Rod Liddle wasn’t condoning ‘dooring’ cyclists in his Sunday Times column last weekend when he appeared to applaud transport minister Chris Grayling for his role in an incident that left a cyclist injured – he was just using “heavy irony,” says the newspaper.
We’re glad that’s been cleared up. The newspaper was responding to a complaint made by charity Cycling UK, which had asked for the piece, which it described as “inflammatory and dangerous,” to be retracted and for an apology to be issued.
> Cycling UK demands Sunday Times retracts and apologises for Rod Liddle column praising transport secretary for dooring a cyclist
The Sunday Times also received a letter from May Hamilton, whose husband Robert was killed in Southport in January 2014 after a motorist opened her car door into his path without looking.
> Woman who caused cyclist to fall off his bike and die banned from driving for six months
In case you missed it, here’s what Liddle wrote under the heading, Think Twice, Think Bike:
At last we have a transport secretary prepared to take the menace of cyclists seriously. Chris Grayling opened the door of his ministerial car to knock one off his bike — a beautifully timed manoeuvre. Grayling then leant over the prone and whimpering Jaiqi Liu and told him he’d been cycling too fast. Respect! The cyclist had been “undertaking” — a practice enjoyed by many cyclists that, while not illegal, is discouraged in the Highway Code.
Grayling devised a suitable method of discouragement. When in London I repeatedly open and close the door of my taxi to try to catch one of them at it and send him flying. I like to think I’m doing my bit to make London a safer place for normal humans.
We must admit, we missed the “heavy irony” the first time we read Liddle’s column, and even on repeated re-reading, we’re finding it hard to discern the irony – obviously, we apologise to the writer for confusing his subtle road safety message with apparently encouraging acts of violence towards people on bikes.
The episode that gave rise to Liddle’s column – and the complaints from Cycling UK and Mrs Hamilton – happened in October and was widely reported on last week after footage was posted to YouTube by another cyclist.
> Cycling UK suggests Chris Grayling should be prosecuted for dooring incident
Cycling UK today received a reply to its letter from Sunday Times executive editor, Bob Tyrer, who said that Liddle is no more than "a commentator on human foibles, not a diplomat."
The charity’s road safety and legal campaigns manager, Duncan Dollimore, said in a blog post today that the response suggests “it's fine for national newspapers to print articles promoting and encouraging crime, distressing victims’ families, and with boasts about the columnist's own attempted crimes.
“You just print it and say you were being heavily ironic - the poorest excuse for lazy journalism ever.”
He went on: “Cycling UK were concerned that Liddle considered Robert, Sam Boulton, and Sam Harding, all to be people outside of his ‘normal human’ category.
“People therefore deserving to be the target of his London taxi door tactic; except it's too late, as all three have died whilst cycling in recent years, in car dooring incidents,” highlighting that Liddle had described that – with what we now know to be “heavy irony” and nothing more – as a "beautifully timed manoeuvre."
Dollimore continued: “It seems however, that we at Cycling UK, and May Hamilton, must have a sense of humour bypass. We aren't sophisticated enough to appreciate Liddle's cunning intellectual wit.
“So, when May exchanged e-mails with me last night after receiving Mr Tyrer's email, expressing the view that she thought she deserved better from The Sunday Times, she was obviously, like me, just missing the heavy irony thing.
“We thought that irony was a poor excuse for inciting violence, but we obviously didn't get the clever journalist bit, where you say something outrageous but mean something else.”
He added that Mrs Hamilton now plans to raise a complaint to the Independent Press Standards Organisation, but said “it seems that encouraging criminal activity, boasting about trying to assault cyclists, and distressing the families of victims who have died, does not fall neatly within the existing IPSO editors code!”
In conclusion, he wrote: “Just a final thought as I try and grasp how to apply the ‘heavy irony’ ruse: does this mean that if I write an article outlining how people should respond to Mr Liddle if they meet him in the street, that I can claim ‘heavy irony’ as a defence if somebody does what I suggest?
“T'was not my fault M'Lud. T'was those unsophisticated people who didn't understand my sense of humour – I was being heavily ironic!
“No doubt the editors at The Sunday Times have an explanation as to why the rules would be different for me, given that I am, unlike Liddle, not a respected commentator on people's foibles.”
