throughout the country, investing substantially in school engagement and supporting Science, Technology, Engineering and Maths (STEM) curriculums”.

And Rolls-Royce, whose military aircraft engines service “160 customers in 103 countries”, sponsors a Cub scientist activity badge for the Scout Association.

Paul Everitt, chief executive of ADS, the trade body which represents defence contractors, said it was important for the sector to engage with schools.

“UK defence companies play a vital role in local communities, providing high-value, long-term jobs with rewarding career paths for those choosing apprenticeships, graduate or post-graduate routes,” he said. “The UK has a national shortage of engineers. Events and challenges run by industry in partnership with schools help to inspire the next generation of engineers and boost access to careers in an innovative and technologically advanced sector. In their engagement with schools, defence companies focus on encouraging pupils to study maths and sciences.”

But Smith called on schools to sever their links with arms companies. “The fact that companies that arm and support human-rights-abusing regimes are targeting such young children is extremely concerning,” he said. “Arms companies aren’t targeting schools because they care about education. They are doing it because they want to improve their reputations and normalise their appalling business.”

Sep 022018
 

EXCERPT:  

The Nazi henchman Hermann Göring explained in Nuremberg prison how easy it is to mobilize the public to war: “Voice or no voice, the people can always be brought to the bidding of the leaders. That is easy. All you have to do is tell them they are being attacked and denounce the pacifists for lack of patriotism and exposing the country to danger. It works the same way in any country.”

Trump has started with a trade war, but we shouldn’t be surprised if the trade war morphs into a hot one. We are far down the path to tyranny.

 

https://www.cnn.com/2018/07/23/opinions/trump-is-taking-us-down-the-path-to-tyranny-sachs/index.html

 

Trump is taking US down the path to tyranny

Trump tweets explosive threat to Iran

“Jeffrey Sachs is a professor and director of the Center for Sustainable Development at Columbia University. The opinions expressed in this commentary are those of the author. “

By Jeffrey Sachs

(CNN   )The United States was born in a revolt against the tyranny of King George III. The Constitution was designed to prevent tyranny through a system of checks and balances, but in President Trump’s America, those safeguards are failing.

 

Donald Trump holds the grandiose belief that only he should rule America. Unchecked by cowed or complicit Republicans in Congress, Trump invokes executive authority to alter policies and practices long established by law and treaty.

 

Days after his summit meeting with Vladimir Putin, no one knows what the two autocrats agreed to, or even talked about — not the President’s top aides, nor the Pentagon, nor security establishment or Congress, never mind the rest of us. And in the midst of the ensuing uproar, Trump has invited Putin to Washington, without telling his top intelligence official and no doubt most other key aides and officials.

 

The list of one-man actions grows rapidly. Trump is single-handedly imposing hundreds of billions of dollars of tariffs — that is, taxes — on imported goods from key US allies and China, without any explicit or implicit Congressional backing.

Trump abrogated the Iran nuclear deal despite its unanimous support by the UN Security Council. Trump is in the process of imposing new and severe sanctions against Iran, including the cutoff of all of Iran’s oil exports, against the international agreement with Iran and with no vote of Congress, presumably to try to topple the Iranian regime.

 

Trump is not evil, just an amateur

 

Not surprisingly, and perhaps as intended, Trump’s drumbeat of belligerency triggered an ominous warning from Iran, and now an escalation from Trump, casting the increasingly ominous confrontation with Iran as yet another one-man Trump show.

 

Trump used executive authority without Congressional mandate to impose a travel ban on several Muslim-majority states; to announce the US withdrawal from the Paris Climate Agreement despite treaty-bound US obligations under the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change; and to change the status quo regarding Jerusalem against the will of the UN Security Council and UN General Assembly. Trump extended the stay of US troops in Syria without oversight or approval by Congress.

 

Political scientists are documenting America’s descent toward one-man rule. A recent ranking of democracies around the world by the Swedish academic think-tank the V-Dem Institute put the US at the 31st position in 2017, a precipitous fall from 7th place in 2015. According to the report, “There is clear evidence of autocratization [the movement towards one-person rule] on several indicators.

 

“The lower quality of liberal democracy stems primarily from weakening constraints on the executive.”

 

Similarly, the Democracy Index of The Economist Intelligence Unit now ranks the US only as a “flawed democracy.”

