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Lookalikes of Nigel Farage and David Cameron in a posed picture by Alison Jackson
Lookalikes of Nigel Farage and David Cameron in a posed picture by Alison Jackson. Is the Guardian guilty of promoting fake news by using one of her spoof images on its front page? ‘The world’s media should not be used as a tool to defame rivals with the disinformation that Orwell warned us of,’ warns reader Shirley Harrington. Photograph: Alison Jackson/Rex Shutterstock
Lookalikes of Nigel Farage and David Cameron in a posed picture by Alison Jackson. Is the Guardian guilty of promoting fake news by using one of her spoof images on its front page? ‘The world’s media should not be used as a tool to defame rivals with the disinformation that Orwell warned us of,’ warns reader Shirley Harrington. Photograph: Alison Jackson/Rex Shutterstock

Real concerns about fake news and staged photos

This article is more than 7 years old

How can you run news items and comment on false news (A challenge to Facebook’s reach and power is overdue, 9 December), while the front page of the very same edition bears a false photo of the US president-elect cavorting with, apparently, Ku Klux Klan members? Donald Trump may or not be a supporter of this organisation and they in turn may or may not be supporters of his. But the clear message of the photo, without any prominent indication that it is false, presents unambiguous positive answers to these implied questions.

I fly no flag for Trump, whatever the answers are in truth, but as a signed-up supporter of your publication’s objective of “producing quality, independent journalism, which discovers and tells readers the truth”, I would have expected better of you. Or are we all (subscribers, supporters, casual front page headline readers) supposed to know the speciality of Alison Jackson’s work?
David Garrett
Bristol

Isn’t the front page prominence given to a photo of Donald Trump apparently embracing Klan members an instance of the fake news the pope is warning about? I have no time for the man and his methods but I would not stoop to copying his tactics. As the pope pungently puts it, that way coprophilia lies (Pope Francis compares fake news consumption to eating faeces, 8 December). The world’s media should not be used as a tool to defame rivals with the disinformation that Orwell warned us of.
Shirley Harrington
Bury, Lancashire

So, let me get this post-truth idea straight in my head: if you agree with the sentiments behind a faked photo you put it on the front page, where it might easily be mistaken for a photo of a genuine event, and you hail it as satire. If you don’t agree with the sentiments behind a fake/untrue news story (eg the misleading Brexit bus slogan) you condemn the use of it utterly. Hmmmm – the word hypocrisy comes to mind I’m afraid.
Hilary Owen
Nottingham

I would not wish to dissent from any of John Harris’s observations on Facebook’s shortcomings. A former councillor colleague told me: “I use Facebook and Twitter but I make sure that I keep the politics quite separate from them.”

My council had to teach me how to tweet but I do not send instant messages from the midst of an event. I want to think carefully about my 140 characters before I put a message out there, even if at first glance it seems harmless. So most of my tweets go out at the end of the working day.

Meanwhile my charity for the year is Young Minds, focusing on the mental health and wellbeing of children and young people. I believe that we are in urgent need of research into the ways Facebook experiences can contribute to the mental suffering of a significant proportion of 16- to 25-year-olds.
Councillor Geoff Reid
Lord mayor of Bradford

Fake news may be endangering our democratic systems, but thoughtless denigration of politicians who are trying to make those systems work is equally reckless. Thus Alan Sillitoe implies that all MPs break all of their promises (Letters, 7 December) and John Crace’s sketches routinely depict MPs as stupid, venal and inhuman. These fake opinions may be thought witty enough for you to publish, but they pander to a general view of standard politics as contemptible. Figures like Farage and Trump reap the short-term benefit; more insidiously, the belief grows that democracy itself is worthless.
Jem Whiteley
Oxford

Fake news is of very real concern. There have been seven recessions in the UK since the second world war. Five have been under Conservative governments. That party has also presided over all four separate periods of quarter-on-quarter fall in growth during the 2010s. By contrast, there was no recession on the day of the 2010 general election.

And now, the Conservatives have more than doubled the national debt. The Major government also doubled the national debt. Yet the Conservatives’ undeserved reputation for economic competence endures. They are subjected to absolutely no scrutiny by the fake news detractors of their opponents.

Other examples of fake news include the official versions of events in relation to Orgreave, Westland, and Hillsborough; the alleged murder of 100,000 military age males in Kosovo; the existence of weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, and their capacity for deployment within 45 minutes; Saddam Hussein’s feeding of people into a giant paper shredder, and his attempt to obtain uranium from Niger; an imminent genocide in Benghazi; Gaddafi’s feeding of Viagra to his soldiers in order to encourage mass rape, and his intention to flee to Venezuela; an Iranian nuclear weapons programme. In every case, that was fake news. Or, in plain English, lies.
David Lindsay
George Galloway
Neil Clark
Alex Carre
Ronan Dodds
James Draper
Krystyna Koseda
John Mooney
Mietek Padowicz
Aren Pym
Adam Young

Join the debate – email guardian.letters@theguardian.com

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