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The reporting of the deaths of 58 people, while trying to enter Britain, shows
once again the deep racism of the average journalist. In some cases, the media
identified the victims themselves as criminals.  But in most cases, the media
presented the deaths as an example of 'criminal immigrant smuggling'. The
British immigration laws were not criticised.

It is not wrong for poor people to enter a rich country. Rich countries and
regions have a moral duty, to redistribute their wealth. The so-called
'development aid' is not redistribution. Giving one dollar per person per year
to Albania, for instance, will never bring Albania to Californian standards of living.

If rich countries refuse to redistribute their wealth, then generally
speaking, it is not wrong for poor people to go to the rich countries. This is
a moral issue, and it overrides any legislation. Specifically, rich countries
have no right to transform themselves into fortified islands of wealth amid
poverty. Anti-immigration legislation with this aim (zero-migration laws) is
clearly morally wrong. Anyone may break such a law, anyone may smuggle poor
people into rich countries, in such circumstances.

It does not have to be like this. There is no secret about how to redistribute
wealth geographically: the European Union, and most of its member states, have
regional policies which do that already. Mass immigration, on the other hand,
is not an effective form of wealth redistribution. To give some idea of the
scale of the problem: GNP per head in Britain is about 4 or 5 times world
average. About 150 million or 200 million immigrants would be needed, to bring
it down to average. Clearly, it would be much simpler to introduce a new
income tax, perhaps 30%, and use that to fund real development, in Eastern
Europe and Africa. But there is apparently no chance that will happen. What
western politician will introduce an extra 30% income tax, on top of all
existing taxes?

So what is the reality of immigration? The reality in Britain is that no
economic migration is legal anyway. And even 200 immigrants provoke extreme
hostility from the media, and from racist parties - they often work together.
In fact every individual immigrant can be the target of British newspaper
journalists, and every detail of their income and housing - to show that "too
much is spent". This has created a climate of extreme hostility, in which
immigration officials can hunt immigrants. When the Customs official at Dover
found the bodies of the 58 dead, what did he do? He called the Immigration
Service, no doubt to ensure that no survivors escaped.

You don't have to go far, to see who created this mentality. No further than
the local newspaper, the Dover Express. According to the anti-racist group
CARF, in October 1998 the paper printed an editorial about "illegal
immigrants, asylum-seekers and the scum of the earth drug smugglers who have
targeted our beloved coastline". The Dover Express concluded: "We are left
with the backdraft of a nation's human sewage and no cash to wash it down the drain".

http://www.carf.demon.co.uk/feat22.html
Racism And The Press In Blair's Britain

Of course the British tabloid press is not the only place where you can find
racist journalists. In Ireland - only 15 years ago a source of economic
migrants itself - the tabloid press has copied their British colleagues.

http://www.ucc.ie/acad/appsoc/epapers/rfgmedia.html
Refugees and Immigrants in the Irish Media

But the racism is not always as crude as this. A few weeks ago, the British
military attache in Athens was shot. His widow, together with her children,
made a statement at the gates of their home, explaining how their lives had
been destroyed. Several minutes of the statement were broadcast on BBC News,
and copied by other TV stations in Europe. Will the families and friends of
the 58 victims in Dover get similar airtime, on BBC News to speak about their
grief and loss? No, because BBC journalists are racists. It's that simple.
This kind of racism pervades newspaper and broadcast journalism in EU countries.

It is time to punish journalists for, creating a climate of racism and
hostility toward migration. A journalist is not some sort of sacred being,
deserving special protection. There is no 'freedom of racism'. The criteria
for punishment is simple: migration of poor people to rich countries is not
wrong, and any journalist who campaigns against it should be punished. The
penalties should be at least sufficient to reverse the effects. Any newspaper,
for instance,  which refers to immigrants as 'human sewage' should be closed -
completely, permanently, and without compensation.  Of course suppression of
media hostility to migration is not, in itself, a solution to the problem of
global inequality. However, it does seem to be one of the necessary first
steps to a solution.


Paul Treanor


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