on
05-02-2014
08:05 AM
- last edited on
05-02-2014
09:28 AM
by
underbat
Abbott prepares for war on the ABC
Who stands to benefit?
The attacks on the ABC are not solely prompted by the acute embarrassment its news coverage has caused the government. Nor is the budget review simply intended to make the ABC more efficient. The execrable MP Cory Bernadi suggested that the government could “cut the ABC budget and allow the commercial media to compete.”
From 1996 to 2012 the ABC budget actually fell as a proportion of government spending, from .45 to .27 percent. Although inflation has in effect kept its funding unchanged since then, the ABC has somehow managed to introduce new digital and web services and develop its existing operations.
But there’s the rub.
The commercial media bitterly resent the ABC and would dearly love to capture its audiences. They are outraged that its new services have proved very popular, and that ABC kids programs frequently draw the biggest TV ratings in Australia. Media magnate James Murdoch thundered: “There is a land grab, pure and simple, going on, and in the public interest it should be sternly resisted.”
The Murdoch empire’s hatred of the ABC has become obsessive since Sky News, an outfit in which it has a financial interest, was deprived by the Gillard government of an opportunity to take over the ABC’s overseas news service.
And the coalition is backing the privateers. Bronwyn Bishop and Ian MacDonald say the ABC exceeded its charter and is cannibalising legitimate private media business operations.
In contrast, former ABC chairman David Hill has strenuously rejected Abbott’s criticism of the ABC and his vindictive approach to it.
He commented: “It’s an absurd proposition, laughable if it wasn’t so dangerous. This is the first serious suggestion I know of, certainly in the last half century, where a prime minister of the country is suggesting that the Australian public be denied access to the truth, and the first time that a prime minister has seriously intimated that the ABC should censor and withhold information from the Australian public.”
According to a report in The Australian, the overseas broadcasting service, which broadcasts into 46 countries, is likely to be scrapped in the May budget in order to “save money and end the pursuit of ‘soft diplomacy’.”
Other options the government may pursue include reducing the ABC’s budget so it fore goes all but basic news broadcasts, introducing advertising to its broadcasts on the basis of improved economic performance, stripping it of its digital and web services – or even attempting to privatise it, as some coalition MPs would prefer.
The attacks threaten an institution which enjoys nationwide affection and respect and is crucial for the public’s understanding of news and current affairs, as well as its cultural development.
The future of “Aunty”, your ABC, is on the line.
http://www.cpa.org.au/guardian/2014/1625/05-abcs-future.html
on 05-02-2014 03:59 PM
@freakiness wrote:
@**meep** wrote:If that was the point Icy was making, it didn't come across that way to me.
Sorry, she said biased news against Australia.
And No, the ABC is not biased against Abbott or Australia.
on 05-02-2014 04:26 PM
@icyfroth wrote:I have read that, thank you gary.
Still hasn't answered my question.
Why is ABC trumpeting about that it's under threat by the Government to be shut down?
All I can see is that the tender for the Australian News service is under review!
Paranoid much? Or a guilty conscience?
Guilty conscience?
How?
on 05-02-2014 04:50 PM
https://theconversation.com/abc-forgetting-lessons-of-2001-pays-for-its-lack-of-scepticism-22746
On February 4, the ABC’s managing director, Mark Scott, and director of news, Kate Torney, issued a media release, the Jesuitical wording of which brings us to the second ethical issue here, that of media accountability.
Referring to the video evidence of the burnt hand, the statement said:
The ABC’s initial reports on the video said that the vision appeared to support the asylum seekers’ claims. That’s because it was the first concrete evidence that the injuries had occurred. What the video did not do was establish how those injuries occurred. The wording around the ABC’s initial reporting needed to be more precise on that point. We regret if our reporting led anyone to mistakenly assume that the ABC supported the asylum seekers’ claims. The ABC has always presented the allegations as just that – claims worthy of further investigation.
Too right it needed to be more precise, and assessments about what the video meant needed to be suspended until better evidence was available. As for mistaken assumptions, it is well established in media law – and equally well understood by journalists – that people take in the news impressionistically. They do not parse every sentence.
Journalists who create false impressions in the minds of their audience have only themselves to blame. In these ways, the ABC’s statement typifies the media’s conventional reluctance to own up.
