Police Arrest Journalist for Covering Just Stop Oil Protest and Tell Journalists it’s a Warning to Stop Reporting

When major parts of the country’s busiest motorway are forced to close by deliberate sabotage for four days running, that is a news story of national importance, says Janet Daley in the Telegraph. Why then have the police arrested a journalist for covering the story – and defended their actions by saying journalists should stop reporting on it? Hertfordshire police’s defence of their chilling actions carry dangerous implications, says Janet.

While attending one of the sites of this lunatic delinquency on a busy section of the M25 last week, they formally arrested not only the Just Stop Oil brats but a broadcast journalist who was covering the incident.

Charlotte Lynch, a reporter from LBC radio was a considerable distance from the protesters desporting themselves on the gantry, and was in possession of an accredited press card which a five minute telephone call would have verified.

Nonetheless, she was apprehended by officers on “suspicion of conspiracy to commit a public nuisance” and imprisoned for five hours. That is to say, she was potentially to be charged with precisely the same offence as the protesters would be.

Nobody so far as I can see has actually suggested that the arresting officers believed her to be part of the demonstration or even supportive of it. This is where the explanation of the arrest by David Lloyd, Hertfordshire’s Police and Crime Commissioner, becomes really alarming. He did not defend it on the basis that his force made a mistake: that they believed wrongly that Ms Lynch belonged to the Just Stop Oil troops.

What he did say was much more far-reaching and political than that. He advised journalists generally to “think about how we as a society… ensure that the oxygen of publicity that Just Stop Oil is seeking is moderated, so that we don’t end up with people doing this and really they’re only doing it because they know it’s going to be reported.” The syntax may be garbled but you get the point.

When the police say these things “we can see the shadow of the Stasi loom quite clearly before us”, Janet says. And this is far from the only area where silence is regarded as the socially correct choice and speaking out is seen by the guardians of manners as unacceptable.

But almost identical sentiments are now dominating areas of national life that have generally been assumed to be dedicated to the preservation of free thought and uncensored debate. In fact, it is within the social circles inclined to support extreme climate protest that you are most likely to find approval of such censorship.

What Mr. Lloyd advocated is nothing more than yet another species of cancel culture. Put succinctly, it is now a received truth of Left-liberal orthodoxy that if you see views or activities which you believe to be harmful being promoted in your society, it is your moral duty to suppress them or prevent them from being promulgated. That is pretty much precisely the philosophy that Mr. Lloyd is espousing.

The wall-to-wall pro-lockdown narrative during the pandemic is a recent case in point, says Janet:

I – and many others – believed that the uncritical pro-lockdown campaign run by the broadcast media during the Covid pandemic was ethically dubious and professionally misjudged. Those of us who criticised it did so on the grounds that such coverage had ceased to be news at all: that the broadcast organisations had turned themselves into an arm of Government and were effectively now propagandists.

Sceptical viewpoints were deemed dangerous and their proponents attacked and censored. Yet no sceptic is suggesting media should be banned from running alarmist stories, Janet says: “We need to open up the arguments not close them down. That’s the whole point of journalism.”

Worth reading in full.

Subscribe
Notify of

To join in with the discussion please make a donation to The Daily Sceptic.

Profanity and abuse will be removed and may lead to a permanent ban.

48 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
jeepybee
3 years ago

I’d be inclined to agree…. Stop reporting on these mental cases, they don’t deserve the time of day.

Marcus Aurelius knew
3 years ago
Reply to  jeepybee

How to completely miss the point…

jeepybee
3 years ago

Well thank you for missing the facetious remark. Might be a few other people might take comments a little less serious from literal paid sceptics. Obviously I know this is horseshit…

Marcus Aurelius knew
3 years ago
Reply to  jeepybee

OK, thanks for the clarification! Scepticism takes many forms, and we’re not afraid to disagree and argue 😉

Amari
Amari
3 years ago

Why do you have a Masonic symbol next to your name?

