Difference between revisions of "Melanie Phillips"

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{{person
 
{{person
 
|image=Melanie_Phillips.jpg
 
|image=Melanie_Phillips.jpg
|image_weidth=240px
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|image_width=240px
 
|birth_date=4 June 1951
 
|birth_date=4 June 1951
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|description=Columnist with ''[[The Times]]'' and married to the BBC's legal correspondent, [[Joshua Rozenberg]]
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|amazon=https://www.amazon.com/Melanie-Phillips/e/B001K8CD4W/
 
|wikipedia=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Melanie_Phillips
 
|wikipedia=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Melanie_Phillips
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|twitter=https://twitter.com/MelanieLatest
 
|website=http://melaniephillips.com
 
|website=http://melaniephillips.com
|constitutes-author, journalist=
 
 
|spouses=Joshua Rozenberg
 
|spouses=Joshua Rozenberg
|constitutes=Journalist, author, publisher
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|constitutes=journalist, author, publisher
 
|birth_place=United Kingdom
 
|birth_place=United Kingdom
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|religion=Jew
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|powerbase=http://www.powerbase.info/index.php/Melanie_Phillips
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|sourcewatch=http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php/Melanie_Phillips
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|wikiquote=http://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Melanie_Phillips
 
|employment=
 
|employment=
}}'''Melanie Phillips''' is a British journalist and author.  Since 2001, she has written mostly opinion pieces for the [[Daily Mail]], but in the past she wrote for ''The Observer'', ''The Sunday Times'', and ''The Jewish Chronicle''.  She is married to [[Joshua Rozenberg]] a BBC correspondent.
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'''Melanie Phillips''', a British journalist, author and publisher, is a columnist with ''The Times'' and is married to the BBC's legal correspondent [[Joshua Rozenberg]].
  
On 6 June 2007, she appeared on the BBC's Question Time, and was introduced as being "regarded as one of the [U.K.] media's leading right-wing voices".<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/low/programmes/question_time/6727447.stm This week's panel], BBC Question Time, 6 June 2007</ref>
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In the [[1990s]] she was a columnist at ''[[The Guardian]]'' and, after a brief period as news editor, moved to the ''Observer''. In 2001, she joined the ''[[Daily Mail]]'' where she wrote a controversial column on moral and social issues from a right-wing viewpoint. In September 2013, a “shake up” at the ''Daily Mail'' saw Melanie Phillips step down as columnist for the paper after 12 years.<ref>[http://www.pressgazette.co.uk/melanie-phillips-bows-out-after-12-years-mail-columnist-dominic-lawson-tipped-replace-her "Melanie Phillips bows out after 12 years as ''Mail'' columnist, Dominic Lawson tipped to replace her"]</ref>
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''[http://leftfootforward.org/2013/09/goodbye-mel-we-wont-miss-you-a-look-back-at-melanie-phillipss-greatest-hits/ Left Foot Forward]'' bade her a fond farewell: "Goodbye Mel, we won’t miss you: A look back at Melanie Phillips’s greatest hits."<ref>[http://leftfootforward.org/2013/09/goodbye-mel-we-wont-miss-you-a-look-back-at-melanie-phillipss-greatest-hits/ "Goodbye Mel, we won’t miss you: A look back at Melanie Phillips’s greatest hits"]</ref>
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==BBC ''Question Time''==
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Melanie Phillips makes regular appearances as a panellist on [[BBC]] ''Question Time'':
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* [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/low/programmes/question_time/6727447.stm Melanie Phillips, BBC ''Question Time'', 6 June 2007]
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* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I3QzfrnsQkE Melanie Phillips scorns two UKIP-haters on BBC ''Question Time'', 7 March 2013] 
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* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ak43aCg5Cjo Melanie Phillips gets her Zionist arse kicked on BBC ''Question Time'', 21 June 2013]
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* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uu6S484BDMw Melanie Phillips performing a Zio-Centric Tantrum on BBC ''Question Time'', 21 June 2013]
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* [http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p02vktqy Caroline Flint and Melanie Phillips: Sexism in science, BBC ''Question Time'', 25 June 2015]
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* [http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b06h8qmq/question-time-08102015 ''Times'' columnist Melanie Phillips on BBC ''Question Time'', 8 October 2015]
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===Britain or Israel?===
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In December 2001, Melanie Phillips told the ''Jewish Chronicle'' how fellow ''Question Time'' panellist [[Will Self]] had put her on the spot:
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:Where, he demanded, did my own loyalties lie? If [[Britain]] declared war on [[Israel]], whose side would I be on?
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I could scarcely believe what I had heard. Self was seeking to make the wider world aware of two things: first, that I was a [[Jew]], and second, that therefore my views on Israel could be disregarded since Jews had double loyalties.
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I replied that British Jews were immensely patriotic. It was also inconceivable that Britain should attack Israel since Israel was a salient of democracy in the Middle East. But if the inconceivable were ever to happen, this would represent such a turning against Jews that some of us might feel we had no alternative but to live in Israel. That of course was entirely different from being a traitor to one's own country.
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When I said, however, that Israel was a democracy the audience did a horrible and astonishing thing. They laughed. That incredulous laugh was more shocking even than Self's attack. It revealed that however many Israeli teenagers are blown to smithereens by suicide bombers, the British have seen on TV Israel's tanks demolishing Palestinian houses and above all seen those Palestinian children being killed by Israeli soldiers, and they have formed the view that Israel is a tyranny and the Jews are the real terrorists.
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The programme discussion lurched from bad to worse. [[Diane Abbott]] claimed Britain had attacked Israel 'over the Irgun', which was 'the embryo of the state of Israel' (sic). And from the audience came the considered view that Israel was the source of terror in the Middle East, that what it was doing was as bad as what was done to it, and that it was responsible for ethnic cleansing. I believe that the visceral hostility towards Israel and Jews displayed by both the panel and the audience are representative now of much mainstream British opinion.
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Criticism of Israel is providing the cover for the kind of anti-Jewish feeling many of us thought we would never hear in public. [[Anti-Semitism]] seems to be the attitude of choice now at all the most fashionable dinner parties.<ref>[http://www.melaniephillips.com/answer-time-jewish-chronicle "Answer Time - ''Jewish Chronicle''"]</ref>
  
