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THE TELECARD AFFAIR: DIARY OF A MEDIA LYNCHING
Gerard Charles (Wilson)
ISBN 1 876262 10 9 pb 215x140mm 232pp, 2001, $9.95
ON 10th OCTOBER 2000, The Canberra Times
broke a story about the misuse of Peter Reith's government-funded telecard.
Unauthorised calls to the tune of $50,000 had been rung up on the Workplace
Relations Minister's telecard after he had given his son, Paul Reith,
the card's PIN in contravention of the Remuneration Tribunal's guidelines.
For more than two weeks, the story was headline news. Editorial writers,
political commentators, and radio talkback hosts claimed that Peter Reith
was responsible for his telecard's misuse. This was a case, they said,
of the rorting politician-of 'snouts in the trough'.
Gerard Charles took a different view. In the opening chapter of The
Telecard Affair: Diary of a Media Lynching, he writes:
..while the media and the Labor Party have Peter Reith battered and
strung up as a public warning, I am going to argue that the Telecard Affair
is not about former Workplace Relations Minister, Peter Reith. It is not
about Parliamentary entitlements. It is not about MPs' rorts. It is not
about the usual 'snouts in the trough'. It is essentially about the media
as the sharpest corrupting influence in our social and political life.
It is about those media groups who function as amoral commercial enterprises.
It is about those journalists who betray their calling and are seduced,
or coerced, by people who rule themselves according to their materialist
objectives. It's about the slow death of the processes of public justice.
The analysis of the media's reporting of the Telecard Affair is unrelenting,
and targets some well-known media figures. This is a book to secretly
delight people who have been on the receiving end of the media's activity.
TO ORDER: Email your order (gerardwilson01@optusnet.com.au)
and you will be sent a Paypal invoice which you can pay with credit card.
Reviews:
John Young, News
Weekly
R.J. Stove, News Weekly
Jack Waterford (Editor-in-Chief of The
Canberra Times)
Gerard Charles (Wilson) responds
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