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cover of episode News Watch: Farmers' 'tractor tax', Trans awareness, Amsterdam attacks

News Watch: Farmers' 'tractor tax', Trans awareness, Amsterdam attacks

2024/11/21
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Media Storm

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Helena Wadia
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Matilda Mallinson
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Matilda Mallinson:英国政府新的农业土地继承税政策引发农民抗议,抗议活动背后既有保护家庭农场利益的诉求,也存在富裕地主利用这一事件逃避税收的现象。这一政策在一定程度上冲击了传统家庭农场,增加了继承人的经济负担,可能导致农场后继无人。然而,该政策也旨在堵住富裕地主逃避遗产税的漏洞。因此,抗议活动中既有维护家庭农场利益的合理诉求,也存在富裕阶层利用这一事件进行政治操作的现象。 Helena Wadia:对英国农民抗议的报道中,媒体关注点偏向于富裕阶层利用农民权益进行政治操作,而非关注普通农民的实际困境。媒体报道中,对参与抗议的富裕人士(如Jeremy Clarkson和Katie Hopkins)的关注度较高,而对普通农民的困境关注较少。右翼政客利用农民抗议事件,将自身政治议程与农民权益诉求相结合,借此推动其反移民等政治立场。他们并没有真正关注农民的经济利益,而是利用农民的愤怒情绪来推动自身的政治目标。

Deep Dive

Key Insights

Why are UK farmers protesting the new inheritance tax on agricultural land?

Farmers are protesting because the new law imposes inheritance tax on agricultural land over £1 million, which they argue will burden family farms already financially strained. However, the protest is also being co-opted by wealthy landowners seeking to avoid taxes, making it a complex issue.

How does the media coverage of the farmers' protests compare to climate protests?

The Sun, which labeled climate protesters as 'eco-fanatics,' portrayed the farmers' protests as heroic, with headlines like 'British heroes.' This contrast highlights how media narratives can shift based on the cause being protested.

What is the significance of Transgender Day of Remembrance and Trans Awareness Week?

These events highlight the ongoing violence and discrimination against transgender people. This year, 350 transgender people were murdered globally, with 93% being black or brown, yet mainstream media largely ignored these events.

Why did the media initially misreport the Amsterdam football violence?

Initial reports focused on anti-Semitic attacks by Dutch locals, omitting the fact that Maccabi Tel Aviv fans had instigated violence days earlier by attacking people perceived as Arab or Muslim. This misreporting was corrected by some outlets but not all.

How did Netanyahu's actions influence the media narrative about the Amsterdam violence?

Netanyahu's announcement of military planes to rescue Maccabi supporters was a publicity stunt that seized control of the news agenda, framing the narrative as a rescue mission rather than addressing the initial violence by Maccabi fans.

What is wrong with the Daily Mail's headline 'Car boot murder tragedy'?

The headline is sensationalist, focusing on the car boot detail rather than the victim or perpetrator. It uses the word 'tragedy' to remove accountability from the alleged perpetrator and fails to mention the victim's name or the key detail of who is accused of the murder.

What is the 'woke filling' controversy in the Daily Mail?

The Daily Mail mocked 'woke fillings' in a sandwich, implying they were overly politically correct. The actual 'woke filling' they were referring to was chicken, highlighting the paper's tendency to sensationalize and ridicule progressive ideas.

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Hi, MediaStormers. It's Helena. And Matilda. The news is chaotic as hell. It's terrifying. It's confusing. It's conflicting. Basically, it's a dumpster fire on Trash Island. So how are we meant to make sense of it all? How about we do it together? Every Thursday, we're bringing you a news roundup.

The main stories dissected, finding the facts behind the fear-mongering, calling out the most unhinged headlines and helping you read the news critically. It's your essential guide to the mainstream media. This is MediaStorm's Newswatch.

You look at some of the fake news on these platforms, there's just so much out there right now. Some breaking news to bring you now. People want to be able to express opinions. I understand that. I have only one objective, which is to make sure the BBC is truly impartial. Well, I don't think that the mainstream media was lying. I think we missed the overarching story.

Welcome to MediaStorms Newswatch, helping you to make sense of the mainstream media. I'm Helena Wadia. And I'm Matilda Mallinson. This week's MediaStorms. Farmers, football fans and food that's too woke for the Daily Mail.

Hey, Helena. Hello. I'm looking forward to discussing another week in unhinged news. Look, I don't want to push conspiracy theories that the world is being run by an elite circle of paedophiles and sex predators. OK, sorry, where are you going with this? Have you seen Trump's nominations to his administration this week?

