 How will they get rid of Rupert Murdoch and his toxic enterprises?
How will they get rid of Rupert Murdoch and his toxic enterprises?
July 4, 2011 may turn into the people's Independence Day.  On that  day, stellar journalist Nick Davies of the Guardian released his story; Missing Milly Dowler's voicemail was hacked by News of the World.   Twelve year old Milly Dowler had been kidnapped with foul play  feared.  The Murdoch tabloid couldn't resist.  News of the World (the  News) hired a private detective to hack Milly's voicemail.  Finding the  mail box full, the News or its hired dick deleted existing messages to  make room for new ones, all to fuel their ongoing coverage.  The deleted  messages raised hopes by Milly's parents that she was still alive and  using her voicemail. (Image)
The Davies story elicited a reaction of near universal shock,  outrage, and revulsion.  Milly had already been murdered by the time the  Murdoch paper began its illegal tapping.
The public revulsion resulted in immediate and fervent popular  demands for justice.  Those demands were compounded by follow-up stories  on other Murdoch media hacking.  As it turned out, the News also broke  into the voicemails of war widows to capture their most intimate exchanges on the loss of fallen soldiers in Afghanistan and Iraq.   All in all, at least 4,000 citizens had their voicemails hacked to boost the Murdoch publication's circulation and profits.
Driven by broad public ire, Murdoch's empire began unraveling  immediately.  He became a target for those he'd tormented, particularly  in politics.  In just a few days, he became anathema for those he'd  placed in power, indicating the focused intensity and force of public  outrage.   Conservative Prime Minister David Cameron fell in line with  Labour Party Leader Ed Milliband's call to stop Murdoch's critical  acquisition of pay TV network BSkyB.  The Independent spoke of Murdoch  having to abandon his United Kingdom media properties.
The crisis spread across the Atlantic when Senator John D. (Jay)  Rockefeller demanded that law enforcement look into possible voicemail  and other electronic surveillance of 9/11 survivors in the United States  by  Murdoch's News Corporation.
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