Posts Tagged ‘TCS’

CUCA in the press

Saturday, January 16th, 2010

The Association is mentioned twice this week:

Firstly, in The Tab:

Cambridge University Conservative Association (CUCA) Registrar Callum Wood called the current system a “quangoburaucracy” governed by red tape.

Labour’s blasé attitude to tax-and-spend over the past decade has racked up a huge public debt (the vast majority of which is nothing to do with the recession) and so it shouldn’t come as a surprise that cuts will have to be made”, he said. “This is the morning after the night before.”

“For Cambridge to continue to be a major protagonist on the international stage, it is imperative that politicians are committed to supporting world-class research institutions.”

 

Secondly, in The Times:I couldn’t bring myself to join the CU Conservative Association because they were such braying, cravat-wearing, port-gargling, social-networking prats.”

Personally, I’m rather pleased.

“Given the current economic situation, what Practical steps would your party take to help graduates find work next year?”

Friday, October 2nd, 2009

As published in this week’s TCS.

We are portrayed as a ‘lost generation’ of graduates, entering the market burdened with personal debt and without the employment prospects to match. The outcome of the next election will be crucial for us. It will determine whether we finally have a government willing to free the economy from the burdens of punitive tax and ill-planned regulation, so it can offer us the opportunities we need.

The Conservative Party is calling for immediate action to help graduates hit by the recession. ‘Job Clubs’ will provide human support for applicants where bureaucratic job centres are failing. Postgraduate education will receive all the funding government can afford. Tax breaks on new jobs and proposals to encourage loans to businesses through a temporary National Loans Guarantee Scheme should also be crucial in preventing further graduate unemployment. 

Ultimately, such proposals are constructive but limited by the state of the economy under Labour. With the next government facing a public debt of over £800bn, it is impossible for any party to realistically suggest it can bank-roll an expansion of public sector graduate jobs. The comprehensive and realistic plans for economic recovery proposed by the Conservative Party are the real solution to helping graduate prospects.

Our economy can be rebuilt and strengthened through greater fiscal responsibility in government, and greater international competitiveness. The debt burden that the Labour government has imposed on our economy is acting as a dead weight on recovery and expansion. The Confederation of British Industry, which represents a third of private sector businesses, has highlighted a balanced budget as a critical factor in achieving future growth and stability. With studies showing cuts of up to £96bn are possible through targeting waste, the Conservatives will remove the burden of debt from the economy while maintaining all necessary services.

In a fiercely competitive global economy, our graduate opportunities also rely on the creation of an attractive market for employers. The Conservative Party will overhaul our complex and expensive tax system, where so much is wasted on bureaucracy. In its place, straightforward and lower corporate taxes will restore Britain’s international competitiveness to ensure the best companies settle here. 

The employment opportunities we aspire to cannot flourish in an economy burdened by debt, regressive corporate tax and knee-jerk over-regulation. Nor can they be conjured up with short-term, expensive government schemes.Only a Conservative government will restore the stable and competitive economy that will bring real, productive jobs to Britain.

Bias in TCS 8

Friday, March 6th, 2009

Last of 8 weekly articles documenting bias in “The Cambridge Student”: Lent 2009 Issue 8.

First, some minor examples of bias in this week’s TCS, then some notes on bias.

Tom Chigbo, the well-deserved winner of the election for CUSU President, is described as “educated in a London state school”. “He attended a comprehensive school in Fulham”.

But the London Oratory is “one of the top secondary schools in the capital”. “[Tony Blair's] assertion… that his teenage children attended ‘ordinary state schools’ was met with disbelief by some newspapers which commented that the Oratory was hardly an average comprehensive.” Peter Hitchens described the Oratory as “a near-unique school which… was comprehensive in the same way that 10 Downing Street is an inner-city terraced house.”

I don’t know what the point of this dishonesty by TCS is, but it is dishonesty nonetheless.

A comment piece claims “our intention is not to brandish the banner of political correctness”, yet manages to both condemn Guolong Li’s homophobic jokes while at the same time maintaining that “The beliefs of every individual, of course, deserve respect.” Wrong. There are plenty of beliefs which do not deserve respect.

Similarly, the claim that “the use of a high-profile platform to urge someone to change sexual orientation… amounts to nothing less than persecution” is nothing less than false.