Oh yeah, it's pretty hellish. Yeah, he's now looking to be one of only three accused sexual assailants in the US government. And one of them, the guy pegged to literally be the chief law enforcement officer in the country, the Attorney General of the US. His name is Matt Gaetz. He's been investigated by the House Ethics Committee for...

involvement in the trafficking of a 17 year old he supposedly had sex with a 17 year old at this drug addled party and she was a victim of trafficking he may or may not have known her age until after the sex all of this has been documented by two women who supposedly paid to have sex with at that party as well but anyway he's very cleverly gotten around the investigation by um

resigning as congressman. The ethics committee can't investigate anyone who isn't a congressman, so it's not constitutional for them to continue this investigation. I actually think that Trump is like messing with us now. Like, let me see how far I can push this. Wow, well, this is a really cheery topic to start the episode on, but also this is kind of the reason why we've decided to do Newswatch. The news is so complicated.

and we want to help make sense of it. - Exactly, and so every week we're gonna pick apart these headlines and we're gonna bring you perspectives that you may not have come across, but help you to make sense of some of the chaos.

Let's start this week with the farmers protests happening here in the UK. Okay, this is actually very interesting. I guess I should just give the background which is the Labour government has introduced a policy which will reduce tax exemptions for agricultural land. Basically up until now farmers have been able to pass on their properties without any inheritance tax.

now for anything over a million pounds, they will now have to pay a certain amount of inheritance tax when passing on those properties. So this has been criticised by some because they're saying, well, this is really harmful to family farms. Already, it's not necessarily very financially rewarding running a farm. Why is your kid going to take on the business if they have to pay inheritance tax on top of, you know, living the life?

quite burdensome life that some farmers live. But there's also some people upset because this is closing a loophole for wealthy landowners who want to avoid paying inheritance tax. And this is, of course, Labour's intention in changing the law. So this quite...

ethical farming cause that can pull on the heartstrings is being piggybacked on by some very wealthy people who basically just don't want to pay taxes. And that's made it a very powerful movement here in the UK, at least as far as the headlines are concerned. Right, so this is what actually confused me because when I saw that thousands of farmers were marching through the streets of London to protest this law,

I was thinking immediately, this must be a law that is making the lives of working people and working class people harder

But when I delved into it a little bit more, it doesn't really seem like that's what it is. No, I mean, up to a million pounds, a property will still be inheritance tax free. I thought you'd be tickled, Helena, by comparing some of the coverage of these protests to coverage of, say, climate protests. Oh, go on. So The Sun, which called climate campaigners eco-fanatics who deserve to be locked up,

is presenting those protesting this new inheritance tax as British heroes. Their front page has Jeremy Clarkson with his arms folded staring down the lens of the camera. I mean, no, it was so interesting the type of people who joined...

the farmers or the wealthy landowners, however you want to describe them, on this march. Jeremy Clarkson, Katie Hopkins. I did see some of the policing of the protests as well, which I found very interesting. There was literally footage of tractors mowing down police barricades and actually, like,

driving, albeit very slowly, towards police officers. The police officers didn't really seem to mind so much, you know, as opposed to, let's say, women at a candlelit vigil. And you're so right to point out these people who were joining on the marches, like people with very, very public political profiles...

Something that it points to, I think, is the co-opting of farmers' rights by the right, and in turn the far right, to push ideologies that actually have little or nothing to do with farmers.

There may be some concerns with this tax by family farmers and farmers with first-hand testimonies should be listened to. But obviously reasons for much of the outrage is landlords, hence why the Telegraph has published a personal guide to tax evasion.

for its disproportionately wealthy readers. And look, I'm actually pro having potentially some subsidies, some tax exemptions for farmers if it encourages us to eat a more localised diet and to be more subsistent agriculturally. But I think that cause has been undermined by many on the right who claim to champion farmers' rights. And I am talking about Brexit here. Like Brexit...

for many farmers, has had quite a detrimental effect. It's lost them subsidies. It's lost them the powerful EU farmer lobby. It's led to labour shortages. It's led to market pressures with cheap meat being imported from New Zealand and Australia. But some people have gotten rich off Brexit. And one of those people is Nigel Farage, who, of course,

is now making headlines posing as a champion of ordinary farmers with this tax law. And I'm going to make you laugh, Helena, with the GB News headline. Oh, God. Nigel Farage pays tribute to Britishness of protests as he stands with farmers. Oh, my gosh. Yeah, and the thing is, what this headline actually tells us is the far-right piggybacking of farmers' rights.

isn't because they actually care about agricultural causes or economic protections for farmers. It shows that the only thing they're championing is to do with immigration and personal political gain. He has not delivered promises of economic protections. What he has given farmers, or people who he sees as belonging to that social category, is like a misdirected channel for their frustrations. Migrants and Muslims and people of colour.