Poor evidence of biasNone of these failings, however, support the accusations of bias that have been levelled at the ABC.
Failure to verify is not on its own evidence of bias. If it could be shown to be accompanied by some other culpable element such as conscious prejudice, suppression of available evidence or failure to give an opportunity to reply, then a case of bias might exist. However, there is no such evidence.
News Corp has characterised the ABC as treacherous and accused it of hating the navy. But News Corp has acommercial axe to grind with the ABC and isn’t to be taken seriously on this matter.
The government was given every opportunity to reply but was defeated by its own policy of censorship in respect of Operation Sovereign Borders.
Nor do these failings provide any support for prime minister Tony Abbott’s authoritarian proposition that the ABC should give Australia the benefit of the doubt on these issues.
Lessons of historyGive Australia the benefit of the doubt? Why? Australian governments have lied about these matters before.
During the 2001 federal election campaign, the ABC was rightlysceptical about the veracity of photos that the government asserted to be of asylum seekers throwing their children overboard. They turned out to be nothing of the kind.
The irony now is that the ABC has been insufficiently sceptical of another asylum seeker image, in this case the burnt-hand video. In journalism, it is always hazardous to suspend disbelief.
on 05-02-2014 05:03 PM
@freakiness wrote:https://theconversation.com/abc-forgetting-lessons-of-2001-pays-for-its-lack-of-scepticism-22746
Questions of accountabilityOn February 4, the ABC’s managing director, Mark Scott, and director of news, Kate Torney, issued a media release, the Jesuitical wording of which brings us to the second ethical issue here, that of media accountability.
ABC managing director Mark Scott’s statement of regret offers a limited sort of accountability.AAP/Alan Porritt
Referring to the video evidence of the burnt hand, the statement said:
The ABC’s initial reports on the video said that the vision appeared to support the asylum seekers’ claims. That’s because it was the first concrete evidence that the injuries had occurred. What the video did not do was establish how those injuries occurred. The wording around the ABC’s initial reporting needed to be more precise on that point. We regret if our reporting led anyone to mistakenly assume that the ABC supported the asylum seekers’ claims. The ABC has always presented the allegations as just that – claims worthy of further investigation.
Too right it needed to be more precise, and assessments about what the video meant needed to be suspended until better evidence was available. As for mistaken assumptions, it is well established in media law – and equally well understood by journalists – that people take in the news impressionistically. They do not parse every sentence.
Journalists who create false impressions in the minds of their audience have only themselves to blame. In these ways, the ABC’s statement typifies the media’s conventional reluctance to own up.
Poor evidence of biasNone of these failings, however, support the accusations of bias that have been levelled at the ABC.
Failure to verify is not on its own evidence of bias. If it could be shown to be accompanied by some other culpable element such as conscious prejudice, suppression of available evidence or failure to give an opportunity to reply, then a case of bias might exist. However, there is no such evidence.
News Corp has characterised the ABC as treacherous and accused it of hating the navy. But News Corp has acommercial axe to grind with the ABC and isn’t to be taken seriously on this matter.
The government was given every opportunity to reply but was defeated by its own policy of censorship in respect of Operation Sovereign Borders.
Nor do these failings provide any support for prime minister Tony Abbott’s authoritarian proposition that the ABC should give Australia the benefit of the doubt on these issues.
Lessons of historyGive Australia the benefit of the doubt? Why? Australian governments have lied about these matters before.
During the 2001 federal election campaign, the ABC was rightlysceptical about the veracity of photos that the government asserted to be of asylum seekers throwing their children overboard. They turned out to be nothing of the kind.
The irony now is that the ABC has been insufficiently sceptical of another asylum seeker image, in this case the burnt-hand video. In journalism, it is always hazardous to suspend disbelief.
Do you have a point in amongst all that text?
on 05-02-2014 05:05 PM
on 05-02-2014 05:07 PM
froth,
no trumpeting that I can read, trumpeting is really more Tones style anyway, no paranoia, except from Tone and Co., guilty conscience - I doubt Tone and co have one.
further from the previous article in Independent Australia
The Abbott Government is apparently concerned about bias at ABC and yet they give the Murdoch press a complete free pass to act in the most irresponsible manner possible on a range of fronts — whether it be political bias, climate change or promoting its own business interests.