The article thinks that because we still live in a world with “homophobia”, Li should have been condemned more strongly rather than simply laughed at. Perhaps. I’m not sure. As Tammy Baldwin, a gay Democratic Party congresswoman from Wisconsin said, “If you want to live in the kind of world where you can put a picture of your partner on your desk, then put a picture of your partner on your desk, and you will live in that kind of world.”

We’ve blogged TCS’ curious dislike of St John’s College before. The following quotations are unlike anything else in the article they are taken from (my emphasis):

“Spectators revelled in LMBC II’s decision to take the opportunity to make an arse of their top of Div. 2 spot by getting “overbumped” by Peterhouse’s second boat, a move which sent them soaring down four places.”

“…with Downing bumping their way into the number 2 spot at the expense of LMBC I — another small victory from the combined boat clubs of the respectable Cambridge colleges”!

“The Union Society has been criticised in the past [by who?] for representing a certain type of politics — namely small ‘c’ conservative. This image problem [!] was recognised by the Union Press Secretary…”

A good way to see how bias shapes TCS is to compare articles from TCS and Varsity. This week’s Varsity gets straight to the point in an article “Cambridge report attacks state education”: “Cambridge report highlights state sector failings”. “State school students are failing to get in to top universities simply because they don’t get good enough grades, according to research by Cambridge Assessment.” The TCS headline is less hard-hitting: “Improved exam performance key to access”. The article, while factually accurate, avoids explaining the headline until half-way through, preferring to focus for the first half on lack of information as a reason fewer pupils from poorer backgrounds apply to Cambridge.

An interview with Lembit Öpik uses the phrase “lurch to the right”. Why are moves to the right always described as “lurches”? Is there any other way? Can one glide to the right?

Notes on bias:

Jeff Randall (former BBC Business Editor) about the BBC (The Observer, Sunday 15 January 2006):

“It’s not a conspiracy. It’s visceral. They think they are on the middle ground”.

Peter Hitchens about his Talk Radio programme, “Grilled On Both Sides” (The Guardian, Monday 3 April 2000):

Instead of pretending that the programme’s presenters had no opinions, we openly acknowledged that they did, and allowed them to debate directly, without a referee to get in the way.

Kelvin had originally offered me a microphone to myself but I suggested the double-headed format because I have been worried for years about broadcasting bias, and wanted to see if it could be overcome in an entertaining way…

I always thought my Talk Radio programme worked better when I was pitted against Derek Draper – who disagreed with me about everything from the age of consent to the euro – than it did when my opponent was Austin Mitchell, whose Old Labour instincts were closer to my views than he liked to admit.

The BBC’s assumption of infallibility often shows in its presenters, who honestly believe that they are being fair provided that they give equal time to Labour and the Tories, and never express any direct opinions themselves. They seem unaware that the selection of questions, the tone of voice and the assumptions behind their choice of subject are themselves conditioned by a set of opinions. They do not view these as opinions, since from university onwards they seldom if ever meet anyone who disagrees with them. These views are the assumed basis of civilised existence. You might as well try explaining to a fish that it is wet, as explaining to a BBC insider that he is biased.

This creates another curious effect. Because the BBC believes itself to be the cultural and moral mainstream, it tends to pick outside presenters who suit its world view and sideline those who do not.

I don’t believe that TCS is biased simply because I often disagree with it. There have been plenty of articles this term which contained viewpoints I disagree with, but which I haven’t mentioned because I don’t think they were examples of bias. (Indeed, some articles were so good that I mentioned them in order to praise them.) I’ve also tried not to quote too many comment pieces, but limit my analysis to news articles and editorials. My intention is rather to point out the many assumptions which TCS articles tend to make, whether consciously or unconsciously: how the world-view of TCS editors and journalists affects what they write. As Peter Hitchens says, “These views are the assumed basis of civilised existence.” It hasn’t just been this term: check out the communist and anti-Thatcher images on a previous Facebook group for recruitment, “TCS Comment 2008″. Little things like this may seem insignificant, but they are symptomatic of the larger problem.

I think Jeff Randall’s comment applies well to TCS. Last week’s TCS said “The centre-right, which has had a tight grip on the sabbatical positions in recent years, seems to be yielding [to?] a more activist brand of officer.” Yet recent CUSU sabbatical officers have not been remotely “centre-right”. They have been left-wing. TCS can only describe them as “centre-right” because it is even more left-wing than recent sabbatical officers, yet it believes itself to be “centre”. One of its journalists describes his political views as “A little bit of right, a bit more left, and lots of centre.” There is no such thing. To describe one’s views as “centre” is merely to claim that they are “normal”, and by extension that the views of others are not “normal”.

