September 05, 2005

The BBC Is Back!

Stirring words of truth from the BBC's Matt Wells, reporting from Los Angeles:
National politics reporters and anchors here come largely from the same race and class as the people they are supposed to be holding to account.

They live in the same suburbs, go to the same parties, and they are in debt to the same huge business interests.

Giant corporations own the networks, and Washington politicians rely on them and their executives to fund their re-election campaigns across the 50 states.

It is a perfect recipe for a timid and self-censoring journalistic culture that is no match for the masterfully aggressive spin-surgeons of the Bush administration.

But last week the complacency stopped, and the moral indignation against inadequate government began to flow, from slick anchors who spend most of their time glued to desks in New York and Washington...

Government has been thrown into disrepute, and many Americans have realised, for the first time, that the collapsed, rotten flood defences of New Orleans are a symbol of failed infrastructure across the nation.

Blaming the state and city officials, as the president is already trying to do over Katrina, will not wash...

The dithering and incompetence that will be exposed will not spare the commander-in-chief, or the sunny, faith-based propaganda that he was still spouting as he left New Orleans airport last Friday, saying it was all going to turn out fine.

People were still trapped, hungry and dying on his watch, less than a mile away.
The fact that Wells has been allowed to post such a story is a welcome return to form for the BBC. Welcome back, Aunty.

2 comments:

Joules *Dances with Haddock* Taylor said...

I'll apologise in advance for the vagueness of this, I was struggling with a computer problem at the time and only had half an ear on the TV...
(I'm not quoting here, just typing what I remember) A couple of days ago, on one of the regular BBC1 news slots, one of the beeb's own reporters, the drowned city behind him, commented that the world would remember Bush's first term for his disastrous war and his second for the disaster that hit New Orleans.
It was so good to hear it said.

Winter Patriot said...

note to joules: we're gonna remember a heck of a lot more than that!

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