Difference between revisions of "Simon Clark"

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==Notes==
 
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[[Category:Tobacco]] [[Category:Lobbying]]

Latest revision as of 14:13, 28 April 2011

Simon Clark of tobacco industry funded FOREST and formerly of the Media Monitoring Unit

Simon Clark is a right wing/libertarian activist who is the director of tobacco lobby group FOREST maintains a blog titled Taking Liberties for a libertarian organisation called The Free Society.

Background

According to an account by a member of MENSA:

One prominent member of FCS was Simon Clark. He edited a magazine Campus from 1983 which put forward the views of the right wing of the FCS. He was also associated with the Russian émigré group NTS and later became director of the Media Monitoring Unit. The MMU was funded by right-wing business interests and searched for leftist bias in the media, particularly television. Although not a member of Mensa, Clark was appointed editor of the Mensa Magazine and continued as such until quite recently.[1]

According to Clark's own account:

Julian Lewis and I go back a long way. From 1983-85 he helped raise funds to support a national student magazine that I founded and edited. (One of our goals was to strike a blow against the closed shop system whereby undergraduates had to be members of the National Union of Students.) For five years thereafter I worked for him as director of the Media Monitoring Unit which he founded in 1985 with former Labour minister Lord Chalfont to combat unrestrained political bias on television news and current affairs.[2]

Clark is a non-smoker.[3]


Resources

Blog: http://taking-liberties.squarespace.com/

Notes

  1. Alan Edmonds MEMORIES OF MENSA COMMENSAL ISSUE 102 The Newsletter of the Philosophical Discussion Group Of British Mensa Number 102 : August 2000 ARTICLES May 2000 : NOTE : this paper was delivered at the PDG Conference, Braziers Park, May 2000.
  2. Simon Clark Rights and wrongs of free speech Monday, November 26, 2007
  3. House of Commons,Select Committee on Health Minutes of Evidence, 20 January 2000, accessed 20 April 2011