Similarly, this week there was an article about a survey of Cambridge student politics. The survey had 345 respondents, admittedly “self-selecting”. I don’t know how they heard of it — I certainly didn’t. It can’t have been advertised very widely. So I think it’s safe to assume that most of the respondents were lefties. (“85% had voted in CUSU or JCR elections” compared with the ~20% turnout for CUSU elections this year and last year. (And can TCS please stop referring to CUSU as “the Union”? It’s very confusing. Everyone else calls the Union Society “the Union”, and CUSU “CUSU”.)) “Most respondents placed all other students at Cambridge as ‘centre right’; the majority of respondents placed themselves as ‘centre left’.”

Well, it’s been an interesting term. I wasn’t sure at first that I’d have enough material to write these articles for eight consecutive weeks, but TCS have obliged. (I tried to do the same to Varsity each week, but I couldn’t detect systematic bias.) I hope you found them worthwhile.

Bias in TCS 7

Monday, March 2nd, 2009

Seventh of 8 weekly articles documenting bias in “The Cambridge Student”: Lent 2009 Issue 7.

Quite extreme biased reporting this week: “Students launched a ‘Vote Yes’ campaign supporting the creation of a CUSU sabbatical post for an Ethical Affairs Officer at the Sidgwick Site on Tuesday.”

The article manages to cover a column of the front page barely mentioning the existence of opposition to such a move. Instead it details the action of the Yes Campaign. Apparently thirteen people constitutes a noteworthy demonstration nowadays.

“Thirteen campaigners spelt out the word YES with their bodies on the lawn at Sidgwick site. The display was accompanied by a banner reading ‘vote yes for a fulltime Ethical Affairs Officer’. The campaign dropped similar banners across the city.

The demonstration marks the beginning of a week of campaigning before the referendum takes place at the start of next week. The campaign has spread to the social networking site Facebook, with opposing ‘Vote Yes’ and ‘Vote No’ groups established to encourage debate. ‘Vote Yes’ advocates announced plans to step up the campaign over the coming week with additional “body spells” in Market Square and the Downing Site.

CUSU’S Ethical Affairs Team is currently run by part time officers, unlike the other teams, such as Welfare and Education, which are headed by sabbatical posts.

Supporters of the sabbatical post argue that the expansion of responsibilities make the role of Ethical Affairs Chair too demanding to carry out on a part-time basis.

“To be performed professionally, this job needs full-time and continuous attention, which is impossible to juggle with full-time study,” the ‘Vote Yes’ Facebook group reads.”

Finally,

“Opinion within CUSU remains divided.”

This is followed by brief quotes from a “No” campaigner and a “Yes” campaigner.

A minor example of bias on page 7, in a story about university fees. The pull-quote pushes the TCS line: “The extra funding has to come from the government’s investment, not students.” “The government seems increasingly unwilling to indulge universities in need of subsidy”. Need?

Friedman: “We ought to have a system under which everybody who wants to go to college can go there. He has to pay his own way, either now or later on…

But I don’t see that any reason whatsoever why I shouldn’t have been required to pay back that money. Individuals pursuing their separate individual interests also provide public benefits. Of course I think that the public benefited from my getting an education, but the primary beneficiary was me. I was the one who got the benefit from it. I was the one who had the higher income.”

This term has seen some of the best Varsity editorials. Unfortunately, it’s also seen some of the worst TCS editorials — a shame given their high quality in some past terms. Usually they don’t have much to say. This week they did. “While we wouldn’t necessarily vote for them, we’d like to see some openly right-wing candidates to oppose the overwhelmingly left-wing consensus.” This is a strange view — that people we disagree with should be candidates to give the impression of a more vibrant democracy. (I suggest the sentence “The Cambridge Right has seemingly decided to remain sniping from the sidelines rather than fielding a candidate to engage in open debate”, assuming that the “Cambridge Right” is an institution or an organisation, betrays TCS’ collectivist bias, as do the headlines “Your CUSU candidates” and “TCS shows you your next leaders”.) I also am very surprised that “this paper is backing the outspoken activist Ed Maltby, someone who has shown consistent dedication to campaigning on behalf of students.” I hardly think the self-described “revolutionary socialist” can be described as “a candidate who will represent us stridently and defend our interests vociferously” (my emphasis). For example, he participated in the recent “occupation” of the Law Faculty, which was very far from popular.

