LOVING THE SNP….

Just HOW pro-SNP is the BBC? I suppose they instinctively admire any Party that seeks to break up the UK and a Biased BBC reader advises;

“As a Brit who does not reside in Scotland I appreciate that this feature might seem a little parochial but I have to inform you that the BBC’s pro-SNP stance is well-known up here and is, quite frankly beyond belief – perhaps a little similar to the BBC’s love affair with Irish Republicanism?

This Sunday Politics feature (link below)  begins by focusing on the pro-independence campaign’s weekend march in Edinburgh; it was basically an advert for the Yes/SNP agenda with no balance provided from unionists,  who, if the polls are to be believed, constitute over two thirds of the Scottish populace; Unionists are the majority but you wouldn’t believe this by watching this biased package. There was no mention that the turnout was utterly feeble, with only 5, 000 nationalists turning up. In the feature you have shots of Alex Salmond and anti-English nasty bit of work, Margo MacDonald,  preaching to the converted,  and a cynical mention of how a unionist started a scuffle as a result of flying a Union Jack flag. I live in Edinburgh and can inform you that there were boos from hundreds, if not thousands, of Unionists as the march went by; the BBC doesn’t mention this or hint at this at all. Neither did it mention that Alex Salmond got booed by thousands at the Olympian homecoming in Glasgow a couple of weeks’ back.

After the feature in the ‘analysis’ section there was absolutely no attempt at getting the views of Unionists but instead we had a pro-independence interview with the Chairman of the Yes campaign; he was giving free reign to speak his mind numbingly boring/biased drivel with no interruptions from well-known SNPer Isobel Fraser. It was an utter DISGRACE! As an Englishman working up here I am disgusted by the BBC’s constant groveling to the SNP agenda. It really is awful and they get away with it on a daily basis.

Anyway, here is the link to the program.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b01mzg0r/Sunday_Politics_Scotland_23_09_2012/

IT’S SAINT VINCE DAY…

Well, hasn’t today been Vince Cable day on the BBC? They have been salivating over him ALL DAY, and even his ludicrous idea of creating Britain’s very own Fannie May and Freddie Mac has gone without any serious economic analysis. Cable must be delighted how the BBC is playing along with his leadership bid and one wonders how Clegg must feel?

You Say Pleb, I Say Plod, Let’s Draw A Line Under It And Call The Whole Ballything Orff.

The top BBC story of the day?

Man loses temper and shouts some angry abuse at copper who refuses to open a gate for him.

Man apologises.  Copper accepts apology.  Done and dusted.

 

Yes?  No.

Can there ever have been a day in which the BBC proves itself more totally irrelevant and highly politicised?

A complete non-story is whipped up into a maelstrom of pseudo political significance by an ever more desperate Labour Party and a Police Federation with a grudge, and all egged on by a gleeful BBC who have spent, what, hundreds of thousands of license payer’s (the Plebs) hard earned pounds today reporting what must be the world’s least earth shattering story.

Nick Robinson must be hanging his head in shame somewhere in embarrassment. 

 

But seeing as we’re on the subject let’s look at what the BBC considers the crux of the matter…..the ‘fact’ that Mitchell dared to call a police officer a ‘pleb’.

Did he?  Might he not of called him ‘Plod’ or ‘F’ing plod’?  Rather more likely perhaps.

The BBC have the evidence…it tells us the Sun has the police report which states that the word ‘pleb’ did arise in the course of the little contretemps.

The BBC presenter said that this is ‘proof” then that Mitchell did say ‘pleb’.  It’s in the Sun, so that’s OK then.  Except when it’s about Liverpool football fans.

However is the police officer telling porkies…or did he just mishear Mitchell?

 

Why is the use of  ‘Pleb’ of such interest to the BBC?  Nicky Campbell claimed there was ‘an ugliness about the word’.  It smacks of arrogance, a born to rule attitude, a flashman type character that we all really suspect is, at heart, what every Tory is like,  grinding the face of the poor into their own poverty at every opportunity.

The BBC are not so ready to condemn similar class catcalls when indulged in by Labour…..only recently in PMQs Miliband was accusing Cameron and Co of being ‘rich poshboys’…and apparently it is acceptable to bash the ‘Tory Toffs’…or to claim Cameron is unfit to govern due to his Eton background.

Why is that a rather odd stance?  Which school did  Labour’s economic hero Keynes go to?  Eton.  Which school did the US’s aristocratic but democratic President Roosevelt go to?  The US equivalent of Eton…Groton….and yet he introduced the Left’s  iconic ‘New Deal.’