Marcus Aurelius knew
3 years ago
Reply to  Amari

I wasn’t aware the symbol for anarchy is a masonic symbol…?

TJN
TJN
3 years ago
Reply to  jeepybee

That’s a totally different thing to actually arresting people for reporting on it.

It doesn’t take a genius with a crystal ball to realise where such police actions are going.

jeepybee
3 years ago
Reply to  TJN

see above.

TJN
TJN
3 years ago
Reply to  jeepybee

My post was meant to say that there’s a difference between thinking that their actions shouldn’t be given publicity (a plausible, or at least discussable, stance imo) and actually arresting journalists for reporting it.

Not sure if I misunderstood your original post.

TJN
TJN
3 years ago
Reply to  TJN

Sorry – seen it now. Satire (although without obvious clues).

jeepybee
3 years ago
Reply to  TJN

Like tone, yes. Difficult in text, eh.

jeepybee
3 years ago
Reply to  TJN

Not at all, TJN. I was flippantly stating that we should probably ignore these eco-ists regardless. Obviously I think censorship is a place for the devil and his assholes. I made a glib remark about them deserving it for reporting on nonsense, essentially…A nothing. Like masks.

TJN
TJN
3 years ago
Reply to  jeepybee

Obviously I think censorship is a place for the devil and his assholes

Ok, I didn’t get that from your post. About the best post I ever put up on here had an absolute pile of downvotes, but it was obvious satire.

jeepybee
3 years ago
Reply to  TJN

Yeah, tone is a mother fucker on “the internet” init.

Kisses.

TJN
TJN
3 years ago
Reply to  jeepybee

Yes, nuance doesn’t come out that well on forums.

Best wishes.

DonkeyKongPingPong
3 years ago

I thought you said a journalist was arrested, as opposed to the propaganda agent reported here.

The purpose of this story is to keep the debate about the “climate catastrophe” high up the news agenda. The public will soon grow weary of Tarquin and Dulcima’s high jinx, but if you reframe the debate it remains high on the news agenda.

Sometimes it surprises me that Daily Sceptic falls for these “talking points”. Then I remember this is a limited hangout. Keep doing their work for them guys and we’ll see you in the gulags.

DonkeyKongPingPong
3 years ago

And to the down voting haters, you are the Jon Snow’s of this forum. In fact your worse than Jon Snow, because “you know nothing” and your unwilling to learn.
You only need look at LBC’s track record since 2016 (and no doubt before) to see their modus operandi.

jeepybee
3 years ago

They’re out in force tonight.

TJN
TJN
3 years ago

That people should down-vote posts which appear to imply that arresting journalists is the common course of their duties is fine shouldn’t be at all surprising.

DonkeyKongPingPong
3 years ago
Reply to  TJN

It is surprising that is what you drew from my comment. I have no idea how you could draw that conclusion, other than an inability to read words and interpret their meaning. If you seriously believe that is my point then you are indeed a Jon Snow and deserving of the accolade.

TJN
TJN
3 years ago

the down voting haters …  “you know nothing” and your unwilling to learn.

So people who disagree with your post are ‘haters’? And ignorant, and unwilling to learn? I am sure that’s not what you mean, but would be grateful if you could clarify.

Sorry, I read from your post that it was ok to arrest propaganda agents, if they were masquerading as journalists. Have I got that right?

But how do you distinguish a ‘propaganda agent’ from a journalist? And how can it be so that when each of them is conducting the same physical activity that one is breaking the law and the other isn’t?

I write this post without any ‘ad hominem’ comments, but just seek to understand what you mean.

(I didn’t down vote you btw, merely commented.)