Bias in TCS 6

Sunday, February 22nd, 2009

Sixth of 8 weekly articles documenting bias in “The Cambridge Student”: Lent 2009 Issue 6.

Protesters have accused Cambridge University of “turning a blind eye” to Ethical Investment and “continually not engaging with CUSU Ethical affairs” on the topic, at a student demonstration on Monday.

A rather strange article this week, about so-called “ethical investment”. The university is attacked by protesters for holding investments which are claimed to be unethical. The TCS article is essentially a plug for “CUSU Ethical Affairs” (who we’ve covered before) — it doesn’t consider the possibility that opponents of the campaign exist. Never mind the more general problem that a campaigning body for “ethics” cannot represent the diverse ethical beliefs of the various students in Cambridge (and why is their website URL www.green.cusu.cam.ac.uk ?). Indeed, only “Roughly 200 students” attended the protest, a number much lower than the 337 people who said they would go and the 538 people who said they might go on the facebook event, and far lower than those “Not Attending” (1,431) or “Awaiting Reply” (1,127).

More important (therefore) is the uncritical nature of the article.

several Colleges, such as Trinity and St. John’s, have investments in the arms manufacturers BAE Systems and QuinetiQ, as well as in Rolls Royce; companies condemned by Campaign Against the Arms Trade (CAAT) as unethical.

Note the use of a quote to condemn these companies, rather than doing so outright. There’s no attempt to justify it, merely the logical fallacy of appeal to authority.

“It would not be tolerated if Cambridge University publicly endorsed companies which violate International Human Rights Law or damage the University’s educational mission. It should not be tolerated that the University can financially support these companies through its investments,” reads a statement on the campaign website. “The University needs an investment policy that reflects its commitment to human rights, education, and sustainability.”

Indeed it would not be tolerated if Cambridge University publicly endorsed companies which violate International Human Rights Law. But the website gives no examples of any companies endorsed or invested in by the University that do. There are plenty things that “it would not be tolerated” if Cambridge University endorsed, and which they don’t.

At the end is a rather sinister quote from someone from the NUS.

“Educational institutions are publicly funded beacons of the community which help us to form an understanding of the wider world, so it is important that they have Ethical Investment Policies,” she told TCS.

“Universities have a duty to reflect the values of the students and staff themselves and should not be contributing indirectly to groups that are destructive to human rights.”

This idea that universities should promote a very specific worldview, rather than simply teach departmental subjects and provide an environment for general learning, discussion and debate, is insidious.

TCS should not so report “CUSU Ethical Affairs” so uncritically.

Page 7: “Universities around the country at risk for bankruptcy…” “A spokesman at the Department told reporters that: ‘Universities are not going bankrupt…’”

Page 8: “he tried to correct [sic] inequalities of wealth”.

On page three there is a splendid example of editorial bias, marring a mainly good article.

The article is entitled “University pay review shows men still better off”. The article itself is balanced, which accurately reports a review by the University’s Equal Pay Review Group. The review “revealed that the average stipend for female employees is £28,247, while for men it is £37,157; a difference of some 31.54%.” The reporter explains: “These figures reflect the imbalance in the gender distribution within the overall staff profile, that is proportionately more women are employed on lower grades and more men on higher grades; and within grades more men appear at the high end of the pay scale as they have longer service with the University.” And “we receive fewer applications from women than from men for such senior positions.” And the TCS article also mentions “In grade six, which concerns clerical staff, women out-number men and their average pay is about 2.51% higher. Moreover, in grades 5,7, and 9, that is, non-clinical research staff, the report found ‘very low differences in pay.’”

So there appears to be no problem.