 

Trump supporters argue that Trump is merely using his legal authority to the fullest. Yet the situation is worse than that. Simply by invoking the phrase “national security,” Trump can push the Congress and Supreme Court to give him almost any degree of latitude. Trump’s tariffs (under Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act of 1962), the travel ban and his abrogation of the Iran nuclear deal were all made under the incantation of national security.

The Supreme Court, by a 5-4 majority, upheld the travel ban because the majority refused to second-guess the President on a claim of national security. Congress is almost completely supine on matters that the President declares to be about war and peace.

 

Republican leaders need to remember what happened the last time America chose to be isolated

 

The Constitution is not supposed to work this way. Under Article I, Section 8, the power to wage war rests with Congress. So does the power to levy taxes and tariffs. Yet in each case, an aggressive President may invoke national security to circumvent the Congress. Congress’s chronic failure to oversee presidential war-making, prolonged troop placements and overseas bases, with this president and earlier ones, is similarly notorious.

And Congress’s failure to challenge Trump on his claims that Canada’s steel and aluminum exports or China’s consumer product exports constitute a “national security threat” is unforgivable.

 

Two long-term trends are at play, both exploited by Trump in his grab for power.

 

The first is the relentless growth of the national-security state since World War II, with America’s hundreds of military bases and nonstop war-making around the world, including covert wars and influence campaigns run by the CIA. For more than half a century, Congress and the Supreme Court have tended to give presidents an almost free hand in starting wars, which are checked only later by the gradual mobilization of public opposition.

The second is the rise of corporate power in driving federal policy. As presidents implement the corporate agenda, Congress stands back. The Supreme Court, starting in the 1970s and continuing under Chief Justice John Roberts, has also championed the corporate lobby, giving the President a wide berth in promoting the corporate agenda. The Congress, in thrall to corporate lobbies, is complicit in letting the President unilaterally dismantle environmental and consumer-protection regulations.

 

Not all is lost. Special Counsel Robert Mueller and lower courts may still stand up to the President, even though the Supreme Court has become a predictable 5-4 backer of almost limitless presidential authority. Trump’s assertion of power would also be counteracted if the Democrats win at least one of the chambers of Congress in November.

 

Historian: Americans are right to wonder if the Great Experiment has failed

Yet these are fragile reeds. The US may well be one major war away from the collapse of American democracy, most likely a war with Iran for the regime change that Trump seeks.

The Nazi henchman Hermann Göring explained in Nuremberg prison how easy it is to mobilize the public to war: “Voice or no voice, the people can always be brought to the bidding of the leaders. That is easy. All you have to do is tell them they are being attacked and denounce the pacifists for lack of patriotism and exposing the country to danger. It works the same way in any country.”

 

Trump has started with a trade war, but we shouldn’t be surprised if the trade war morphs into a hot one. We are far down the path to tyranny.

Sep 022018
 
Good that they are at least talking about it!
– – – – – –  – – – – – – – –
Indicators more intricate than just economic growth are needed to ascertain if life has improved for individuals, say economists
Vivien Shiaovshiao@sph.com.sg

Singapore

THE gross domestic product (GDP) may be a country’s most closely-watched key performance indicator, but economists said it might be time to start paying more attention to other ways of measuring the well-being of Singaporeans.

The suggestion comes as Singapore arrives at a more sophisticated stage in its development – and economists said indicators more intricate than just economic growth are needed to ascertain if life has improved for individuals.

“GDP was never meant to be an all-in measure – it is just one objective measure of where the economy is,” said Maybank Kim Eng economist Chua Hak Bin. “Quality of life would probably be a broader measure of well-being and happiness, but the difficulty is getting the right metric.”

Market voices on:

Gauges of how well people are really doing are not new. There are the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development’s (OECD) Better Life Index; the United Nations’ (UN) Human Development Index; and the UN Sustainable Development Solutions Network’s World Happiness Report – just to name a few.

But scholars said having a Singapore-centric study of subjective measures that take into account the local context would be a good complement to the objective measures already in place. It would give a “well-rounded perspective” of society and economy.

Gillian Koh, deputy director (Research) at the Institute of Policy Studies (IPS), said: “Quantitative measures are quicker to grasp, but we all recognise that we need qualitative ones for their rich detail and meaningful linkages to various aspects that describe social life.”

Increasingly, more academics from fields as diverse as sociology, business and politics have been stepping out to present findings on different aspects of the welfare of Singaporeans – and of late, their work has been gaining a lot more traction in public discourse and policy-making circles.