DonkeyKongPingPong
3 years ago
Reply to  TJN

I don’t actually know if they are ‘haters’ or not. I don’t know what’s in their heartys. Perhaps they missed my point. Perhaps they have hatred in their hearts. I don’t know. It’s a popular turn of phrase with the yoof. You hang to much meaning on the word. I absolutely have never stated or even implied that its okay to arrest anyone. No matter what they’re job is. I’m suggesting the story is a psychological operation where a ‘journalist’ dupe has been used to in order to provide a new angle to maintain a story that would otherwise be losing its ‘newsworthy’ status. A journalist is someone like Derrick Broze, Iain Davis, James Corbett or Whitney Webb who investigate the motivations behind the actions and don’t just accept the events as they occur. A propaganda agent is someone who has been through journalist school, works for a mainstream outlet, follows closely to a tightly controlled editorial line and rarely uses critical thinking skills, yet churns out copy that ultimately favours an end goal of the ruling class. They do not need to be conscious that this is what they are doing. I appreciate you enquiring further and I withdraw… Read more »

TJN
TJN
3 years ago

I see now that you are explaining, and think your views here are close to the mark. Maybe a lot of the down-voters would re-access on a fuller explanation of your original post?

It wasn’t really an ad hominem comment, and I know that you are a solid and thoughtful poster.

And God Bless you, as he does anyone who can have sensible disagreements and seek to understand each others positions. We sceptics should hold onto that.

As an aside, have I got hatred in my heart? Well, if I’m honest, I do feel very bad against the perpetrators of that last nigh-on-three years. Not sure what that says about me. But one has to be honest with oneself.

huxleypiggles
3 years ago

I don’t think the primary issue is that an LBC (propoganda) journalist has been arrested it is the charge which was levelled: “apprehended by officers on “suspicion of conspiracy to commit a public nuisance” Notwithstanding the slant which this journalist might have put on any story it is difficult to conclude that her presence was likely to be an immediate ‘public nuisance.’ Even more worrying is that the Stasi response of Herefordshire’s Police and Crime Commissioner was: ” journalists (should) generally “think about how we as a society… ensure that the oxygen of publicity that Just Stop Oil is seeking is moderated, so that we don’t end up with people doing this and really they’re only doing it because they know it’s going to be reported.” So this politically corrupt moron is now an arbiter of free speech. This is seriously worrying and the reality is that ALL P&C Commissioners need to be reminded of the remits of their job and policing free speech is not a part. Equally all Chiefs of Police need to be told in no uncertain terms to start doing their jobs, under pain of dismissal and no more firkin about. Very, very worrying and this… Read more »

transmissionofflame
3 years ago
Reply to  huxleypiggles

Spot on

huxleypiggles
3 years ago

Thanks tof.

DonkeyKongPingPong
3 years ago
Reply to  huxleypiggles

I’m sorry to disagree but this seems so clear to me a contrived incident. I’m not stating that the journalist was complicit, other than she wouldn’t be in the post unless she fitted the profile required of the modern day MS churnalist. Your objections are entirely correct. Although we run the risk of dissecting the content and not recognising the broader narrative. When you break it down what boxes are ticked here? 1) The Tarquin Army stay on page 1. Push, push and push again for the Open Conspiracy that HG Wells wrote about in the 1920’s (big mates with fellow eugenicist Julian Huxley). 2) LBC raise their profile. The journalist also raises her profile as an agent of free speech oppressed by a ‘Tory’ administration. 3) A case is made for journalistic censorship, and the argument ensues on both sides, placing it on the agenda with a ‘reasoned’ case for potential action in the future. 4) The notion of the ‘responsible journalist’ is galvanised in the minds of the public. An attempt to define journalistic behaviour/compliance within bounds of acceptability to the state. Problem (journalist gets arrested) Reaction (this discussion) Solution (more of the same tip toe towards globalist… Read more »

transmissionofflame
3 years ago

You make many good points.

However I struggle to think of why the police should be arresting a journalist who is just doing journalist stuff (or pretending to).

That’s not to say that there aren’t lots of other agendas in play here. Just seems to me to set a bad precedent.

A Y M
3 years ago

And the award for Blackist Black pill of the day goes to…….

😜

alanbaird10
alanbaird10
3 years ago
Reply to  huxleypiggles

Huxleypiggles for world president.

huxleypiggles
3 years ago
Reply to  alanbaird10

Blimey. But thank you.