The BBC had little to say when the police federation accused Cameron of ‘hollow sympathies’ when the two police officers were shot recently.  Is that not far more insulting and out of order?

The BBC have no hesitation in denouncing the ‘plebs’ which they disagree with…they just call them by a different name….. ‘populists’, or Daily Mail readers, or  evangelical Christians or climate change ‘deniers’, or Tories or Republicans, or UKIP voters.

 

The big difference is that Mitchell spoke in anger, a flash of temper, rude and obnoxious perhaps but in the heat of the moment.  Perhaps forgiveable.

The BBC however speak in cool, considered tones which they have had time to think about and alter if they wish.

The trouble is they don’t wish and are quite prepared to ridicule and deride anyone they consider less educated or intelligent or cultured as what they are.

There is no difference between their own character and the image they portray of the Tory lording it over the common man.  They are every bit the arrogant Flashman they affect to despise.

 

 

HULLO HULLO HULLO WHAT’S NOT GOING ON HERE THEN?

Photos here.  Click on photo to enlarge it.

 

 

A dossier of internal police, social services and intelligence reports  shows agencies in South Yorkshire were aware vulnerable girls were being abused, but a catalogue of alleged crimes were not prosecuted.

 

The BBC went to town on the police after the inquiry into Hillsborough revealed they had been covering up evidence of their failures….The coverage and mournful examinations went on endlessly.

Today however a story of similar significance in which not only police but politicians worked to cover up a child sex abuse scandal involving ‘Asian’ men and white girls has been kept off the airwaves…..I have heard one small item early in the morning and nothing else all day…and I have been unable to find it on the website…if it’s there it’s well hidden.

Why?

What is the BBC trying to hide?

The Times has published an extensive report on the release of documents that show the extent of the cover up and mal-practise. (Unfortunately behind paywall)

On the BBC what did we get? We were treated to endless in depth debates about Tory whip Andrew Mitchell and his bad tempered rant at some police officers to whom he has apologised.

Not only that but who did they have on as an ‘expert’ witness…the Sunday Times political editor…..and yet the BBC couldn’t find the time to ask about the Rotherham story published in her own ‘stable’ of papers…..but they do ask about the Sun’s story on Mitchell.

Search the BBC now and Rotherham doesn’t seem to exist after 2011. It has vanished as a story.

So what is the BBC trying to hide?

Listening to 5Live after 05:00 this morning the subject of Rotherham and the release of new evidence did work its way onto the airwaves…what did the BBC say the Report said?

‘It was the actions of a very small group from within the Pakistani community’.

Let’s break that down……..So we know the BBC will not use the word Muslim in connection with this story or indicate it was a significant contributor to the choice of victim (Some were Asian…but Hindu or Sikh). Previously ‘Asian’ was the preferred racial moniker, clearly the BBC has decided that is too wide a description and has narrowed the ‘culprits’ own profiles to ‘Pakistani’, but that again would implicate all Pakistanis…so they have narrowed it even further to ‘a small group’.

 

The BBC has worked hard to isolate the abusers and their crimes from any association with their race, culture or religion.

As they did with the 7/7 bombers….can’t have anything to do with Islam because Islam is a religion of peace.

However…the white girls were a product of their society and in a way are themselves to blame, as are we (Non-Muslim) all for their plight.

 

But wait what did the report really say:

‘Possibly the most shocking threat is the existence of substantial and organised offender networks that groom and exploit victims on a worrying scale,’ the report states. ‘Practitioners throughout the force state there is a problem with networks of Asian offenders both locally and nationally.

‘This was particularly stressed in Sheffield and even more so in Rotherham, where there appears to be a significant problem with networks of Asian males exploiting young white females.’ 

The report, seen by The Times, states that such groups are believed to have trafficked victims to other cities and towns, including Bristol, Manchester, Birmingham, Bradford and Dover.’

‘Substantial and organised offender networks’….not a small group then?

 So why has this story been sidelined?  Surely it is just as important in terms of ‘Establishment’ cover  ups as Hillsborough.

Then again Maggie Thatcher can’t be blamed for this one…maybe that’s just the angle they’re trying to work out…so they can work it into the story somehow!

In the meantime if they can’t take Maggie down (again)they’ll make do with Tory Whip Mitchell rather than have to rake up some old case about gangs of Asian men raping and abusing white girls and the police covering it up as they ‘respect’ cultural differences.

