Club Wah

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Archive for April 14th, 2008

Damn lies, statistics and racists

Posted by clubwah on April 14, 2008

 I don’t want to make a habit of writing posts about topics raised on A Western Heart, but I couldn’t let this pass, not least because I’m barred from commenting.

Our friend MK posted the following:

Yay for multiculturalism, refugee rights and open-borders

Daily Mail- One in every five murders or manslaughters in England and Wales is committed by a foreigner, police figures revealed. In one area of London, the figure is one in three. This is despite the fact that foreigners represent only around one in 16 of the general population. Critics blame the Government’s failure to deport foreign criminals. Recent cases have involved foreigners who had already been convicted of robbery and assault but were allowed to remain after serving their sentences. Conservative MP David Davies, a member of the Commons home affairs committee, said: “These extraordinary figures demonstrate the failure of the Government’s immigration policy, which has seen all sorts of undesirable characters being able to get into this country and use the Human Rights Act to escape deportation.”

Of course MK and his cohorts attribute foreigners to mean filthy coon refugees, without considering it can mean Americans, Canadians, New Zealanders, Europeans and people from other nations that these dickheads don’t find distasteful. Oh, did I mention the 15 Australians in UK prisons 

As Wayne Carey, and the two Australian sailors who beat the shit out of an American guy over an argument about football showed, you don’t have to be reffo darling of THERLEFT to be a foreign criminal.

The other thing about that story is how the Daily Mail, the blue-top bastion of the conservative wife, used the figure of one-in-five - which sounds a lot bigger than 20 per cent. Also if you turn that figure around then the fact that 80 per cent of prisoners in UK jails are UK born is hardly fucking news.

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Lonely Planet scandal symptomatic of where journalism is heading

Posted by clubwah on April 14, 2008

News.com.au reports Lonely Planet is reeling from claims by one of its authors that he plagiarised and made up large sections of his books and dealt drugs to make up for poor pay.

Thomas Kohnstamm, whose book is titled Do Travel Writers Go To Hell? said yesterday that he had worked on more than a dozen books for Lonely Planet, including their titles on Brazil, Colombia, the Caribbean, South America, Venezuela and Chile.

In one case, he said he had not even visited the country he wrote about.

“They didn’t pay me enough to go Colombia,” he said. “I wrote the book in San Francisco. I got the information from a chick I was dating - an intern in the Colombian consulate.

“They don’t pay enough for what they expect the authors to do.”

The only surprising thing about this story is that he actually interviewed someone with local knowledge about Colombia and didn’t just relay on the internet to produce the book.

Lonely Planet are notoriously bad payers which, like many publishers, relies on the fact that many budding journalists, writers and book editors are willing to work for peanuts in an industry where demand for jobs far outweighs supply. I remember applying for a job as guide book editor at Lonely Planet several years ago, a role which included commissioning writers and photographers, compiling the information and editing the book. I withdrew my application when I found the role was paying just $35,000 - a mere graduate salary for position which pays anywhere from $50,000 to $70,000 at larger publishers.

Lonely Planet isn’t alone. Community newspaper groups, street press, trade publications and small publishers are cutting costs big time resulting in poorly payed, poorly resourced and overworked journalists who are unable, and often discouraged, from taking the time and expenses to be thorough.

The result is press release and Google journalism, which is fast becoming the norm, rather than some journalistic atrocity highlighted on Media Watch - imagine what Hemingway would think.

 

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