Something I wanted to talk about is that today, as we are recording, it is Transgender Day of Remembrance. And last week was Trans Awareness Week. Now, Matilda, which papers would you say are really aware of trans people? I mean, if it's awareness of trans people you're asking about, I wouldn't say there's a shortage of that in the news because mentions of transgender people has...

multiplied tenfold in the last few years in British papers. I would say that these are disproportionately unfavourable though. And, you know, for all of those mentions, I didn't see anything about trans awareness day or week in the mainstream media. I only saw it on social media. Yeah, I mean, it's interesting that these papers that really love running stories about trans people, and when I say running stories, I mean more like promoting culture wars about trans women in bathrooms or changing rooms or...

any room or existing or breathing, etc. They just failed to mention

Trans Awareness Week or indeed today, Transgender Day of Remembrance. But the outlet Queer AF, who is run by the amazing Jamie Wareham, who has been on MediaStorm twice, most recently on our episode about Pride Month, so you can scroll back and listen to that. But Queer AF and other LGBT+ outlets were basically the only outlets to report that 350 transgender people have been murdered so far this year. What?

The only mainstream outlet I saw reporting that was Forbes. Wait, so tell me a bit more about this figure. Where does it come from? So this year's Trans Murder Monitoring Project has tracked 350 murders of trans people in the last year, which the report's authors say is a significant increase since last year.

And the really sad thing is, is that these numbers are likely only the tip of the iceberg, you know, for many reasons, one of those being mistrust of police, for one thing, so maybe a lot of these aren't reported. The data this year shows that one in four of those killed were under the age of 25, 15 of those who were killed under the age of 18, and 93% were black or brown trans people, which just shows how transphobia and racism completely intersects.

And aside from this just being a really sad and terrifying story, it's a media storm story because it shows that media outlets like The Times and The Telegraph who over-report on trans people, because remember, trans people are about 1% of the population. Here is a story so important and so harrowing and terrifying

that needs to be reported about the very specific and real threat that trans people face from other people. When it comes to that, it's radio silence. Ford Pro Fin Simple offers flexible financing solutions for all kinds of businesses, whether you're an electrician or run an organic farm.

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The next story I want to talk about is the story that dominated headlines a couple weeks ago about the violence that followed the football match between Ajax, Amsterdam and Maccabi Tel Aviv. MediaStorm has done a review of the coverage and how it evolved in the days that followed. This is what happened as it was reported across the mainstream media. These are clips from Channel 4, the BBC, Fox News and France 24. Have a listen.

All right, so this is the breaking news out of Europe, and this is some ugly stuff here now. Israel is evacuating those who want to leave Amsterdam after what amounted to street fights. Now let's turn to the Middle East, because the Israeli military says it's preparing to immediately deploy a rescue mission to the Netherlands after violence broke out following a Europe

league match between Maccabi Tel Aviv and Ajax Amsterdam. Amsterdam had been bracing for violence ahead of the match, but when it came, its scale and nature were shocking. Israel said that Israeli supporters were attacked in a very violent incident as they left the ground. As ever with these things on social media, you need to be a little careful, but it's quite clear that there were people who were beaten. Police said men on scooters hunted down Israeli football supporters to beat them. There's several Israeli families who claim that they have not been able to get a sign of life

from their loved ones who went to watch this match. The prime minister of the Netherlands is horrified by the anti-Semitic attacks. These scenes have been described by the Dutch government as horrific anti-Semitic events. Amsterdam's mayor laying the blame with what she called hateful anti-Semitic criminals and banning all public demonstrations for three days.

