Very sad to hear that Mungo MacCallum has died. An @independentaus contributor for years I've known Mungo since my time as a director of the Republican Movement, a decade and some ago. A charming man, incredibly astute, brilliantly eloquent and utterly his own. Such a loss. RIP.
Mungo has two stories in our top nine over the last week and only announced his retirement on Monday. He kept writing right until the end. What a professional he was.
Mungo was part of the Bunyip aristocracy, as his family were offshoots of British aristocracy. His great-great-grandfather ,William Charles Wentworth, came to the NSW colony in the early 1800s and stamped his mark as an explorer and politician, and as a father of the nation.
His family stamped its mark on this country. His father, also Mungo, was a pioneer of television nationally. His uncle, William Charles Wentworth IV was a Liberal Party minister under Menzies. Gough Whitlam described Mungo as "the tall, bearded descendant of lunatic aristocrats."
But, despite his family being known generally for its rightwing views, Mungo was from a different cloth. A true progressive, Mungo cut his teeth on the alternative Nation Review - the journalistic cradle of so many fearless reporters, and the model for @independentaus.
Mungo is a journalist such as Australia has very seldom seen and may never see again. Irascible, incorruptible, totally truthful, fiercely independent and completely in command of every tool in his trade, Mungo MacCallum was exceptional. Vale Mungo, your legacy will long live on.

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More from @davrosz

11 Dec
The passing of Mungo MacCallum means we have lost a enigmatic truthteller. An @independentaus columnist towards the end, his razor sharp wit, wisdom and huge intellect helped us make sense of the world.
The loss of such giants makes us reflect on what counts, hence this thread.
It's clear there aren’t enough truthtellers like Mungo left in Australian media. At @independentaus though, we hunt them out and publish them. We know the importance of facts and truth to democracy, which is at grave risk when false narratives are presented as the whole picture.
Truthtelling is not for the fainthearted and Mungo was a fearless progressive amongst a sea of conservatives - even in his own family. But if you care about democracy, you will speak the truth to power, even when it is uncomfortable, awkward, risky or even frightening.
Read 10 tweets
16 Sep
Great editorial coming for @independentaus subscribers in today's weekly newsletter.
Editor @vmp9 is on fire more than NSW in January, as she explains who is the koala's biggest enemy. (Spoiler: there's a twist!)
Make sure you're a subscriber. Yes you!
independentaustralia.net/about-ia/subsc…
Of course, @independentaus is one of Australia's most ardent koala champions. Indeed, I have just paid our lawyers $10,000 as someone has taken umbrage at one of the many brilliant, fair and painstakingly researched articles on IA by @koalacrisis about this growing calamity.
In just over 10 years of speaking truth to power, @independentaus has been almost constantly threatened by people with deep pockets - who are almost always the powerful - to try to shut us up.
This is called #lawfare and is a pernicious and costly part of our flawed legal system.
Read 10 tweets
3 Sep
You've probably been following the dispute between Google and Facebook and the Murdoch media's official proxy. the Morrison Gov't
As the publisher of a popular independent news website, I have developed some well-considered views on this deeply corrupt farce.
So here's a thread.
The first thing to understand is that old Uncle Rupert, the repitilian relic, doesn't like the internet. He likes more tangible things, like paper, ink and the entrails of his foes. He also doesn't really understand the internet, but knows what he doesn't like most: aggregators.
He has been railing against these so-called aggregators, by which he means social media platforms and search engines, both personally and through his vast and sinister media conglomerate, for at least a decade. His argument is they are stealing News Corp content by posting links.
Read 14 tweets
28 Aug
I would say that the difference between me and virtually every other relatively successful journalist or publisher is that I don't regard other journalists or VIPs as any more important than the people we write for. In fact, my sympathies are very much more towards the outsiders.
Many people probably say that, but my record speaks for itself.
Of course, not pandering to egos does make IA a target and I have, regrettably, I must inform you received rather severe and harrowing bouts of sustained intimidation. But enough about my family...
Read 8 tweets
18 Jul
I haven't done a thread for a while, so indulge me for the next 20 or 30 minutes, while I offer you my thoughts on corruption, dinkum Aussie style.
It's one of my favourite topics and I think I've developed, over the last decade or so, a pretty keen insight.
So here goes...
Many people believe Australia to be relatively corruption free. In my experience, this nation is anything but. It is simply that Aussie corruption is concealed by the "mates network". Money is not passed over (much) in brown envelopes, but mates do mates a favour. And so it goes.
There is so much of this soft, hard to police, systemic corruption a fascinating academic book has been written about it, 'The Game of Mates', by Prof Paul Frijters and Dr Cameron Murray. independentaustralia.net/politics/polit…
Essential reading if you ever wonder why things are so screwed up.
Read 17 tweets
17 Jun
In truth the mainstream media do report most scandals that we hear about -- at least eventually. I think the gripe most people on Twitter have is the unequal treatment and weight given to scandals involving the ALP, as compared to the soft touch the Coalition is invariably given.
Journalism is, of course, not merely about reporting issues, but is in given them the recognition they deserve. So, for instance, Nick McKenzie reported the ABF allowing the Ruby Princess to dock. But if it was reported lower down on the LHS of page 5 of The Age, it is forgotten.
All this is not the reporters' fault, but rather a decision by the editorial staff -- maybe even the editor for sensitive stories. And if an editor wants to disappear a story, he doesn't need to spike it, he can just choose to under-promote it. Hide it on page five, as mentioned.
Read 9 tweets

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