Now, a few words in the article display the author’s unconscious assumptions: the use of the word “revealed” (twice) rather than “showed” indicates, I think, that we are supposed to read the revelation as slightly shocking, as if the university would wish to keep the fact secret. The word “some” could be cut: it would normally be used to indicate approximateness, yet the figure given is very accurate; the word’s only purpose is to indicate disapproving shock at the size of the figure. Another quibble concerns the recommendations of the so-called “Equality and Human Rights Commission”, which advises that “A difference of 3-5% should be ‘regularly monitored’, while ‘action is needed to address the issue and close the gap’ if male and female pay differs by over 5%.” How is this rendered in the article? “Male and female wages mostly differentiated by 3% or less within grades, which means that the University is not required to act.” Well, that’s not true. The University is not required to act anyway. The Equality and Human Rights Commission’s recommendations are only recommendations, without legal force.

But this close analysis is relatively trifling, revealing though it is. More extreme is the editorial bias. The headline is “University pay review shows men still better off”. Note the word “still”, as if it is a problem that needs to be rectified. Then note that the headline is simply not true — it is contradicted by the article.

Then note the pull-quote: “Action is needed to address the issue and close the gap”! This clearly distorts the article, taking a quote completely out of context to make a point contradicted by the article. Shame.

Bias in TCS 5

Saturday, February 14th, 2009

Fifth of 8 weekly articles documenting bias in “The Cambridge Student”: Lent 2009 Issue 5.

This week it’s jobs, and economic bias (or perhaps economic ignorance). The Cambridge University Press are to cut 133 jobs. (Confusingly, the article prefers to use the numbers 160 and 170 more often, even though these appear to be overstatements.) The article does not quote anyone in favour of the cuts, and does not even quote the Press itself to justify them. It apparently hasn’t occurred to TCS that any job cuts anywhere could ever be justified.

Without job losses, economic growth would be impossible. Not just hindered, but impossible. Without job losses, living standards would never improve and we’d be stuck in the middle ages, with everyone much poorer. The reason is that the very definition of economic growth — each person becoming more productive — means that firms can do the same work with fewer people, and fewer firms are needed. These people are then available to go into new or expanding sectors. Job losses are scary for those who lose their jobs, while they look for other jobs. But they are essential to allow some sectors to shrink and others to grow as the market adapts itself to the changing desires of consumers. In a recession, this is restructuring is essential.

Cambridge University Press appears to want to leave the printing business altogether, and just be a publishing business. Presumably they believe that printing is not a sector they will be able to remain competitive in. Indeed, printing is one of the most competitive sectors in the world. A CUP employee says “the decision on the printing side is perverse; the Press as a whole is currently operating at a profit.” This is disingenuous: even if the University Press is making a profit overall, its printing section may be making a loss. There is no point throwing away profit to subsidise wasteful jobs, when the profit should be used to support the University of Cambridge.

Why do people feel the need to claim offence on others’ behalf? (It’s rather like claiming to represent people who haven’t asked for it.) There was a rather over-the-top comment by a student in a story about Emmanuel College’s “Empire” May Ball: “Throwing the party in the name of ‘Empire’ will damage the Emmanuel College’s reputation indefinitely and stop people, who have the potential to be here, from applying to Cambridge”! So good on TCS for including the following charming story in an article about “Golliwogs on sale at souvenir shop”: “An African gentleman had come in to collect a Stieff Bear he had ordered, and while he was in the shop a white girl came in and said we should be ashamed for selling the dolls. The man turned round to her and said, ‘it doesn’t offend me; so why should it offend you?’”.

More on the occupation of the law faculty. 56 academics have signed a letter to the Vice Chancellor condemning the University’s response to the protesters. The pull-quote is “The letter describes the occupation as ‘peaceful and dignified’”. Non-violent protest is laudable, but it’s not enough. If some people entered my house to demonstrate against something that had nothing (or very little) to do with me, pointing out that they were non-violent would hardly make it okay. Trespass is trespass. The university did not “deprive” the protesters of food — it merely stopped them taking food into a building that the university owned. The protesters were free to leave and eat elsewhere.

The article mentions “the occupation’s most popular aim, with 74% of students in a poll stating support for disinvesting in the arms trade”. It doesn’t mention their other, unpopular demands (and they were demands, not just aims), and their general unpopularity. Minor criticism of the demonstrators is admitted at the end.

