Thursday, July 4, 2013

Collusion Between Murdoch, Thatcher And The London Police: Strikerbreaker Edition

How did Rupert Murdoch and his merry hacksters at News International (the British edition of News Corporation) get so close with the London police?

It goes back to the strikebreaking war Murdoch waged with the help of Margaret Thatcher and the cops back in the eighties:

The investigation of News Corp is not, as Murdoch claims, about "paying cops for news tips": it is about systemic corruption. The deputy assistant commissioner of the Metropolitan police at the time, Sue Akers, explained early last year: "The cases we are investigating are not ones involving the odd drink, or meal, to police officers or other public officials. Instead, these are cases in which arrests have been made involving the delivery of regular, frequent and sometimes significant sums of money to small numbers of public officials by journalists."

One of the decisive moments consolidating Murdoch's relationship to the Metropolitan police was the use of police as armed strikebreakers in the 86-87 Wapping dispute. Margaret Thatcher herself had assured Murdoch that the police would be at his disposal, and their collusion in breaking the strike required an operation costing £14m.

As the Guardian journalist Nick Davies pointed out, this was never simply a matter of criminality. It was always about power. The networks of collusion, bribery and complicity that began to be established in the Thatcher era are beginning to be unravelled.

Murdoch has been pretty skilled at avoiding accountability for helping to set up and support these networks of collusion, bribery, and complicity.

I'm under no illusion that he won't find a way to skate accountability now.

Somebody in the comments wrote the following:

Murdoch is the classic 19th century tycoon. No ethics, no sense of responsibility, no concern for anyone outside of his family and very small circle of personal friends.

His mission has always been to become the richest and most powerful SOB possible. Part of that goal is to bring the world back to the 19th century, when government encouraged that behavior, rather than trying to control it.

That is an excellent description of Murdoch and indeed, a pretty apt description of the world he has helped to usher in.

Think the collusion between FOX and the GOP.

Think the collusion between the NY Post/Wall Street Journal and Bloomberg and Klein.

For Rupert Murdoch, it is all about collusion and systematic corruption mean to enrich and empower himself and his coterie.

5 comments:

  1. "Rupert Murdoch is unfit to run a major corporation."That has been declared by the highest elected institution in Great Britain. They must now enforce their declaration with a long prison sentence and with extraordinary fines. Otherwise, the declarations of parliament are empty rubbish from the mouths of obfuscating jackasses.
    Oh, But don'tthold your breath waiting for justice because Great Britain is a proud partner of th United States' kleptocratic regime

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    1. According to Chris Bryant, MP, the laws on corruption are more stringent here in the U.S. than in the U.K. If there's any chance of Murdoch facing accountability, it's here in the U.S.

      But that would assume that we have a government looking to hold him accountable. And we do not. They're too busy looking to hold Snowden accountable.

      http://perdidostreetschool.blogspot.com/2013/07/chris-bryant-mp-murdoch-should-be.html

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  2. Don't hold your breath, RBE! In the American kleptocracy the constitution and the rule of law are for the "little people". politicians are their patrons, the Plutocrats are exempt from the rule of law. This is the new "norm". If you are surprised at this reality, ask yourself how many banisters have been prosecuted and sent to jail.
    So duh! That is why we are experiencing a "kleptocratic regime" which is sustained by a culture of fear and intimidation through illegal mass surveillance.. The British are fearful of the vindictive revelation by Murdoch of the many hidden political scandals as the bright disinfecting light of a thorough investigation scorches the filthy underbelly of Parliamentary collusion. Is it not preferable to keep our British skeletons tucked away and comfy in the closet?

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    1. I think the Obama DOJ will never go after him unless they were absolutely forced to. So yeah, I think you're right, no prosecution for Rupert.

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    2. I should add that the disclosure will be used against News Corp in the U.S. hacking court cases and will hurt them financially, so that even if Rupert skates accountability, his "new" News Corp - which will be on the line for all of the court fees and costs - may not.

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