Chapter 1486 Paparazzi

Philip Snowden, who was elected to the Labor Party in 1906 and lost his seat during the World Wars because he opposed conscription, has now returned to Parliament and is a staunch supporter of Ramsay MacDonald.

When Ramsay MacDonald formed a cabinet, he appointed Philip Snowden as Chancellor of the Exchequer. This is also a controversial person. He is one of the founders of the Labor Party. Some people think that Philip Snowden is the The biggest traitor.

Coincidentally, Ramsay MacDonald was also considered the biggest traitor of the Labor Party. In 1931, Ramsay MacDonald formed a cabinet for the second time, and then Ramsay MacDonald and Philip Snowden Both were expelled from the Labor Party.

Now one of these two is the leader of the Labor Party and the other is the founder of the Labor Party.

"So what should we do?" Oswald Mozley didn't know what to do. If he wanted to promote something in the UK, the Times News Corporation couldn't get around it anyway.

"Go to the Daily Telegraph, or the Morning Post, or even the Weekly Worker. This is a lawsuit, and it is a war. We must and will win the final victory." Ramsay MacDonald, a former journalist and speaker, speaks volumes.

"Don't have too much hope, Times News Group is not easy to deal with." Ramsay Macdonald's friend, J. R. Klein, who is also a member of Congress, is not optimistic.

"The result is not important. What we want is the process. As long as more people know what we have done, we have already won." Ramsay McDonald smiled. The Labor Party is already invincible in this lawsuit. Indeed, if the London Magistrates Court ruled against the Labor Federation, it would just show that the Labor Party is the only group really fighting for the interests of workers.

Facts have proved that, with the popularity of the Labor Party soaring, there are still a lot of media willing to support it. From the next day, news about this lawsuit gradually increased.

"BIG NEWS, BIG NEWS - Mr Ramsay MacDonald's Labor Party has formally declared war on the Fawalt Steel Group, a war of workers against capitalists, Mr Ramsay MacDonald declared he had Prepare your own cemetery, and never give up until you reach your goal—" The voice of the newsstand owner filled the streets, and the front page of the "Daily Telegraph" was bold and bold: We are going to war with Southern Africa!
Next to the Daily Telegraph, the front-page headline of The Times read: Germany Refuses to Pay Reparations, French Army Returns to the Ruhr.

France reoccupied the Ruhr, which meant that the "Dawes Plan" could no longer be implemented.

But who cares?
People in London don’t care how angry the French are on the other side of the strait. Southern Africa was once a British colony. Now that Britain is going to war with southern Africa, will southern Africa become the second United States?

This kind of news can better satisfy the British people's enthusiasm for gossip.

"Give me a copy." Zhang Yi, the young editor of The Times, paid a penny, took a copy of The Daily Telegraph, and boarded a tinkling electric bus .

It's really electric, it's amazing, an electric bus in 1923, and it was produced in southern Africa!
Unlike the "Times", which has always been known for its "fairness and seriousness", the editors of the "Daily Telegraph" really have no morals. They described a lawsuit that was just to attract attention and not really speak out for the workers. into the greatest interest claim since the Industrial Revolution.

The editor of the "Daily Telegraph" described the proliferation of southern African goods in the Commonwealth in extremely inflammatory language in the news, and described southern African enterprises as slave factories in the colonial era. Southern African entrepreneurs naturally became cruel The editor of the ruthless slave owner "Daily Telegraph" not only criticized southern African enterprises, but also called on the British to reject southern African goods as punishment for southern African enterprises.

"How can it be possible to reject southern African products—" Zhang Yi sneered while sitting at his desk, and casually threw the "Daily Telegraph" he just bought into the trash can next to him.

reject--

How to refuse?

The editors of The Daily Telegraph ignored the fact that the more ordinary people are, the more dependent they are on high-quality and cheap southern African goods.

Among other things, there are many British families who would not have survived the world wars, and the subsequent economic crisis, without the influx of southern African food.

Without the wool from southern Africa, the high-end textiles from the UK would remain at a level that ordinary people cannot afford.

Without the oil in southern Africa, the popularity of cars in Britain would not be so fast. Maybe Zhang Yi would have to take a horse-drawn carriage to work. Don’t forget that this is London.

Without the steel of Southern Africa, the average British household might still be using wooden barrels.

Even French fries, one of Britain's national dishes, are made from southern African potatoes.

reject?

Unless Britain returns to the barbaric era!

"Have you seen the news from the Daily Telegraph today?" Zhang Yi's colleague Williams is a pure Londoner. He is always neatly dressed, wearing a black striped suit, shiny leather shoes, and a pocket watch on his chest. a watch chain, as glamorous as those bank managers in the Financial Street.