Finally, a hilarious quote from a comment article: “you cannot sell education in a market system. Education is too complex to be priced. Not only does it involve too many different elements and qualities, but it consists of things like truth, falsehood, science, culture, and art. These things cannot be bought and sold in a standard market system, because they cannot be identified as ‘goods’.” Ahahahahaha. What non…sequiturs. Education already is bought and sold. Of course it is not to complex to be priced. Teachers have to earn a living, and charge for their services, as do the writers of books, etc. At the moment most are paid by the state, but there is no reason why they can’t be paid for privately. Indeed, many are. In America, for example, one can get a loan to pay for university education, where the payment is a percentage of all future lifetime earnings. Such schemes are crowded out in the UK by the state.

It is not quite true that “if you try and turn the education system into a market, these things will take on a totally one-dimensional character.” It is true that if university was privately funded, fewer people would study things like philosophy, laudable though they are. For most people, degrees like Management are means to an end, whereas degrees like Philosophy are ends in themselves. If students had to pay for it themselves, most would only choose to do a degree if they thought it would pay for itself through increased earnings. Some would still choose to do more “soft” or “abstract” degrees, for “leisure” purposes. (We pay for leisure.) Probably, fewer people would do degrees overall, and then fewer employers would expect them. And wouldn’t that be more rational?

Finally: Is “journalism by facebook group” the new “journalism by press release”?

Bias in TCS 4

Saturday, February 7th, 2009

Fourth of 8 weekly articles documenting bias in “The Cambridge Student”: Lent 2009 Issue 4.

Fairly good article on the Tiger Temple in Kanchanaburi, a rather unpleasant place run by some stupid Buddhist monks who keep animals in very bad conditions. However, the authors believe that the key to preventing poaching, and thus stopping tigers going extinct, is education. I doubt “education” will have much effect on poachers. The only way to stop animals going extinct is to make it profitable to do so. In places where animals aren’t owned or can’t be legally used for profit, there is no incentive to cultivate them. Instead people try to kill and sell them as quickly as possible, before someone else does. It’s the classic “tragedy of the commons”. But if people can legally own and sell animals, they have massive incentive to keep them safe and breeding, as in the private game reserves of South Africa. But the property rights solution doesn’t even seem to be on the authors’ radar. Indeed, they dismiss tiger farms as “even less desirable”. Why?

In another article in “Thursday”, “TCS has picked two of the best” “projects to support”. A pity one is CUSU “Ethical Affairs” “Real Food Campaign”, which urges us to buy “locally grown, organic fruit and veg”. Organic food is absurd: its low yields would simply make it impossible to feed the world’s population, for no particular advantage. And why buy local? “People should stop talking about food miles”, says Adrian Williams of Cranfield University. “It’s a foolish concept: provincial, damaging, and simplistic… the idea that a product travels a certain distance and is therefore worse than one raised nearby – well, it’s just idiotic.”

According to “Food Miles – Comparative Energy/Emissions Performance of New Zealand’s Agriculture Industry”, from Lincoln University in New Zealand:

“New Zealand has greater production efficiency in many food commodities compared to the UK. For example New Zealand agriculture tends to apply fewer fertilizers (which require large amounts of energy to produce and cause significant CO2 emissions) and animals are able to graze year round outside eating grass instead of large quantities of brought-in feed such as concentrates. In the case of dairy and sheep meat production NZ is by far more energy efficient, even including the transport cost, than the UK, twice as efficient in the case of dairy, and four times as efficient in case of sheep meat. In the case of apples, NZ is more energy-efficient even though the energy embodied in capital items and other inputs data was not available for the UK.” According to the study, New Zealand lamb shipped to England by boat produces 688kg of CO2 emissions per ton, about 25 percent of the 2,849kg produced by most (but not all) British lamb. (Michael Shuman points out errors in the study, but correction would not change the overall point.)

In “Comparative Study of Cut Roses for the British Market Produced in
Kenya and the Netherlands”, Adrian Williams found that roses flown to the UK from the Netherlands leave six times the carbon footprint of Kenya roses, even accounting for air freight. It also is more efficient to grow green beans in Kenya than Europe, the latter with its intensive irrigation systems.

Red, White And ‘Green’: The Cost Of Carbon In The Global Wine Trade” found that “many New Yorkers may be surprised that holding bottle mass constant, it is more “green” to drink wine from Bordeaux (1.8 kg) with a long sea voyage as opposed to a wine from Napa (2.6 kg) with a long truck trip.”

