rosesarered I just quoted a small paragraph of the article and left a link for anyone who wishes to read it in full. The highlighted comment from the newspaper's founder still says a lot about that paper.
George Orwell in his book "1984" wrote about the Two minutes hate.
This was an attempt at rabble rousing. Stirring up hatred of certain groups by gender race etc etc. Also in "Animal Farm"
This was also seen in many films of Hitler in the Nazi Nuremburg rallies.
The DM is still publishing such rhetotric, although it is very much less obvious in its manner. These days they have to go out of their way to avoid prosecution. I can't find any examples as I don't buy the paper.
Orwell was a socialist. I think he may have been a communist for a time but once he realised what was going on in Stalinist Russia he became a fierce critic of that communist state.
Gransnet forums
News & politics
What gives anyone the right to 'knock' a newspaper?
(197 Posts)This was a comment on another thread but that bit of the conversation was detracting from the subject so I thought I would ask about it on a new thread. I hope that is OK.
Is it really wrong to have a poor of opinion of a particular newspaper? I have to admit I was surprised to see this as many have such opinions as far as I can tell. The Sun and The Mail are certainly seen in a particular way. The Guardian is often referred to as the Grundian because of it's spelling mistakes. The Telegraph used to be and may still be referred to as the Torygraph.
The now deceased Daily Sport (which specialised in celebrity news and soft core pornographic stories and images, according to Wikipedia) and the Morning Star could each be used to set the scene in a novel which somewhat implies that we all have opinions about newspapers.
If having an opinion about them is something that is country-wide (or international in some cases) then does expressing a commonly held opinion mean that knocking the newspaper knocks all that read it as was suggested? Surely not.
I agree, roses, that one can't trust any newspaper to give balanced coverage. Which is not to say that they don't all publish balanced reports sometimes, but I think it's always wise to read widely rather than stick to one editorial point of view.
I look forward to the weekly review. Actually, it would be interesting to read about our EU "hokey okey"(in, out, shake it all about) from a European perspective, so maybe I will have a look at one or other online. 
Well I think grumppa has more than established his bona fides to comment on Le Monde and the Frankfurter Allgemeine, just not please, Die Bildzeitung!! 
granjura's post 12 October. 20.24.12
For someone who professes to hate the Daily Mail you seem to have a very intimate knowledge of its content 
You must have studied it intensively for years and years!
(If that is its content!)
I missed this thread yesterday, but it is very amusing.
To answer the OP, it is just snobbery really isn't it? We are nearly all guilty of snobbery regarding something or another IMO. Though, being snobbish about a newspaper is somehow more acceptable than any other kind, in some people's eyes.
If I were to read any paper, it would very likely be The Times, DH used to buy this once in a while, but even so this wouldn't give balanced coverage.
Just read your link nelliemoser out of interest, you leave out the fact that the paper often champions 'left wing causes' as well, as it was the first paper to campaign for the murdered teenager Stephen Lawrence.
selective links are like editing, they don't tell the whole truth.Polly Toynbee is very left wing as well.
In any case, I don't like the idea of forum members deciding which papers are the right ones to read i.e. The ones that they do themselves.This is IMO of course, which I am entitled to.
The Daily Mail has long had something of the status of a national joke. It is by no means just on Gransnet.
This extract is from this link
www.realnews247.com/daily_mail_circulation.htm
"Criticism"
The Daily Mail is a target of satire and criticism by centrist and left-of centre media and individuals as well as certain satirical magazines. As a target of satire the stereotypical Daily Mail reader is characterised as a borderline-racist, homophobic, aspiring middle-class conservative who lacks the intelligence to read the broadsheet equivalent the Daily Telegraph.
In fact, in recent years the phrase 'Daily Mail reader' has become increasingly used in general parlance (not just in the media) as shorthand for any person with such attitudes.
Due to its stance on moral issues - for instance, its continuing condemnation of already-punished criminals such as Myra Hindley and Maxine Carr, and its editorial outrage at television programmes such as Jerry Springer - The Opera or Brass Eye - some left-wingers refer to the paper with nicknames such as the "Daily Wail" and the "Daily Hate".
The latter is in part because - according to Polly Toynbee in The Guardian [3]
www.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,3604,1178434,00.html -
The Mail's founder, Lord Northcliffe, said his winning formula was to give his readers "a daily hate".
