Executive TL;DR:
- UK media fails to disclose defence sector links in nearly 60% of cases
- Institutionalized corruption and biased reporting are major concerns
- Private interests funding private media set the agenda for selective reporting
The Buzz Score
The Internet’s Verdict: 70% Hyped, 30% Skeptical
Forum Voices Weigh In
Commenters are speaking out about the issue, with one saying:
In other words: institutionalized corruption. It’s also a problem because who controls those media? So the taxpayers are at the least two times at a disadvantage here, private interests funding private media, to then set the agenda of reporting very selectively – or not at all in certain areas.
Another commenter notes:
Ex UK military members discover the private sector pays 10-20x more
and acknowledges that media should disclose defence sector links, even if retired ex-military members’ bias would remain.
A third commenter offers a nuanced view:
These individuals had also been quoted, featured, or otherwise used as commentators in UK media coverage of defence, conflict, or national security issues. If they are promoting defence spending or plugging their employers products that’s bad, but using their experience to comment on the Iran war or Ukraine, or Russian/Chinese Spy networks doesn’t seem that bad?
Focus Keyword: Defence Sector