The TCS article also calls packaging “ridiculous”. I thought plastic-wrapped cucumbers were ridiculous too, but it turns out that packaging is actually good. It prolongs the shelf-life of food quite a lot, and cuts down on waste. According to the Cucumber Growers’ Association, plastic-wrapped cucumbers can last almost two weeks, but unwrapped ones are “unsaleable” after five. This also allows consumers to cut down on trips to the supermarket. It’s better to throw away packaging than throw away food.

TCS should be more inquisitive about which “projects to support”.

I’d like to be able to link to all the articles mentioned, so that readers can read them in full. Unfortunately not all TCS articles are put on the web. Ideally, TCS could put a PDF file of each week’s edition on their website, like Varsity.

Bias in TCS 3

Thursday, January 29th, 2009

Third of 8 weekly articles documenting bias in “The Cambridge Student”: Lent 2009 Issue 3.

TCS’s statist bias is well known. This week, an article on government funding for universities was entitled “Give with one hand, take with the other”, despite there being no taking from universities involved whatsoever. The sub-title was “£700 million extra investment criticised as too little” (!). The “take with the other” referred to a reduction in student grant funding. Of course, the government aren’t “taking” anything, merely giving less of other people’s money than they previously were.

The £700 million increase to £7.8 billion next year is an almost 10% rise on £7.1 billion this year. However, the article claims the increase “barely accounts for inflation”! Well, we know that the government are inflating the currency at ludicrous rates, but the official CPI measures inflation at only 3.1%, down from 4.1% in November. Even if the actual rate was double that, a 10% rise in spending is still a huge increase in real terms.

TCS seems to think that it would be wrong to maintain government spending at present levels – it must increase, perpetually! Obviously government spending on universities as a proportion of national output can’t increase forever, otherwise eventually we’d be spending everything on universities, and nothing on anything else! They really haven’t thought this through.

On page 13, there was a comment piece on the just-ended “occupation” of the Law Faculty by some nutters.

“Last Friday at around 7pm a small group of protestors [sic] entered the law faculty and refused to leave. Like so many student protests in Cambridge, this could have ended with issuing an obligatory and unrealistic list of demands to the university, a photo-shoot with the student media and then… nothing. Everyone goes home because, hey, they’ve got an essay in for Monday. Except this time something was different.”

Oh really? It seems to me that the protest fits those criteria perfectly: unrealistic demands like “We demand that Cambridge University issue a statement which condemns Israel’s action in Gaza” and “We demand that Cambridge University grant a minimum of ten scholarships to Palestinian students every year”; a photo-shoot with the student media, and now everyone’s gone home, accomplishing nothing. “This is the largest, most protracted protest of 21st century Cambridge”. Well, that wasn’t particularly hard: they accomplished it with 30 people and six days.

The Editors “feel there is much to be praised” in the actions of these trespassers. They found them “sleep-deprived, hungry, but undaunted. It takes organisation, guts and conviction to spend your weekend – and much of your week – in a cold, dull building, potentially to the detriment of your degree. The Cambridge Student admires the protesters for their dedication to politics and their own ideals”.

What dedication to politics? These people weren’t engaging in politics, but blackmail. Their message was, give in to our demands or we will not leave. Good on the university for turfing them out.

On page 15 there’s an interview with John Prescott. Uninformative tosh. Says Prescott: “having produced the most sustained growth of any European economy, we [had it] undermined by greedy bankers and financial institutions”. Labour produced sustained economic growth? Well, Tony Blair thinks it was luck! Any real economic growth was hindered by Labour’s policies, and most of it was fake growth caused by too low interest rates. The interviewer doesn’t call Prescott up on this. Maybe it’s because the interviewer didn’t want to interrupt the flow of the interview? Or maybe it’s because the interviewer was Pete Jefferys, Secretary of the Labour Club!

Excellent article about education vouchers on on page 12 though: “if schools select on academic aptitude, they will draw from an eclectic mix of different backgrounds, which is far favourable to the current system where your geographical location, or your level of economic privilege, usually determines which school you attend.” Quite right.

Bias in TCS 2

Thursday, January 22nd, 2009

Second of 8 weekly articles documenting bias in “The Cambridge Student”: Lent 2009 Issue 2.

This week it’s that old chestnut, anti-independent-school propaganda:

The front page was an article about a proposal at a Fabian Society Conference (not even an official policy of the Fabian Society) to cap the amount of privately educated students at University. The article was roughly balanced. But why was it newsworthy at all?