Zhang Yi didn't speak, he glanced at the trash can, then got up to pour coffee.

Oh sorry, coffee is also produced in Southern Africa.

The tea Williams had just brewed was also from southern Africa.

Even the cups used by Zhang Yi and Williams are made in southern Africa.

So refuse?
"Haha, you are right, the trash can is the best home for The Daily Telegraph—" Williams laughed. Although the sales volume of the "Daily Telegraph" is higher than that of the "Times", its influence is greater. Can not be compared.

But there is a problem. The "Times" has a higher influence in the upper class, while the "Daily Telegraph" is aimed at the civilian class.

So the "Times" still attaches great importance to the "Daily Telegraph".

"Gentlemen, please go to the conference room for a meeting." Bell, the assistant to the editor-in-chief, is a girl with blond hair who just graduated from Nyasaland University last year.

"How's the weather today?" Zhang Yi's question seemed out of tune.

"The editor-in-chief is not in a good mood—" Bell knew what Zhang Yi was asking.

The meeting room was cloudy, and as a senior editor, Zhang Yi was qualified to sit at the round table, and the chairs by the wall were occupied by photographers and text reporters. The interns didn't even have a seat, so they could only stand and listen.

The editor-in-chief, Rousseau Clarkson, who looked over sixty but was not yet fifty, was a petite man with a funny goatee and round, rimless glasses that barely covered half his face.

Rousseau Clarkson previously served as the editor-in-chief of the Southern Africa Bureau of The Times. He was just transferred to London to preside over the work last year. He is a very serious person who takes his work seriously and responsibly.

"You should have seen the report in The Daily Telegraph. How is it? How do you feel?" Rousseau Clarkson is a French-born southern African, and his English is also very standard. He is also proficient in Chinese and Boer.

"It's absurd!"

"Ridiculous remarks!"

"Grandstanding!"

Editors and reporters chatted, and the interns were wise not to comment.

"Zhang, what do you think?" Rousseau Clarkson still attaches great importance to Zhang Yi, and Zhang Yi is also the only editor-in-chief that Rousseau Clarkson brought to London from southern Africa.

"The "Daily Telegraph" report looks ridiculous, but it seems to me that it has another purpose." Zhang Yi is very careful and has a keen sense of news, which is why Rousseau Clarkson attaches great importance to Zhang Yi.

"Yes, gentlemen, don't ignore the "Daily Telegraph" report. They are promoting the Labor Party. We must do something so that public opinion cannot affect the election in the second half of the year." Rousseau Clarkson said bluntly, don't Watching the British media shouting for freedom of speech every day, in fact, all newspapers have positions, some serve the Conservative Party, some serve the Liberal Party, and some serve the pound.

"It's hard to handle. Although the Daily Telegraph is promoting the Labor Party, it is under the banner of giving voice to the workers. If we oppose it at this time, it is tantamount to standing on the opposite side of the workers." The vice president Editor Alexandra Field frowned. The influence of The Times on the people at the bottom was not as good as that of the Daily Telegraph. If it stood on the opposite side of the workers, it would definitely damage the reputation of The Times. have a major impact.

"We can pay attention to the method. The Daily Telegraph focuses on the impact of southern African companies on local companies. We can focus on southern African goods. It is precisely because of the import of southern African goods that locals are superior. Enterprises have to face up to the needs of the people, and southern African products are of high quality and cheap, if we boycott southern African products, then we will go back to the wrong path.” Zhang Yi has already had an idea just now, if it wasn’t for this sudden meeting , Zhang Yi may have already written a manuscript.

"Good idea, continue—" Rousseau Clarkson encouraged, what Zhang Yi said was correct, but not enough.

"We need to increase interviews with steel workers and shift our attention to the conflicts between workers and local steel companies—"

"Maybe we can try to find the Conservative Party or the Liberal Party. If we stand on the opposite side of the Labor Party, we are speaking for the Conservative Party or the Liberal Party—"

"Would you like to interview the judges of the London Magistrates Court and hear what they have to say?"

"Hehe, interviewing judges can be done by the reporters of the "Daily Mail", they are best at-"

Compared with the politically biased "Times", the "Daily Mail" targets similar groups as the "Daily Telegraph", and has a greater influence at the bottom.

"Daily Telegraph" reporters are best at stalking, the predecessor of paparazzi.

ps: Today is the winter solstice, brothers, don’t forget to eat dumplings—you’ve entered the ninth grade from today, brothers, don’t forget to add clothes——

(End of this chapter)

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