‘Another confidential 2010 report, for the Rotherham Safeguarding Children Board, warns against drawing too much attention to the ethnic origin of the alleged abusers.

It states: ‘Great care will be taken in drafting…this report to ensure that its findings embrace Rotherham’s qualities of diversity. It is imperative that suggestions of a wider cultural phenomenon are avoided.’

 Bearing that last statement in mind……

One final question…did the BBC take it upon themselves to restrict the nature of its reports in terms of race and ethnicity or did it have discussions with other agencies such as the police or local councils to co-ordinate a ‘conspiracy’ of silence on the matter?

WHO PAYS THE PIPER….

 

Frank Words in the comments suggests that maybe the BBC could get a couple of musical jokers like ‘Chas and Dave’ to present the Proms. Why do that when the BBC has its very own in-house musical joker…step forward Mr Paul Mason…a man of great depths and hidden talents.

Is it April Fool’s Day? I don’t suppose it matters to a rebel like Paul Mason who longs for the Revolution and the breaking down of all societies petty rules, structures and iconography. April 1st can be any day he wants it to be.

Tell me I’m wrong when you read the below that Mason isn’t pulling our legs and having a laugh using the BBC to peddle his mockery of Osborne…..

Did a medieval monk predict the double-dip?

[Musicians created] sounds that shocked their audience instead of soothing them.

One of the earliest examples of this is the Kyrie Osbornum, an anonymous manuscript recently found in the archives of an English Cathedral.

What has startled musicologists is the similarity of the Kyrie to a graph of the UK’s quarterly GDP growth figures since before the Lehman Brothers crisis.

Like the UK economy, the melody starts stable, plunges to unheard of depths, recovers, but falls again at the end. And like the Kyrie, the UK growth graph speaks of disruption, depression, failed recovery, uncertainty.

Controversy rages about the Kyrie, with some scholars determined to prove it is a fake, planted perhaps by an economist who is also a musician, and who has simply projected each 0.25% rise or fall in output onto a four-stave graph.

This school of thought has dubbed the piece the Kyrie Darlingianum.

 

 

Good that the BBC’s  business editor on Newsnight can push such nonsense and all with a straight face……any clearer sign of anti-Osborne sentiment couldn’t be found.

The photo at the top of this post is a discovery that was found in an old cellar in the KGB headquarters…..apparently it is the blue print for the creation of the BBC, some say.

No wonder Mason was nominated for the Orwell Prize not once, but twice!

Where Does He Find The Time?

Andrew Marr graces our screens again bringing his expertise and insight to the subject of world history.

I shan’t watch it as Marr isn’t actually a historian, and isn’t just reading a script produced by historians…it’s all his own work. The fact that Marr had such left wing politics at university that he was called ‘Red Andy’, and that he is a favoured son of the BBC, makes it unlikely that any historical narrative comes untinged without a pinko blush.

Judging by his last efforts in which Darwin was to blame for Hitler and Britain’s war against the Boer’s led directly to the gas chambers for the Jews of Europe might also colour my view of his views.

However not watching the programme does not preclude me from criticising it….as said I think it is pretty certain what Marr’s take will be……you might rightly complain that I am jumping the gun, Red Andy could have changed….more Randy Andy now than Red.

Evidence points to my presumptuous conclusions not being premature nor still born.

The Telegraph gives us a foretaste of what to expect:

‘In his blockbusting new documentary series, Andrew Marr must condense a couple of hundred thousand years of human history into just eight hours of television. How has he done it?’

“This series is Andrew Marr’s History of the World in the sense that I’ve chosen the stories,” he says, “but I am not pretending that I have a unique take on world history.’  (Oh yes you do..ed)

As you would expect, Marr’s skills are journalistic rather than academic, but because the principal challenge of his new series is to condense and collate a dizzying volume of information into a clear, compelling narrative, he could scarcely be better qualified.’

 Journalistic rather than academic?  Great.  And perhaps he should take some advice from his colleague Justin Webb and not take on too much….’The crush of “facts” actually reduces people’s ability to see the other point of view.’

Marr gets in a spoiler before we can claim, as I do, that perhaps he might colour his story with his own personal views……

As he merrily admits: ‘His is not a personal, proselytizing view of history in the style of Kenneth Clark…….’  (Of course not!…ed)

However, he does admit to having ‘an over-arching thesis.’

