Difference between revisions of "Roger Scruton"
Tamasin Cave (talk | contribs) |
Tom Griffin (talk | contribs) (→Affiliation) |
||
Line 14: | Line 14: | ||
*[[New Atlantic Initiative]] | *[[New Atlantic Initiative]] | ||
*[[University of Buckingham]] | *[[University of Buckingham]] | ||
+ | *[[International Free Press Society]] - Board of Advisors | ||
==Related Articles== | ==Related Articles== |
Revision as of 03:37, 22 December 2009
Roger Scruton is a British philosopher who was caught taking surreptitious payoffs from the tobacco industry in exchange for writing pro-smoking articles in the Wall Street Journal. Presently he serves as the external editor for OpenDemocracy.
After The Guardian's disclosure in 2002 that Scruton had 'asked Japan Tobacco for a £1,000 a month rise to an annual £66,000 to help place articles defending the right to smoke in newspapers, including the WSJ, the Financial Times, the Times, the Daily Telegraph, and the Independent,' he was dropped by both the Financial Times and Wall Street Journal.[1]
Affiliation
- OpenDemocracy
- Institute of Economic Affairs
- Conservative Philosophy Group - founder
- Right Reason - contributor
- Town and Country Forum
- Claridge Press - founder
- CEC Government Relations - chairman
- Institute for European Defence and Strategic Studies
- New Atlantic Initiative
- University of Buckingham
- International Free Press Society - Board of Advisors
Related Articles
- ^ Rebecca Allison, Wall Street Journal drops Scruton over tobacco cash, The Guardian, 5 February 2002