Two pieces of research that arguably received the most attention of late are Nanyang Technological University Associate Professor Teo You Yenn’s findings on inequality on Singapore, which upends traditional assumptions of poverty; as well as the IPS Study On Social Capital In Singapore (of which Dr Koh was one of the researchers) which revealed a sharp class divide in Singapore.

Most recently, NUS Business School associate professors Siok Kuan Tambyah and Tan Soo Jiuan released their latest Quality of Life Survey. A comprehensive study started in 1996, it offers insights into aspects of subjective well-being in Singapore, such as happiness, achievement and a sense of purpose, among others.

Observers said policymakers already looked at country performance on all fronts – not just economic – but the sheer variety of other well-being indicators conducted by various entities makes it difficult to sieve out what is important.

Walter Theseira, an economist at Singapore University of Social Sciences, said: “When you look at an economic indicator, you know how it was constructed, you know it is comparable to other countries. Also, decision makers in industry value it – it is understood and it’s relevant.

“Indicators of well-being are also relevant, but much less understood, which makes it harder for policy-makers to integrate them into policy-making.”

He noted that there is “generally much less agreement internationally” on how to measure other aspects of quality of life, and it is also “very rare that there exists a systematic, national effort to track such well-being indicators over time”.

Creating a single government-sponsored Quality of Life index is not as straightforward as it seems. Dr Koh said: “The benefit would be to have one that provides a quick take on the situation and, secondly, if you repeat over time, you can track changes because it is the same measure.”

However, she warned that relying on one measure gives the illusion that what matters does not change, and that everything important has been captured.

“Even if we were to find a quality of life index we like, it is likely to be inadequate for us to just fixate on one.”

She said there should be scope for different researchers and entities to compile various Quality of Life indices, spell out their rationale, repeat measurements for as long as they can, and then for policy makers to take heed of what the “more robust ones” say over time.

For Maybank Kim Eng’s Dr Chua, creating a national well-being index can be tricky because of political considerations.

“Because it’s very subjective and it will be used to determine policy, you might end up taking the metric to suit what you want to do rather than respond to a metric that gauges what the sentiments are,” he said.

To him, the biggest challenge is the subjectivity involved in what constitutes happiness and satisfaction.

“Some might enjoy working, but some don’t – so even the number of leisure hours might not accurately measure well-being…

“It’s a worthy start, but there are a lot of issues on how to make sure they are standardised, don’t change with time, and there’s no incentive to suddenly change the components when they don’t go your way.”

He added: “I’m not even sure if it’s possible for people to be 90 per cent happy, for example, and whether it’s even in the realm of policy to deliver. I don’t know if that’s asking too much from the government.”

But observers agree that more robust studies on quality of life issues would add further pieces to the jigsaw puzzle – not replace the need for economic indicators.

CIMB Bank economist Song Seng Wun said: “Well-being studies are worth pursuing as they contribute to the debate – they complement the hard data.”

Aside from the standard economic indicators, he also looks at surveys that explore social issues to get a better overall picture of the state of Singapore.

“I do so because it’s the psychology of individuals that shapes society as well. It could have implications on the overall confidence of the economy.

“I think Singapore has reached a stage of growth where we can spend more time on issues like well-being. From a political standpoint, putting more effort to ensure that people will not be left behind is also important for socio-economic stability.”

READ MORE: Relationships give Singaporeans satisfaction, but tangibles fall short

Sep 012018
 

The former Guardian editor details a revolution in journalism. Can it still perform its vital, truth-telling role?

Eloquent in his argument for well-resourced journalism … Alan Rusbridger
Eloquent in his argument for well-resourced journalism … Alan Rusbridger. Photograph: Greg James

Truth is a small word liable to sanctimonious overuse and philosophical dispute, but in its humblest sense of accurate and verifiable information we like to think we know it when we see it. In Alan Rusbridger’s view, journalism should be among its leading providers: societies depend on good journalism to distinguish fact from fiction, to form a realistic view of their problems and futures. And here, he writes, a little hopefully, Donald Trump may have done journalism a favour. In his cavalier disregard for truth, Trump has reminded the rest of us why we need it. That’s the good news. The bad news is that digital technology and the web have created “the most prodigious capability for spreading lies the world has ever seen”, while the economics that support truth-seeking journalism have never looked feebler. To adapt the dictum of one of Rusbridger’s predecessors: bad facts are free and good ones expensive.