The editors editorialise: “It is outrageous that private schools are so disproportionately represented here; how is it fair that 7% of the nation’s school-children should comprise 44% of the students at Oxbridge?”

It’s fair because independent schools are currently produce better students, on average, than state schools. There is no evidence whatsoever that there is anything biased about Cambridge University’s admissions procedures.

To be fair, they appear to recognise this, rightly saying that “Imposing arbitrary limits on entrance to Oxbridge makes a mockery of the ideas of fairness, equality and meritocracy.” But then they proclaim that “the problem lies as much with the state school system as with Cambridge.” No it doesn’t. It doesn’t lie with Cambridge at all. It lies entirely with the state school system.

The article itself mostly quoted sensible commentators. One student said “Cambridge should be accepting the best students, period.” David Aaronvitch said, “I think it’s quite possible that there is an over-representation, let’s say, of Jewish people in higher education institutions. Could we have a situation where we have a cap for them?”

These quotations and others demolish the arguments for a cap. So why was it newsworthy at all? It wasn’t. But the long term strategy of the left is to keep the ideas of penalising or abolishing independent schools in the media. If they can make it look like there two sides to the argument, and keep the argument from naturally dying out, eventually those ideas will succeed.

Has anyone noticed bias in reports of rugby matches between Jesus and St John’s? Last year most of an article was devoted to praising Jesus, only to note with sadness that they lost significantly. Same this year. St John’s is described as a “motley crew of neanderthal forwards”.

Also: TCS is well-known for using the word “refute” when it means “repudiate”. This week, they used “whiskey” when they meant “whisky”.

Bias in TCS 1

Thursday, January 15th, 2009

First of 8 weekly articles documenting bias in “The Cambridge Student”: Lent 2009 Issue 1.

This week it’s an anti-drinking article, “Pints for pennies: a public risk?”

Wetherspoon’s have started selling pints for 99p. The one-sided article was anti-alcohol in tone, quoting anti-alcohol campaigners but no pro-alcohol campaigners in response. TCS quote Wetherspoon’s themselves, who say that it has not caused any problems. But the article tries to create controversy out of nothing. Councillor Ian Nimmo-Smith is quoted complaining that it may encourage people to drink more. Andrea Walko, CUSU’s “Welfare Officer”, is quoted reciting the government alcohol guidelines. This is despite the fact that the government guidelines “were plucked out of the air”. They have “no firm scientific basis whatsoever”:

Subsequent studies found evidence which suggested that the safety limits should be raised, but they were ignored by a succession of health ministers.

One found that men drinking between 21 and 30 units of alcohol a week had the lowest mortality rate in Britain. Another concluded that a man would have to drink 63 units a week, or a bottle of wine a day, to face the same risk of death as a teetotaller.

The disclosure that the 1987 recommendation was prompted by “a feeling that you had to say something” came from Richard Smith, a member of the Royal College of Physicians working party that produced it.

He told The Times that the committee’s epidemiologist had confessed that “it’s impossible to say what’s safe and what isn’t” because “we don’t really have any data whatsoever”.

Mr Smith, a former Editor of the British Medical Journal, said that members of the working party were so concerned by growing evidence of the chronic damage caused by heavy, long-term drinking that they felt obliged to produce guidelines. “Those limits were really plucked out of the air. They were not based on any firm evidence at all. It was a sort of intelligent guess by a committee,” he said.

Andrea Walko has also said giving out free drinks is “irresponsible”: “I don’t think alcohol should ever be given out for free. This definitely encourages alcohol use.”

“Alcohol Concern” is quoted: “Alcohol causes harm to the nation’s health and economy, and there appears to be a strong link between cheap alcohol and the high levels of binge drinking in the UK.”

However, “Alcohol Concern” is a notorious “fake charity”.

“Created by the British government in 1985, Alcohol Concern wages an incremental campaign against drinkers and the drinks industry.

Alcohol Concern supports banning happy hour, raising the price of alcohol, lowering the drink drive limit, banning glass bottles in pubs, warning labels on cans and bottles and banning TV advertising before 9pm. It described the ban on happy hour promotions as ‘a step in the right direction’ and the introduction of cigarette-style warning labels on bottles as ‘a very good first step’.

According to its 2007/08 accounts, Alcohol Concern received £515,000 from the Department of Health. It received just £4,991 in public donations.”

This “controversy” was concocted out of nothing.