*Neocon Europe [http://www.neoconeurope.eu/index.php/Melanie_Phillips Melanie Phillips]
 
 
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==References==
 
==References==
 
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Latest revision as of 18:55, 11 March 2023

Person.png Melanie Phillips   Amazon Powerbase Sourcewatch Twitter Website WikiquoteRdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
(journalist, author, publisher)
Melanie Phillips.jpg
Born4 June 1951
United Kingdom
ReligionJew
SpouseJoshua Rozenberg
Columnist with The Times and married to the BBC's legal correspondent, Joshua Rozenberg

Melanie Phillips, a British journalist, author and publisher, is a columnist with The Times and is married to the BBC's legal correspondent Joshua Rozenberg.

In the 1990s she was a columnist at The Guardian and, after a brief period as news editor, moved to the Observer. In 2001, she joined the Daily Mail where she wrote a controversial column on moral and social issues from a right-wing viewpoint. In September 2013, a “shake up” at the Daily Mail saw Melanie Phillips step down as columnist for the paper after 12 years.[1]

Left Foot Forward bade her a fond farewell: "Goodbye Mel, we won’t miss you: A look back at Melanie Phillips’s greatest hits."[2]

BBC Question Time

Melanie Phillips makes regular appearances as a panellist on BBC Question Time:

Britain or Israel?

In December 2001, Melanie Phillips told the Jewish Chronicle how fellow Question Time panellist Will Self had put her on the spot:

Where, he demanded, did my own loyalties lie? If Britain declared war on Israel, whose side would I be on?

I could scarcely believe what I had heard. Self was seeking to make the wider world aware of two things: first, that I was a Jew, and second, that therefore my views on Israel could be disregarded since Jews had double loyalties.

I replied that British Jews were immensely patriotic. It was also inconceivable that Britain should attack Israel since Israel was a salient of democracy in the Middle East. But if the inconceivable were ever to happen, this would represent such a turning against Jews that some of us might feel we had no alternative but to live in Israel. That of course was entirely different from being a traitor to one's own country.

When I said, however, that Israel was a democracy the audience did a horrible and astonishing thing. They laughed. That incredulous laugh was more shocking even than Self's attack. It revealed that however many Israeli teenagers are blown to smithereens by suicide bombers, the British have seen on TV Israel's tanks demolishing Palestinian houses and above all seen those Palestinian children being killed by Israeli soldiers, and they have formed the view that Israel is a tyranny and the Jews are the real terrorists.

The programme discussion lurched from bad to worse. Diane Abbott claimed Britain had attacked Israel 'over the Irgun', which was 'the embryo of the state of Israel' (sic). And from the audience came the considered view that Israel was the source of terror in the Middle East, that what it was doing was as bad as what was done to it, and that it was responsible for ethnic cleansing. I believe that the visceral hostility towards Israel and Jews displayed by both the panel and the audience are representative now of much mainstream British opinion.

Criticism of Israel is providing the cover for the kind of anti-Jewish feeling many of us thought we would never hear in public. Anti-Semitism seems to be the attitude of choice now at all the most fashionable dinner parties.[3]


 

Events Participated in

EventStartEndLocation(s)Description
Identity Crisis: Can European civilization survive conference13 March 200814 March 2008Italy
Rome
European University of Rome
National Conservative Conference15 May 202317 May 2023London
England
A 2023 conference on Conservativism
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References