Edward Snowden … his revelations of mass government surveillance were published by Rusbridger.
Edward Snowden … his revelations of mass government surveillance were published by Rusbridger. Photograph: Lindsay Mills

But establishing the truth costs money – wages, travel, hotel bills. Journalists who learned their craft in the pre-digital age never knew too much about profit and loss. As Rusbridger writes, the phrase “business model” never came up in the pub (and it was only in the late 1980s that I first heard the word “budget” in an editorial meeting). But then everything was different. It seems almost inconceivable in retrospect but those of us who began our journalistic careers in the 1960s and 70s worked with tools that included carbon paper, scissors and glue, while elsewhere in the same building molten lead glistened in the little vats of linotype machines and klaxons announced the starting of the rotary press.

Sail to steam, cart horse to locomotive, theatre to cinema: these were milder transitions. Rusbridger joined his first paper, the Cambridge Evening News, in 1976. He describes how he recently tried to convey the pre-digital newspaper process to a class of 18-year-olds by drawing stick figures on a whiteboard. Stick figure (SF) 1 is a reporter with a manual typewriter, SF2 is the news desk “copy taster”, SF3 is the news editor, SF4 is the layout subeditor … and so on through the composing room, the press room and the newspaper van until we reach SF19, the newspaper boy or girl who pushes the product through the letterbox. Nearly 20 pairs of hands were needed to bring the news from producer to consumer. These days all that’s required is a smartphone. Rusbridger joined a staff of 70 journalists at the Cambridge paper. Who or what paid them and the rest of the staff? Some of the money came newspaper sales – the paper sold nearly 50,000 copies a day then (today it sells fewer than 15,000 a week). But most of it came from advertising. If anyone in Cambridge and district wanted to sell a car or a house, or announce a birth, a marriage or a death, they paid to advertise. Likewise, firms who needed to fill job vacancies, cinemas who wanted audiences, councils who sought to warn residents of road closures. Local papers such as the Cambridge Evening News were then making profits that reached 40% of turnover. A national such as the Sunday Times, enriched by colour advertising in its magazine as well as many pages of classified, could send a man all the way to Kathmandu (me in this case) and never worry if they spiked his report because they had better things to fill the space.

There was nothing new here. Advertising has always subsidised reporting. Rusbridger quotes the American historian Paul Starr: “For the past 300 years, newspapers have been able to develop and flourish partly because their readers have almost never paid the full cost of production.” George Orwell noted that advertising tended to exercise an indirect censorship over the editorial matter, though its influence was more complicated than he perhaps understood. Richer readers paid the same price for the paper as poorer ones, but the richer reader was more valuable to the paper because his greater income could be sold to advertisers. A paper with a smaller circulation but richer readers could attract more expensive advertising; in the pursuit of richer readers, a paper might moderate its political tone or be tempted to road test Aston Martins as much as Fords.

These tensions and the facts behind them were part of a newspaper’s everyday life. The Guardian might regret that its readers’ incomes – the average in 2016 was £24,000 – were much lower than those of the smaller-circulation Financial Times, but its losses as well as its profits were small. In its circulation heyday as a printed newspaper it could fill many pages with public service advertising and also draw on the substantial profits of Autotrader magazine, which the Guardian Media Group acquired as a kind of substitute for a rich and indulgent proprietor. “It was such a cash-generating beast,” Rusbridger tells us, “that I sometimes felt every morning conference at the Guardian should begin with a quiet prayer to the gods of the used car dealer.”

‘The Berliner was to newspapers what the QE2 was to North Atlantic liners: the ultimate development of a dying form’
‘The Berliner was to newspapers what the QE2 was to North Atlantic liners: the ultimate development of a dying form’ Photograph: Ben Stansall/AFP/Getty Images

The digital revolution overwhelmed the traditions of newspaper publishing in all kinds of ways, not least philosophically. If every voice was equal to every other voice, what did that mean for the role of the editor, supposing he went on existing? But the most crucial question was financial. In Rusbridger’s words, “the entire economic model of information was about to fall apart” and nobody knew what was to be done. Belief in the future of printed newspapers persisted despite all the evidence pointing to their short-to-medium term demise. In just one weekend in 2005, a total of 20m DVDs were given free to readers of national newspapers in an attempt to shore up declining sales. In 2006, the Daily Mail group turned down an offer of £1bn for its local newspapers, and only six years later was glad to sell them for £53m and a minority stake in another declining newspaper chain.