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27 comments
Looks like the Sunday Times does not talk to their colleagues at the Times who started the 'Save our Cyclists' campaign after a colleague was killed on a bike. I cannot help thinking that both cases illustrate a total moral vacuum - i'ts all about column inches.
I think we should just leave it now, and stop giving this berk the oxygen of publicity.
I fact I think we should just stop giving him oxygen.
2944316770 Heavy complainrony
Was Mr Liddle being ironic when he punched his pregnant girlfriend in 2005 and received a Police caution?
Such a nice guy.
A fitting end to 2016...
Good to see Cycling UK taking a robust stand.
So if I hit Liddle with a brick, I'm not being violent, just using heavy masonry?
Asking for a friend...
Yes. My editor told me so, so it must be true.
I met his ex-wife once, she didn't have very flattering things to say about him - it seems that the attitude displayed in his column extended to his domestic life.
all i can say is ... Bull phukkin sh1te ... basturds ....
Ah see - if you're a real journalist, you don't need the disclaimer. You just wait for your editor to deal with the shitstorm via lies and excuses.
I'd like to hit Mr Liddle with a piece of heavy irony... (I do of course mean this in a sense of fun and humour and my comments should in no way be taken literally).
Complaint number 294413035.
I hope they move him to the Religious Affairs desk in the New Year where his sense of heavy irony may be better understood.
Alanis Morissette has a lot to answer for.
Never heard of her.....
Now isn't that ironic.....
A formal complaint has been made.
I read it as satire.
The column is in character with Liddle's writing style but out of context with his presumably genuine anti-cycling past so there's a disconnect there I don't understand. He satirised the position of an extreme anti-cycling bore so effectively that I read it as pro-cycling. Not sure that was his intention. I found it pretty funny. He's probably taking the piss out of himself more than anybody else.
@cczmark, how is that civilised debating working out for you.. or more to the point how is working out for all the dead and seriously injured people being mocked by cunts like Liddle?
"Oh Adolf...is that you being ironic again...one can never tell....?" asked Goebbels...
Such a misunderstood guy....
If i ever meet a Rod Liddle i may put him in hospital.
My propensity for violence is a human foible. I'm not a diplomat
I'm not sure the Cyclists Defence Fund would be able to fund your defence, but if you ever meet Rod Liddle and put him in hospital, put me down for twenty for your legal costs.
What IS ironic is that The Times has a public "Cities Fit for Cycling" microsite, created after one of its reporters was seriously injured. Looks like it's not been updated for a while though.
http://www.thetimes.co.uk/tto/public/cyclesafety/
p.s. Is it really necessary for to use the c-word on public forums? Whilst I detest Rod Liddle's views I don't think this type of abuse is helpful to the debate.
2016 is the year of the cunt, just another to add to the list.
"Cycling UK today received a reply to its letter from Sunday Times executive editor, Bob Tyrer, who said that Liddle is no more than "a commentator on human foibles, not a diplomat.""
"Not a diplomat." Now that is irony. Heavy irony, neutron star density irony.
Kudos to CUK for carrying on in the face of such disturbing, pathetic excuses and failure to admit that the "newspaper" has got it completely wrong.
Complaints to the Sunday Times can be made here http://www.thesundaytimes.co.uk/sto/public/article1443652.ece
And complaints to IPSO https://www.ipso.co.uk/make-a-complaint/
Let's make this as big as the Matthew Paris "let's kill cyclists because they drop rubbish" furore.
Moronic I think, not ironic.
Vehicular vermin deserving of a suitably fitting and surprise response.
Just joking of course! Why on earth would I write such a thing unless I was being heaviy ironic..
oh...or do I need the journalistic credentials first?
You guys need an editor.
> The Sunday Times also received a letter from the May Hamilton, whose husband Robert was killed in Southport in January 2014 after a motorist opened her car door into his path without looking.
> In case you missed it, here’s what Liddle wrote under the heading, Think Twice, Think Bike:
> Cycling UK today received a reply to its letter from Sunday Times executive editor, Bob Tyrer,
> who said that Liddle is no more than “Rod Liddle is merely
> He went on: [really?]