‘Gangland violence spilling over to Scotland from south of the Border’, ‘More than 100 children charged with supplying drugs’ and ‘Gangs flooding Scots city with ‘foot-soldiers’ – Why middle-class professionals are being shielded from the truth and are easily duped

This month alone, the tabloids, with readers predominantly from less well-off communities, the Scottish Daily Express, the Scottish Daily Mail and the Scottish Sun, have headlined the plague of extreme violence, drug abuse, drug deaths, child abuse, the ‘cuckooing’ of the vulnerable, people trafficking and prostitution, surging across small-town and rural Scotland, as County Lines drug gangs from English Cities have spread into every corner.

Despite their open, often rabid, hostility toward the SNP, these newspapers have been unable to resist the morbid and scary appeal of these stories for their readers, risking, to my mind, support for the Union.

In sharp contrast, the serious media such as the Herald and the Scotsman along with BBC Scotland’s TV and radio news output, have studiously ignored this, now 5 plus years drama, despite regular Police Scotland reports, official crime statistics revealing a surge in violent crime in areas such as the Highlands, Moray and Aberdeenshire, and stubbornly high drug deaths statistics.

What explains this curious shielding of the professional classes?

Power – these are people who influence and who make decisions about life in Scotland, in the fields of education, health, crime, transport, the economy, and so on. They vote too.

In April 2024, Allan Dorans MP, SNP Westminster Policing Spokesperson, wrote in the international policing journal, Policing Insight:

Why is this? Understanding newsroom cultures and the fast, often knee-jerk responses to incoming stories is not easily done, and suggestions of conscious political agendas operating in them can be over-stated.

Decisions about what policing to prioritise, what crimes to resource, and which of these most deserve investment in intelligence gathering and pre-emptive action, are being made within a middle-class world informed by media operating carefully to avoid divisive and sensitive issues.

More plausible, to my mind, is the notion that a culture develops within media organisations over many years, to predispose decisions about what to report and what not to report.

Professional journalists, often graduates of the same elite Scottish universities, who have moved for careers mainly within the same national broadcasters and ‘quality’ press, who mix professionally and socially with similar professionals in government, in education, policing and other public services, tend to ‘know’ without the need for debate, what is appropriate.

County lines gang members are predominantly, almost entirely, from ethnic minority groups from only English cities, and they are operating in small towns across the UK, causing extreme suffering.

For Scotland’s news broadcasters and elite press to report them in full would be to expose for mass public consumption, narratives that would unavoidably fuel racist and anti-English sentiments. Journalists at BBC Scotland, STV News, the Herald and the Scotsman sense these dangers and will not go there.

That is all-too understandable but there are consequences for policing in those towns damaged by county lines activity.

Decisions about what policing to prioritise, what crimes to most resource and, critically, which of these most deserve investment in intelligence gathering and in pre-emptive action, are being made within a middle-class world informed by media operating carefully to avoid divisive and sensitive issues and also lacking in local knowledge.

It seems all-too plausible that this explains how a full-blown riot [Auchinleck, East Ayrshire, November 2023] risking the lives of locals and officers could have been allowed to explode, despite warning signs in the local press and in social media for days and weeks beforehand.

https://policinginsight.com/feature/opinion/policing-county-lines-gangs-in-scotland-is-a-lack-of-mainstream-media-coverage-making-it-more-difficult/

The Auchinleck County Lines expulsion ‘riot’ – https://talkingupscotlandtwo.com/2024/04/19/the-bradford-gang-that-tried-to-spread-misery-into-auchinleck/

I agree with the above explanation and it conforms to the Propaganda Model theory of Professor Noam Chomsky based on a wide and extensive range of similar phenomena and, at its centre, the notion of interlocking elites, and of the educated and invested professional classes, being easier to dupe than more alienated working-class groups. See – https://chomsky.info/consent01/

6 thoughts on “‘Gangland violence spilling over to Scotland from south of the Border’, ‘More than 100 children charged with supplying drugs’ and ‘Gangs flooding Scots city with ‘foot-soldiers’ – Why middle-class professionals are being shielded from the truth and are easily duped

    1. Same here – although I thought it may have been because I pointed out that Scotland, already a safer place than England, was inadvertently about to be made even safer by Labour.

      I don’t suppose my request for a review will be looked upon favourably by the FB Nazis.

      Liked by 1 person

  1. I still fondly recall Chomksy’s interview in the late 1970s by then BBC’s intellectual giant Andrew Marr, who couldn’t get his head around the notion he wouldn’t be there at all if he didn’t conform to the unconscious predispositions required by the BBC.

    Yet here we are 40 odd years later with a bunch of football hooligans running riot and having heir actions in a foreign city covered up by a collusive media tasked with ‘antisemitism’ for a fee…

    Andrew Marr’s perspectives may have been slightly lacking in the 1970-80s, but they are as nothing compared to the ‘professional’ propaganda available to the highest bidder of today in place of journalism….

    Liked by 1 person

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