Nor was the Guardian immune. No other Fleet Street editor embraced the possibilities of online publishing with greater enthusiasm and imagination than Rusbridger, but in September 2005 he relaunched the printed Guardian in its new Berliner format at the considerable expense of new presses, despite feeling, as he writes here, that “printed newspapers were in a remorseless slide to eventual oblivion: that much seemed overwhelmingly probable”.

It was an expensive mistake – Rusbridger is shy of detail on this point – though a handsome one. The Berliner was to newspapers what the QE2 was to North Atlantic liners: the ultimate development of a dying form. Meanwhile the paper expanded online. “Reach before revenue” was the watchword, meaning that the first concern was to increase the online audience and only then devise a way of making money from it. How to “monetise the content” became a staple of journalistic conversation in a way that, in the days of print, concerns about advertising revenue had rarely been.

The Guardian eschewed paywalls – making the reader pay – not only on high-minded grounds. Too many of its online audience lived outside the UK to make easy payments feasible, and the company feared that an inevitably smaller readership would mean too heavy a cut in advertising. (It was felt that the Times, which did establish a paywall, would suffer less because advertisers would still be drawn to its richer readers.) The Guardian’s strategy in essence was to create such a large audience through free access that online advertising would meet the bills for everything. What nobody foresaw – or nobody, at least, outside California – was that most of the growth in digital advertising would be captured by Facebook and Google, which had developed software that could identify the tastes and purchasing histories of every consumer online.

Newspapers were no match for such technical power or such deep pockets; Twitter lost more than $2bn before it posted its first profits, 12 years after its launch. Rusbridger likens the continual innovations of the software companies to the work of the death watch beetle: invisible until the house collapses. “We were at the mercy of whatever would come next from a handful of tech giants 5,000 miles away. We were living incarnations of those at the receiving end of globalisation … stiffed by faraway forces beyond our comprehension or power. This is what it was like to have been a Manchester cotton mill owner, or a Yorkshire pitman.”

I should say that I know and admire Alan Rusbridger and that I regularly contributed to the Guardian under his editorship. The book he has written is eloquent in its argument for well-resourced journalism, and never better than in its central narrative of how an old profession struggled to cope with a new technology that threatened it with obsolescence – averted, in the Guardian’s case, by the commitment and generosity of its readers.

Breaking News by Alan Rusbridger (Canongate, £20). To order a copy for £15, go to guardianbookshop.com or call 0330 333 6846. Free UK p&p over £10, online orders only. Phone orders min. p&p of £1.99.

Aug 302018
 

Return to  INDEX, Salish Sea

“Salish Sea”  Book Event,  Sept 24

7:00   Emcee welcomes, tells the audience the time-table,  introduces Howard.   Presentation begins.

7:45   Shake-it-up Break.  (up to Howard & Andrew)

At an appropriate time,  “pass-the=basket” for donations, while the Q&A is going.  (Not necessary – – people were generous at the door, coming in.)

Q&A,  Discussion.

9:00    Emcee says Good Night

9:30    Everyone Out.

 

Additional info you may like to know, relevant to tonite’s “Salish Sea” event:

(It turned out,  there was no time to announce any of the following.)

  1.  There is a new interpretive pavilion in QB, on the beach.  Many people will know the location as the Brant Goose Park or wildlife area.

Yesterday (Sunday)  the QB Streamkeepers  dedicated the new pavilion to the memory of Faye Smith.   https://www.pqbnews.com/community/faye-smith-remembered-honoured-through-new-interpretive-pavilion/

It’s a beautiful and interesting destination for everyone.  I’m sure that many classrooms of students will visit it, to learn more about the Salish Sea.

 

  1. INFORMATION TABLES at the back of the hall, people may like to see before they leave:

i.     Howard’s book, “Views of the Salish Sea”.   Hard cover, $40.   Mulberry Bush Bookstore has the book at both the QB and Parksville locations.

If you’re from Bowser,  the “Salish Sea Giftstore” carries the book.

If enough hard cover copies are sold, the publisher will print a lower-priced paperback version, making the book accessible to more people.

ii.     CPOC (Communities Protecting Our Coast) (pronounced See Pock).

Who/what is CPOC?    http://communitiesprotectingourcoast.org/)

The lime green T-shirts that you see walking around are CPOC supporters.

Slogan   When you love something, Stand up for it!”

The T-shirts are available for sale at the CPOC table.

