Longrider

5
Dec
2004

After Galloway…

Filed under: Political — Longrider @ 19:48 pm

I’ve been waiting for the Telegraph’s response to its humiliating defeat in the libel case brought by George Galloway. In their leader today they reassert the claims made immediately outside the court that this is a black day for journalism and freedom of the press.

No, it isn’t. Whatever you may think of Galloway, and I found his sycophancy to the deposed Iraqi leader sickening, there was no evidence that he was in Saddam’s pay apart from the documents found following the fall of Baghdad. On their own, they may have seemed damning. They certainly seemed to make the basis of a good story, but, on their own they were worthless.

The journalist, David Blair may well have been acting with the best of intentions - as, indeed, may the Telegraph - but freedom of the press comes with a responsibility. That responsibility is to ensure that the facts of the story are true before going to press. The Telegraph failed to do that. That is why they lost in the courts and quite rightly too.

Copyright©2004 Longrider

5
Dec
2004

Long Hair

Filed under: Personal Stuff — Longrider @ 09:21 am

Over at Confessions of a Libertine Blog, the discussion of men with long hair has cropped (sic) up. I discuss this in some length (groan) at my website. I’ve had long hair for much of my life. I grew up in the nineteen seventies when men were starting to let their hair grow longer again after the repressive militarist short back and sides that had dominated for most of the twentieth century.

I knew from an early age that short hair just wasn’t me. Every few weeks I was either taken or despatched to the local barber shop and endured the humiliating shearing of my scalp leaving my hair painfully (to me) short. Then came the seventies. . Like most teenagers of the day, I let my hair grow to what is generally known these days as the "awkward stage" - that period where hair is too long to control and too short to tie back or even tuck behind your ears.

As an adult, I settled on a shaped style that hung around my shoulders and I was happy enough. Then a Human Resources manager told me to cut it. This had the undesired (for her) effect of stopping all haircuts from that point onward. It is now down to my mid back and I’m loving it. That HR manager did me a favour and she didn’t even appreciate it.

Copyright©2004 Longrider

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