title:      Why the Guardian Sucks 
date:       2022-12-02 
tags:       phlog  political-thought  web   
identifier: 20221202T163240
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Someone  from  the  federal  socials  noticed  that  I dissed the
Guardian and asked me what I thought was wrong with  it.   That’s
not a question I can answer short form.

I  should  start by giving a little context. I grew up in the UK,
in an upper middle class home with  professional  class  parents,
themselves from working class backgrounds. My mother was a teach‐
er who quit to raise us. My father was an optometrist, his family
coming  to  the  UK  as part of one of the Jewish diasporas, from
Lithuania some time before the Russian Revolution.

Both of my parents were great believers in the rule of  law,  and
the  golden  rule.  Notionally  socialist,  they  enjoyed  a high
(boomer) standard of living, were culturally quite snobbish,  and
participated  in  group activities designed for people with spare
time and resources.

In short, they were typical Guardian readers.

I live in Toronto now ‐ I’ve been Canadian for over a decade  and
lived  in  Canada since 2004. Been in North America since 2000. I
have observed that there aren’t really any national newspapers on
this continent. There are publications that will be laying on the
floor in front of your hotel room door in the morning,  but  they
aren’t  really newspapers. There’s nothing that a newsreader on a
national TV broadcast would reach for a pile of at the end of the
main  news and say "let’s look at tomorrow’s newspaper headlines"
in order to get a taste of what was on their editors’ minds.

In that context, the Guardian was and is  a  helluva  lot  better
than  say the Telegraph, the Daily Mail, the Sun, the Mirror, the
Times, etc. And I can definitely see why someone  coming  from  a
North American news ecosystem would find the Guardian to be a su‐
perior source of news.

But it is a salve. It placates the middle class,  or  those  that
feel  the  twinge of activation in the face of injustice.  It in‐
dulges in "both sides" reporting, and renders equivalences across
its pages by representing trivial matters in a similar way to im‐
portant and pressing issues.

It makes a magazine of the news. It turns the news into a  nicely
packaged  component  of  a  well balanced daily diet, so that the
patterns of your life can wash away  the  intuition  you  briefly
felt  to  panic.  It indulges in punny headlines, which are often
inaccurate and misleading. It platforms  TERFs  without  comment.
And,  as it has shrunk its editorial staff, and aside from colum‐
nists, stopped hiring actual reporters, it does things  like  re‐
porting  press  releases  unchecked,  and (here’s the point I was
making when I  was  asked  about  this)  publishes  controversial
tweets with light commentary presented as news.

It  isn’t the only news organization that does that. Of late, and
after Trump, it became difficult to ignore twitter. But the  cur‐
rent diaspora has evinced the problems with twitter; listening to
and reading the discourse between  journalists  in  podcasts  and
around  quoted  tweets  in  columns  written by opinionators, its
clear that they had come to see it as something very  much  other
than what it is and always was.

Twitter  was  always  the  domain  of  shitposting edgelords. The
Guardian, along with others, elevated it to a level of import  it
never  should  have  had. It took the place of journalism in many
places and now they and others are struggling  to  get  past  it.
Most  people  don’t use it. It is apparently the 15th largest so‐
cial network, with around 390 million active ("monetizable"  lol)
users.  Even  in  the  US, where it has the most users, less than
half of the largest represented demographic (18 ‐ 29)  is  there.
Most people don’t post there, they just doom scroll. No‐one needs
an online news magazine that picks out  tweets  and  comments  on
them  as  if  that  were  the  same kind of thing as reporting on
Ukrainian war deaths, which often shares roughly the same  column
inch count.

They establish equivalences which get internalized by their audi‐
ence ‐ sports are another example. Take a look at the coverage of
the world cup. There are some thoughtful columns making blinding‐
ly obvious ethical statements about  FIFA  and  Qatar,  and  then
there  are  all  the  "apolitical" sports articles. They have the
same look and feel as everything else on the  Guardian  homepage.
We see artful photos of man fighting raging fires, subtitled with
notes about the climate emergency, alongside headlines  promising
to  grudgingly  thank  Trump for popularizing the word "gaslight‐
ing". Then at the end of the week, the  photos  of  raging  fires
make  it into the notable photos of the week, once again bringing
the disasters they represent into the balanced  Saturday  morning
dietary selection. By Monday the edge is well and truly off them,
and they’re filed alongside Greta Thunberg making a funny, proba‐
bly on twitter.

I’m  sure  there are more things I dislike about it. But I’m get‐
ting incoherent now, so let’s stop.