Surplus money from this “Salish Sea” event will be used to further the work of CPOC.

iii.   SAVE THE FRENCH CREEK ESTUARY has already collected 1,500 signatures on a petition, people may want to add their name, or get more information.

iv.    VOTER INFORMATION,  including WHO ARE YOUR CANDIDATES?

FOR THE OCTOBER 20 MUNICIPAL ELECTIONS (ADVANCE POLL DATE, OCTOBER 10).

David Todtman has compiled a  CANDIDATE LIST  complete with contact information.  The list covers Qualicum Beach, Parksville, and the Regional District of Nanaimo (RDN).  The list is available on-line.  It’s easy to find not only who will be on your ballot, but who else is running in the Oceanside area.

 

People should know how their donation will be handled.

Judith will provide the schtick on that.

We need to hit $450 before there is any money for an honorarium for Howard.

SUGGEST:   count the donations received at the door before  “pass-the-bucket”.   Judith/Andrew can tell the audience what the shortfall is, that we need to cover with the pass-the-bucket.  (Received enough donations at the door.  Pass the bucket was not necessary.)

 

QUESTION TO HOWARD:  in context of person taking over the Q&A or community discussion after you leave:  would you want it said that, if there are unanswered questions, people could contact you by email?

REPLY:

I’d be happy to, with a couple of caveats.

First, that people don’t expect instant answers. As you’ve seen, I wander away from my emails– trying to write other things–for days on end.

Second, that people recognise my severe limitations. I deliberately covered a lot of ground in the Blue Book because I wanted people to see the ‘big picture’ on our inland sea and connections between issues that are often considered in isolation from one another, even though the problems never can be solved in isolation. The result is that I talk of many things about which I am very far from an expert.

But if there is likely to be follow up conversation then maybe I / we should stay later. I wouldn’t want to miss it, even as a fly on the wall.

 

Aug 302018
 

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All donations will be deposited in the  CPOC (Communities to Protect Our Coast) bank account;  and the cheque will be drawn on that account. 

The venue and advertising (posters & bookmarks) amount to $455.83    We are planning for an effective collection of donations.  The generosity of an honorarium will be affected by the size and generosity of the audience!   I think we’ll do fine.

NOTE:  Howard owns and is bringing 6 books for sale, at our request.   The money from book sales goes to Howard, not to the Treasurer.

SALISH SEA BOOK EVENT

DONATIONS & EXPENSES

SEPT 24, 2018

 

DONATIONS                                                                                                                                                                            $ 565.50

EXPENSES

VENUE,  CIVIC CENTRE

Hall Rental   3 hrs   Pioneer Hall East                                   $107.10

Equipment Rental     3 hrs  Projector & Sound System       $124.95

Sub-total, VENUE cost                                         $232.05

ADVERTISING

300 posters, Qualicum Stationers                                            $168.00

360 Bookmarks, Qualicum Stationers                                      $55.78

                        Sub-total, ADVERTISING cost                         $223.78

SUB-TOTAL,  VENUE & ADVERTISING                                                                  $455.83

HONORARIUM, EXPENSES, for the Author/Presenter                                                              $100.00

TOTAL EXPENSES                                                        $555.83

DONATIONS MINUS EXPENSES                                                                                                                                       $ 9.67

Aug 302018
 

Return to  INDEX, Salish Sea

Sept Sat 1

3  Mon      Contact more organizations

4  Tues    Candidates, Municipal Elections – Open for filing nomination papers

12  Wed        Organizing Meeting

13  Thur        Kevin Taft, Courtenay

14  Fri           Almost all the Posters are up.   Have a few book marks left.

DEADLINE, Candidates, Nomination Papers submitted

17  Mon          Submit floor plan to the Civic Centre

18  Tues         Continue talking with Organizations and Facebook

23  Sun         Social media – – reminder – –  Tomorrow!

24  Monday      Who would like to assist Howard?

  • His books to his table.
  • Set up for PowerPoint.
  • Introduce him to Emcee, wants to meet with Howard immediately
  • (a different person)  Be at table to sell his books and look after money

THE EVENT:

6:30   Civic Centre open.  Volunteers arrive.  (Dietmar and Judith arrived early and found the Centre open.)

Tables set up.

7:00   Emcee welcomes, tells the audience the time-table,  introduces Howard.   Presentation begins.

(Beyond that,  see Emcee, Notes for  . . .)