Pretty outrageous stuff, right? Like this is harrowing. I remember my first reaction. It is what unprovoked, anti-Semitically motivated violence. Now, of course, we know a little more. We know what they left out. Here's a clip from a Dutch local speaking to Middle East Eye about what happened in the days before the match. The Muckabee fans have been here since Wednesday and they have a

wreaked havoc everywhere. They've been chanting horrible things about Arabs. They've vandalized numerous buildings. They've ripped off Palestinian flags. They've been inciting for violence and they have only been protected by the police. This has made me feel incredibly unsafe. So this is a classic media storm case of stop and think, what voices are you not hearing? Because in all of these reports, there were interviews with pro-Israel politicians and Maccabi

football fans and correspondence based in Jerusalem, but none of them had voices of Dutch locals who were being terrorized in their own homes for expressing support of Palestine or being Muslim or looking Muslim. In reality, days before the violence, Maccabi supporters from Israel had marched through the streets of Amsterdam attacking people they perceived to be Arab or Muslims, tearing down and setting fire to Palestinian flags and chanting hate speech,

I might have to repeat it, but this is hate speech. It would be chants like, fuck the Arabs, or why is school out in Gaza? There are no children left there. God, that is God. Jealous idol? Yeah. This was not really the story told. Two weeks on...

I want to look at how some of that coverage was corrected or how some of it was changed. OK, I'm glad you're talking about this because I saw on social media that Sky News had done a report on the violence and then had subsequently taken down that report and replaced it with a new edited version. Yes, it's actually it was a really good case of

accurate coverage at the beginning. So Sky's original report with their local correspondent in Amsterdam reported the violence as being initiated by the Maccabi Tel Aviv fans, a club already known for anti-Arab racism and aggression. But they pulled that report and published a note claiming the video didn't meet Sky News' standards for balance and impartiality. Now that tweet has also since been deleted in the chaos of this pandemic.

rewrite. But the new video that they uploaded in place of the original was heavily edited and if I was to pinpoint the main change in it it was downplaying anti-Arab racism. Actually the original caption had said Maccabi Tel Aviv fans tore down Palestinian flags and chanted racist anti-Arab slogans the new caption removed any mention of anti-Arab and instead focused on anti-Semitic violence.

The new video had inserted into it a lead interview with a Dutch politician calling out the anti-semitic violence, quote. It also had a testimony from a Maccabi fan saying the violence was reminiscent of October 7th, but no statements from victims of Maccabi hooliganism. And for me, the straw that broke the camel's back was how the new report ended.

So I want you to listen to this, the final line of the original Sky report. Dutch, Israeli and British leaders denounced the attacks as anti-Semitic and even referred to it as a pogrom. But their statements failed to mention the assault by the Israeli hooligans against Dutch citizens.

In the edited version that they released in place of this, they removed that last bit. They removed, but their statements failed to mention the assaults by Israeli hooligans against Dutch citizens, and they just ended it with the pogrom comparison. Wow, that is so sinister. And so then we have to ask, what changed in that time between the original report and the edited report? And that is that politicians took advantage

took action to frame the narrative themselves. Starting with Netanyahu, who announced that he was going to fly military planes to Amsterdam to rescue Maccabi supporters. The ridiculousness of this plane is exemplified by the fact that the mayor of Amsterdam said, what? He's gone over my head. He actually has no authority to do this. And of course, these planes never materialized. This was a publicity stunt by Netanyahu and an incredibly successful one at that because the

the first news report I watched was like Netanyahu is flying planes to Amsterdam to rescue targeted Israelis. So this was like a way to seize control of the news agenda with a seriously dramatic headline. But it is not just Netanyahu's agenda that is revealed here.

The most common quote included in European and American news report was from the Dutch Prime Minister who called out this anti-Semitic violence. The Dutch government is dominated by the far-right Party for Freedom, the PVV. Now they follow this script that is common among far-right all over the world, championing Israel and pretending to care about anti-Semitism despite their dodgy records of

anti-Semitism historically and using those causes to push islamophobic anti-migrant agendas. The PVV literally then used the narrative to threaten to strip the citizenship and deport Dutch Moroccans for starting this violence.

And I would say shame on our media for not identifying this, even those who have corrected themselves. And there have been some corrections. One of the worst examples of inaccuracies in the original coverage, there was footage from an Amsterdam local which showed Maccabi supporters attacking Dutch citizens, which was captioned with the exact opposite, claiming it showed Maccabi supporters being attacked in the BBC, The Guardian, CBS, Wall Street Journal, like, Bild, New York Times, everywhere.

Some of them, like The Guardian, have corrected. As far as we can tell, we've seen no correction by the BBC, CBS, Wall Street Journal, so, you know. But even those who did correct or amend their original reports, they did not question themselves about how it is that the narrative was able to be so quickly and so heavily dominated by one side. And the word that we're all tiptoeing around here is isthmophobia.

