Will not comment on the ongoing phone-hacking scandal. That is for decent people to stamp it out, root it out and jail every single mercenary journalist mercilessly.
The British press has long been a distinctly divided house. Perhaps reflecting a wider societal divide that lives on to this day.
On the one side serious in-depth newspapers that remain worthy of their long acquired reputation. On the other, a cheap, sensational press that made teats and cheats their mainstay dwelling endlessly on any story that sells quickly and handsomely.
Over and again they have bent every elementary rule of decency in hot pursuit of profit disguised as a search for the truth.
That which arouses the interest of the public is not necessarily in the public interest. In fact, most often than not common-sense judgement would have it that there are limits to what truly belongs in the public domain - as opposed to fast-selling naked voyeurism and cheap thrills.
Anyway, devoid of context the end of an age-old newspaper is to be regretted.
(Not so if current owners took their greed too far by stripping targeted people of the right to their intimacy and privacy.
Not to mention use of illegal tools and methods to achieve their goals. Undeserving of any comment, really...)
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