If this is about the standard of media in this country, isn't it reasonable to expect them to look beyond Liberal Party self-interest?
Critics of the ABC will say there is a different standard expected because it is taxpayer funded organisation, but isn't it reasonable to expect all media – whether funded by taxpayers or not – to act in a fair, reasonable and ethical manner. The Murdoch media fail that test on a daily basis.
And do we really want a country where media considers blind patriotism before the any other consideration?
As usual, the corrosive influence of Murdoch divides and conquers and moves the agenda ever more to the right.
on 05-02-2014 05:23 PM
@freakiness wrote:
@boris1gary wrote:meep, sorry i didn't add the link in the original post - i think the mods did it, links don't always work for me so (if i remember) i just add where it came from - if that was what the confusion was ?
The confusion was caused by the name.
http://www.theguardian.com/au is where I look for news attributed to The Guardian.
Yes, that's were the confusion was.
on 05-02-2014 05:27 PM
@icyfroth wrote:
@freakiness wrote:https://theconversation.com/abc-forgetting-lessons-of-2001-pays-for-its-lack-of-scepticism-22746
Questions of accountabilityOn February 4, the ABC’s managing director, Mark Scott, and director of news, Kate Torney, issued a media release, the Jesuitical wording of which brings us to the second ethical issue here, that of media accountability.
ABC managing director Mark Scott’s statement of regret offers a limited sort of accountability.AAP/Alan Porritt
Referring to the video evidence of the burnt hand, the statement said:
The ABC’s initial reports on the video said that the vision appeared to support the asylum seekers’ claims. That’s because it was the first concrete evidence that the injuries had occurred. What the video did not do was establish how those injuries occurred. The wording around the ABC’s initial reporting needed to be more precise on that point. We regret if our reporting led anyone to mistakenly assume that the ABC supported the asylum seekers’ claims. The ABC has always presented the allegations as just that – claims worthy of further investigation.
Too right it needed to be more precise, and assessments about what the video meant needed to be suspended until better evidence was available. As for mistaken assumptions, it is well established in media law – and equally well understood by journalists – that people take in the news impressionistically. They do not parse every sentence.
Journalists who create false impressions in the minds of their audience have only themselves to blame. In these ways, the ABC’s statement typifies the media’s conventional reluctance to own up.
Poor evidence of biasNone of these failings, however, support the accusations of bias that have been levelled at the ABC.
Failure to verify is not on its own evidence of bias. If it could be shown to be accompanied by some other culpable element such as conscious prejudice, suppression of available evidence or failure to give an opportunity to reply, then a case of bias might exist. However, there is no such evidence.
News Corp has characterised the ABC as treacherous and accused it of hating the navy. But News Corp has acommercial axe to grind with the ABC and isn’t to be taken seriously on this matter.
The government was given every opportunity to reply but was defeated by its own policy of censorship in respect of Operation Sovereign Borders.
Nor do these failings provide any support for prime minister Tony Abbott’s authoritarian proposition that the ABC should give Australia the benefit of the doubt on these issues.
Lessons of historyGive Australia the benefit of the doubt? Why? Australian governments have lied about these matters before.
During the 2001 federal election campaign, the ABC was rightlysceptical about the veracity of photos that the government asserted to be of asylum seekers throwing their children overboard. They turned out to be nothing of the kind.
The irony now is that the ABC has been insufficiently sceptical of another asylum seeker image, in this case the burnt-hand video. In journalism, it is always hazardous to suspend disbelief.
Do you have a point in amongst all that text?
Do I have to have?
The point would be that the ABC is not biased against Abbott. If anything they have been the opposite.
on 05-02-2014 06:43 PM
As a former employee of the ABC I can state from first hand experience that the ABC is biased towards getting a 'good story" and not letting the facts cloud the content of a "good story"
I was employed as a tape editor for part of my employment and on many occasions the script supplied with the requested edits bore no resemblance to the actual interview as recorded.
Over time the situation deteriorated to such a level that I resigned my position as tape editor.
on 05-02-2014 06:51 PM
as an ex-channel 2 employee, i totally refute that bs claim.
(shades)