Because remember when the UK far-right riots happened, how slow anyone was to call them islamophobic. Even as mosques were being vandalised and hotels, housing asylum seekers attempted to be set on fire. For days you had Muslim campaigners, Zahra Sultan and the House of Commons begging politicians and the press to call it islamophobic. And for days they declined, calling it thuggery instead.

Compare that to how quickly what happened in Amsterdam was singularly characterised as motivated by anti-Semitism, not anti-genocide or any of those things. And then we really start to see the imbalance in this media narrative.

Okay, the final story that really caught my attention this week that I want to talk about is the story of Harshita Brella. Now, Harshita was 24 from Corby in Northamptonshire, and last week her body was found in Ilford in East London in a car boot. Now, the prime suspect is her husband, Pankaj Lamba, who detectives believe has fled the country. And currently at the time that we're recording this, his whereabouts is unknown.

It's also been reported that a police spokesperson confirmed that Harshita had previously been the victim of domestic violence and was made the subject of a domestic violence protection order at Northampton Magistrates Court in September. And Northamptonshire Police has referred itself to the Independent Office for Police Conduct because of this previous contact with Harshita Brella.

Now, you and I know, and our listeners know, especially from doing our episode on how the media reports on domestic abuse, that the media does have a problem with framing, especially when it comes to fatal domestic abuse.

If you remember our episode with Janie Starling from Organisation Level Up, we spoke about headlines that often reinforce a romantic narrative or that present as sympathetic to the perpetrator or frame the victim as having done something wrong, like he killed her because she had an affair.

And alongside all of that, we also spoke about sensationless language. And this headline from the Daily Mail on this horrible story about Harshita Bhralla's murder just made me so angry. So in all caps, the headline was...

"Car boot murder tragedy." Oh, God. Do you want to give us the media storm breakdown of everything wrong with that headline? It's sensationalist, right? It's true crimey. It's leading with the sensationalist detail of the car boot. The words that actually really annoyed me was "tragedy." Because tragedy is like normally something out of a person's control, like, "Oh, it was so tragic that she stepped off the pavement at the wrong time and got hit by a bus," right? Do you understand what I'm saying?

It takes accountability away from Pankaj Lamba, her husband, who allegedly killed her. And also, like, it's not a tragedy. It's an outcome, a predictable outcome of a violent and controlling man's actions. And beyond anything, it's just so disrespectful. There's no mention of her name. There's no mention of who she is alleged to have been murdered by, which is, I would say, a key detail. Like, sorry, did the...

the car boot murder her yeah like was a car boot murdered like what is a car boot murder i mean it's this classic violence against women and girls where are the men where are the men in headlines about violence against women and girls okay listeners that's our news watch for the week we hope you found it helpful okay but just before we go can i please just give you the most unhinged headline of the week okay go on it's from the daily mail obviously shocker

No.

What the fuck are woke fillings? Well, I don't know. What do you think is a woke sandwich filling? Is it like tofu sandwiches? Like Swellabraveman's? Oh, the tofu. Tofu eating woke karate. Or is it like anxiety with some crunchy chopped feminism? Like, I don't know. What is a woke filling? Tasty. Oh, they'll eat a BLT, but only if it's a bisexual, lesbian, transgender sandwich. Yeah.

Do you want to actually know what the woke filling was that they're talking about? Yeah, yeah, yeah. It was chicken. Chicken. Thank you for listening. If you want to support MediaStorm, you can do so on Patreon for less than a cup of coffee a month.

The link is in the show notes and a special shout out to everyone in our Patreon community already. We appreciate you so much. And if you enjoyed the episode, please send it to someone. Word of mouth is still the best way to grow a podcast. So please do tell your friends and leave us a five star rating and a review. You can follow us on social media at MatildaMal at

MediaStorm is an award-winning podcast produced by Helena Wadia and Matilda Mallinson. The music is by Sam Fire.

Hello, I'm Mark Still, and each week I look at the world and ask the question, what the fuck is going on? To help me answer my question, each week I'm joined by guests like Caroline Lucas, Jason Manford, and James O'Brien. Plus there are contributors such as our very own George Galloway. Let me put it to you, Justin Bieber, Nadine Boris. You're shithousey little shithouse. And broadcasting legend...

Mike Concrete. Yes, he is. So to find out what the fuck is going on, search What The F Is Going On wherever you get your podcasts. What the fuck is going on?