NickR
3 years ago

If the police immediately arrested the protesters rather than dragging the whole thing out for hours the protesters would stop because they wouldn’t be causing a problem. It’s the inaction of the police that creates the story.

BurlingtonBertie
3 years ago
Reply to  NickR

And it is the inaction of the police that they don’t want the journalists reporting.

For a fist full of roubles

Put safety nets under the gantries and leave them all to it. It will be much cheaper than policing and they will get bored without the attention.
As for journalists, they don’t need to be there. They make up most of what they write anyway.

Sinor
Sinor
3 years ago

Another idea is to firmly attach said protestor to gantry by chains handcuffs etc so they cannot fall onto the carriageway and leave them to rot for a couple of days with no food water etc .Once they have crapped /soiled themselves a few times I feel certain they will want to come down at which point they are arrested and jailed for a couple of months .
Or is that to much common sense ..lol

huxleypiggles
3 years ago
Reply to  Sinor

Sometimes we on here are just too reasonable 👍

Sinor
Sinor
3 years ago
Reply to  huxleypiggles

I do try HP I do ..

DevonBlueBoy
DevonBlueBoy
3 years ago
Reply to  Sinor

I was thinking more like a minimum of one week

TJN
TJN
3 years ago

Ha, ah-hah.

Anyone remember Chief Constable Adderley of Northamptonshire Police from the days of Lockdown 1? When he threatened to check shopping baskets to make sure there were no non-essential items present?

I do.

As I wrote on The Spectator site at the time: how thick can you be and still be a senior police officer? Seriously, how thick?

Marcus Aurelius knew
3 years ago
Reply to  TJN

Thick enough to be a product of the system and have zero independent thought.

DevonBlueBoy
DevonBlueBoy
3 years ago
Reply to  TJN

Your closing comment reminded me of a moment back in my teenage years, at the local bonfire night gathering some many years ago. As plod moved in to break up the general, drunken mayhem at the end of the night my mate responded to the request from a PC to “move along now” with “You look like an intelligent copper, recite your number”. Being sent down for 30 days and the pain from the truncheon blow removed all his anti-suthority behaviour for the rest of his life!

TJN
TJN
3 years ago
Reply to  DevonBlueBoy

Was that in Devon? I always thought the plod were pretty mild mannered down here.

EppingBlogger
3 years ago

The political class think they have the power and nothing will stop them. They may be right. If the public do not respond we might as well live under the CCP or Putin.

NeilParkin
3 years ago

“We need to open up the arguments not close them down. That’s the whole point of journalism.”

Good to hear that a journalist wants to report the news and not make political statements, but I fear the horse has well and truly bolted on that one Janet.

AethelredTheReadier
AethelredTheReadier
3 years ago

I’m late to the feast but I see that there are two important points – which have already been made but hey:

  1. We don’t want the police telling us what we can or can’t report on. This is taking policing into political territory and is not acceptable. They are public servants, they’re not government watchdogs or maybe I should rephrase that – they are meant to be public servants not government watchdogs. I am going to write to the police commissioner of Herts and express my views…
  2. We don’t want Just Stop Oil to keep getting all this coverage. The media are obsessed by them and keep giving them all this free publicity. But we don’t want the police to be the ones stopping the coverage. It just makes another side-story that then gives JSO even more publicity.

That’s it!

RTSC
RTSC
3 years ago

The police don’t want the Eco Terrorists to have their publicity curtailed.

What they don’t want is to have journalists reporting on their ridiculous, kid-glove “policing” of them, which means the M25 (and other roads) are brought to a halt for hours on end.

varmint
3 years ago

The protesters get away with it because they are batting for the same team as our phony planet saving governments. They are the governments useful idiots doing their dirty work for them.

Amari
Amari
3 years ago

James Delingpole has said that we shouldn’t give the protestors any more publicity – much like this police officer. I’d like to hear him and Toby Young debate this one out in their podcast this week!