tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4057487038565855826.post522795336020360136..comments2024-02-21T08:52:55.878+00:00Comments on Your Freedom and Ours: No thank youHelenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13799545178433498944noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4057487038565855826.post-76235647685765947112012-08-11T22:58:27.100+01:002012-08-11T22:58:27.100+01:00Indeed, all such controls have an ultimate aim - a...Indeed, all such controls have an ultimate aim - and this one is a clear desire to control what is said and who is allowed to say it. So, presumably, at some point if you oppose your country's membership of the EU you don't get your "kitemark" (for expressing xenophobic views). And of course all the while the authorities are then clamouring for those who don't have a "kitemark" to be barred from blogging "to protect democracy". Presumably using the power of comment "responsibly" includes not drawing your readers' attention to the impact, for example, of the EU on your nation's democracy. As the Foreign Office advised opinion formers 40 years ago, it is best for all to conceal the degree to which the nation would lose its powers and voters their influence. Suppressing the truth, they appeared to accept, would be an act of responsibility...Damian Hockneyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15805337734492250142noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4057487038565855826.post-83847856528139738432012-08-10T09:38:34.969+01:002012-08-10T09:38:34.969+01:00Isn't this just part of a much wider push to c...Isn't this just part of a much wider push to control journalists? In 2006 the UN AoC Organisation's High Level Group recommended the following:<br /><br /><i>"1. Media professionals must develop, articulate, and implement voluntary codes of conduct. The power of words and images in shaping our understanding of the world cannot be overestimated. Media professionals must use that power responsibly. In this regard, accurate reporting is of primary importance. But it is not enough. Journalists and producers must also be alert to the impact that editorial decisions and opinions implicitly conveyed in reporting can have on the public’s perception of an issue. Standards have been articulated by associations such as the International Federation of Journalists, but are not implemented and enforced by professional associations with the consistency and rigor with which, for example, the legal and medical professions apply their professional guidelines and codes of conduct. Adherence to such standards is particularly critical during times of crisis when popular emotions and fears are heightened and in covering the intersection of religion and politics."</i><br /><br />I can see that journalists, if constrained by this, and the EU would happily implement it, would want to see their "opposition" similarly curtailed.<br /><br />As Dr North is fond of pointing out - often behind all such utterances is the overreaching hand of the UN.Alfredhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01694719785236153072noreply@blogger.com