The Mail is often ridiculed for its supposed obsession with the property market. This has led to Private Eye mock-headlines such as Influx of asylum seekers cause house values to plummet and Property prices fall as asteroid prepares to wipe out life on Earth.
Another aspect of the Mail that draws controversy is its alleged promotion of pseudoscience. Astrology is often the subject of articles, and the newspaper runs a profitable telephone astrology service (http://www.randi.org/jr/040204orange.html) through its association with Jonathan Cainer.
Regular features are also run on Alien abduction, the Bible code, and other such paranormal subjects.
In the same vein, the Mail's opposition to the "single-jab" MMR vaccine was condemned by medical practitioners. It is, however, inconsistent in such areas, and marked the 250th anniversary of the birth of homeopathy's founder with an article calling it "Undiluted Tosh!".
There certainly are some Alea, that much is obvious.Good post Anya, if you are not well informed in a rounded sort of way by varied reading then you do stay in a bubble.
@Alea - and what we now know of the Gospels should kick that expression into touch anyway!
So true Anya it helps to know the political bias to start with.
I would have hoped few people still quote something as "gospel" truth,
"Because it was in the newspaper", (but fear there might yet be some.)
The first thing I have noticed about the Sun is that there are a lot of short paragraphs covering subjects and no whole page in depth coverage.
The press are more or less free to print what they want and we are in the privileged position of being free to criticise them.
However some people seem to take whatever their preferred newspaper says as gospel (which is in itself a strangely inaccurate term) and not pass the news through a reality filter, or more often, they buy a newspaper which reflects their political leanings and soak up every little piece of misinformation they are fed.
That goes for papers at both ends of the political spectrum.
Ooh a treat in store?
I've just had "The Sun " delivered instead of the Guardian.
Will have a look and see what I think.
Well said Nelliemoser.
We should be free to criticise any newspaper. It is not criticising the readers.
I disagree with a lot of things they choose to print.
I just don't get this thread. We live in a democracy. Why should we not critcise any newspaper.
Don't forget the Sun and Hillsborough and the News of the World and phone hacking.
Actually we should all be very critical of all newspapers. By critical I mean we should think very carefully about everything that is said by them and not take everything as being accurate.
We should check with other sources of news before taking anything anyone says as "The Truth." It's like gossip. So many people tell you "they" are saying, without a clue who "they" are. Chinese whispers.
To suggest that anyone who criticises a particular newspaper are automatically offering criticism of the reader is IMO irrational.
Why should I feel upset or offended if someone says they really dislike the piece of music my choir is singing next time? No IMO that's their loss. I am happy for them to think it is an appalling piece of music.
I am just going to say on here that... "I dislike Staffordshire Bull terriers and Fluffy Kittens." But if anyone chooses to be upset by my views on them then is their choice to feel offended and alienated. Not my intention or my fault.
mediareform.us7.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=ca407d4765e6b4879b06b0d5b&id=af3ffbcd01&e=d031b5a155
For anyone in London, a media democracy festival at Goldsmith's College.
I knock a newspaper if it twists the truth or tell outright lies, stirs up hatreds, pushes a particular political agenda (usually right wing) and revels in pointless trivia. As this covers most tabloids, I feel free to knock!!
This doesn’t mean I’m knocking the readers - after all, I must have read it myself in order to know what it’s like.
Living in Australia, where political arguments and talking about anything controversial is just not on in many circles, I have been known to get into a bit of bother for being outspoken.
But I really don’t care. In fact I enjoy it.
Grumppa respect! 
Alea, it's the way you say "some people" that grates
Ah, I say that in preference to accusing any individual person or implying that it applies to everybody, so I do literally mean "some" people, and if it applies to anybody reading my post, they may know to whom I am referring (or not).
Would you prefer me to be specific? That would be personal and as you may have found out from a very personal attack on me, now deleted, GN don't like that.
anotherangryvoice.blogspot.co.uk/2012/08/daily-mail-olympic-plastic-brits.html here are some reasons why I do not choose to buy the DM. In my view it promotes disharmony and stirs up sh*t.
OK, but you did teach for ten years at some point. Sorry I got the timing wrong.
No, I did not lie. I did not spend the last ten years of my working life teaching.
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