In For A Penny: News Digest
In For A Penny: News Digest
By Simon Pound
News Digest first goes out on bfm on Friday Morning........ To listen to 95bFM click here - Also, for more of Simon’s columns see… inforapound.blogspot
Now for this week I thought I’d have a quick look at a couple of papers for rather different reasons, the Guardian Weekly and the NBR.
First up, because it is always good to start
with something positive first thing in the morning, The
Guardian Weekly, that fine and venerable English institution
that, in good news, is now being printed in Australia and as
such has become both affordable and timely.
In the old
days you had to shell out a packet for the air-freighted
edition or wait an age for it to arrive by snail mail, by
which time of course the writing, no matter how good, was
well out of date.
Ironically now that we can get our
hands on it so readily we don’t need it so much because of
the excellent Guardian website, but surely these great sites
will soon start to cost moolah so I guess we’ll just have to
enjoy them for free while we can.
Although, no matter
how good a website is it can never replace that satisfying
feeling of having a good newspaper in your hand.
And my,
it is a good newspaper. Nice compact size and packed full of
well-informed stories, commentary and debate – as only the
most influential left wing weekly could achieve, hailing as
it does from the home of the great newspaper tradition –
mother England. And, incorporating as it does the best
writings of the Guardian Daily, its sister paper The
Observer and also Le Monde in France (thankfully for those
like me without a wide ranging classical education, it does
so in English).
Though this publication never started
life as an establishment creature. Indeed for the first,
many, years of its life it was known as the Manchester
Workers’ Guardian, and was far, far, far left of where it
rather respectably sits today.
And also surprisingly for
a venerable left wing institution it is missing the standard
Achilles heels of the left. Instead of being humourless,
sanctimonious, preachy and totalitarian as most leftist
publications are it is, in fact, lightly cynical, slightly
knowing, genuinely concerned and does not advocate
class-warfare as a solution for everything from
student-loans to the common cold.
Not of course that the
vast majority of right-wing publications are any better but
we’ll save that scorn for a couple of minutes until we put
the hooks into the NBR shortly.
Sooooooo. In this weeks
Weekly we can find a host of interesting and illuminating
things. One of the best packages I’ve picked up in ages.
For example, there is a wee story on the Fathers4Justice
Batman guy who scaled Buckingham Palace to raise awareness
for Father’s rights to visit their children. Turns out that
this pompous git in the silly costume and the ill-fitting
speedos is so enamoured of his, admittedly often valid
cause, that he has no time to see his own kids and his last
girlfriend left him, taking their child, because he was
always out protesting and never at home with them. Classic.
What a nonce.
And that is not the worst of it, there was
another little cracker tucked away amongst all the serious
worthy stuff that most people would buy it for that just
made my week.
The European Union, newly enlarged, and
the corresponding European Parliament are, it reports,
buckling under the pressure of translation duties. The 25
current members are spending a billion Euros a year just on
trying to understand each other and apparently are failing
miserably. This latter-day tower of Babel is in a real mess
which is only getting worse because in three years Romania,
Croatia and Bulgaria are going to join and they haven’t a
hope of finding enough interpreters in time. It is always
pleasing to a bad minded bugger like me to see a
paternalistic and prescriptive organisation buckle under the
weight of its own bureaucracy. But that’s just me. I also
like to think what Bulgarian or Czech scrabble must be like
– they probably all sit round going – oh shit, I’ve only got
vowels.
Anyway, as so often tidily happens with these radio things, it just so happens that the Guardian Weekly and the mighty b are pooling some resources. At the moment it is to the pretty small level of them sending us two free copies a week (at a not to be scoffed at saving of $4.95 an issue) and us getting access to their journalists in the field. So watch this space, the opportunity to tap into some of the best writers in the world at the scene, so to speak, is a great coup.
Annnnnnnd soooooo the NBR. Another
weekly and about as far away from the Guardian as you get.
Known to a large degree to the non-business reader for the
high calibre of some of their stable, in particular Deborah
Hill Cone and David Cohen, and also for the annual Rich
List, which is sort of a Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous
for accountants. In short the Review is kind of like a paper
of record for business establishment views. To say it is
right wing is boring, but in the limited sense most people
understand right wing, true. It is very economically dry and
no friend of the Labour government, and, until Dr Brash’s
ascendancy, no great friend to National either.
And now
the NBR has squarely landed in the broader public view for
their frenzied character assassination of Auckland Mayoral
hopeful Dick Hubbard.
Now Dick Hubbard was never a
fellow traveller to this paper. Goebbels once stated that
when he heard the word culture he reached for his revolver.
Similarly, the NBR is the kind of organ that reaches for the
revolver when it hears words like sustainable development
and corporate social responsibility. But it is also not the
kind of rag to immediately jump into bed with someone who
made their millions peddling something so airy-fairy as
bee-pollen supplements, as in the case of incumbent John
Banks. So why did the paper effectively weigh in behind
Banksie by devoting nine stories to discrediting Hubbard?
I suppose that to the NBR Banksie is the devil they know, and by now, as he certainly has an odd car-crash charm, quite like. Well whatever it is one thing I do know is that it has led to the running of such an ill-conceived, vaguely hysterical and overall grasping hatchet-job on Hubbard in the latest issue.
The importance of such an all-out
assault by what is in effect a minority reach paper became
apparent to this speculator only yesterday. It turns out,
and perhaps I really should have known this already, that
businesses also receive a vote in local body elections,
excluding District Health Boards. Once again, if you already
knew this readily available information please do excuse me
but how fascinating.
The logic goes, as I found out from
David Smith, Chief Executive of the eye-poppingly
innocuously named Society of Local Government Managers, that
as businesses pay rates they should get a say in how
councils are populated.
Again, fascinating. Were this
entirely reasonable-sounding logic extrapolated out to the
General Election then Businesses, as taxpayers, ought also
to receive a vote. I know one-person one-vote is not going
to be replaced quietly but it is not too far fetched to
foresee this kind of argument creeping in sooner or later.
So anyway, so as to try to adhere to some sort of
traditionally understood democratic ideal if a business
owner is also a resident voter in a local body election they
are supposed to proxy their vote to a nominated staff member
who lives outside the area…….. but they can still, I’d
imagine, direct who that vote would go to. It all sounds
remarkably murky to me, a smoke and mirrors approach to
transparency.
But finally, in light of this, it makes a lot more sense to me that the NBR would try so strenuously to have a go at Hubbard’s credibility. If, as the respected business paper, they get behind a candidate then the business vote may very well swing the election his way.
Interesting huh. Though I still can’t for the life of me work out exactly why the NBR are so keen to back Banks.