Which is:

 “Clearly the human story is one of acceleration. There has been a Moore curve in terms of the number of people alive on the planet, our technological ability, and our ability to understand ourselves. We have had this extraordinary, explosive growth in our ingenuity.

“But, at the same time, we haven’t had anything like the same advance in political understanding, our ability to control our desires, to act fairly for future generations. We have had political advance. We are less violent than we used to be. But our ability to govern ourselves wisely has not matched our technical development.

“Martin Rees, the Astronomer Royal, has this great conceit: in the next two generations, he says, mankind will enter the rapids, the white water. These are the dangers of nuclear war, famine, plague, overpopulation and radical discontinuous climate change.

“Either this is the beginning of the story spreading across the cosmos, or it’s the end of everything.”

 

So the programme is really about the development of radical politics making a fairer world, controlling our desires (consumerism?), climate change and ‘fairness‘ for a future generation……maybe he has had a script after all…..Did Paul Mason write it whilst in his tent at an Occupy rally?

Andrew Marr’s History of the World starts on Sunday on BBC One at 9.00pm

 

Let me know how he gets on.

Webb’s Web Of Deceit

 

 Media as Obama Sycophants - Nothing New Under the Sun

 

 

It is an irony that Webb here suggests blame for distorting and polarising politics in the US can be laid at The Web’s door.  The ‘fabrications, the lies, the nonsense’ that comes from the Web are all to blame.  Well yes….he’s right….it’s just that he blames the wrong Web.

Webb returns to his old stomping ground to add his wit and wisdom to Mark Mardell’s who clearly isn’t biased enough for the BBC.

Webb wants to know:

How did US politics become so polarised?

Remarkably for a BBC man who has spent much of his career doing his best to trash President Bush and the Republicans he  admits:

[That] this bile matters. It has real consequences. It leads, in Congress, to deadlock. A nation beset with urgent issues to confront – of which the size of the national debt is probably the most serious – cannot find the cross-party consensus necessary to act.

So media misrepresentation of political figures and their policies results in extremely bad consequences for Democracy? Go Figure! Who’d a Thunk? A political journalist who just worked that out!

 

Naturally of course such an impasse is always blamed on the Republicans.

However it is not just the Republican politicians to blame….it is that shapeless, writhing monster the Internet and its sinister army of swivel eyed, foam flecked (Right Wing) bloggers that reduce democracy to a hollowed out shell in which only the most sharp elbowed and well heeled succeed in getting their message across.

Does he mean Obama who used the internet to raise a massive amount of money and agitate for votes?  No, that’s the ‘good’ internet.

If only we had an impartial, unbiased provider of news, facts and fair comment to inform, educate and entertain us and that would provide a balance to all the highly political and partisan comment and opinion out ‘There’!!!

 

Webb goes on:

‘…..newspaper columnist Carl Hiaasen. He made an interesting point about the sheer number of sources of information on offer to the average American in the digital age. The TV of course, and the radio, but also from the net the blogs and the YouTube video and the snippets of half noticed opinion on Twitter and Facebook. A maelstrom of fact and opinion and sheer nonsense. All mixed up.

“The ability to twist and fabricate makes it so much more difficult to sort through what’s true and not true. You need to dig twice as hard.”

In these circumstances, no wonder many people defend themselves with the obvious human psychological defence mechanism – they believe what backs up what they already think and disregard the rest!

The crush of “facts” actually reduces people’s ability to see the other point of view.’

It must be true for Mark Mardell also admits he is overwhelmed by information…..

‘If you are anything like me you will find there is too much to read, too much to absorb.’

 

That interpretation is the latest ‘thinking’ from the Left….ignorance and psychological problems are the causes of ‘right wing’ thought and ideology….it is deployed with increasing rapidity to combat critics of climate change, immigration, Islam and Europe…..and then the usual add-on….it will all lead to another Auschwitz if we allow such bile onto the internet…..

According to Guy Verhofstadt, a former Belgian Prime Minister who now leads the Liberals in the European Parliament, “The ultimate consequences of identity thinking are the gas chambers of Auschwitz“.

What Webb is really upset about is that the BBC and its ilk are now held to account (if I might say by the likes of this site) and its stories can be checked…..and are often found wanting.  No wonder the BBC and the Left would like to close down the bloggers.

 

But wait there’s more….not only are the lies and nonsense of the internet making a mockery of Democracy it is the ‘nastiness’ of real life….as practised by the Republicans….if only we had the cosy, cosseted world that Liberals and Democrats would provide…cradle to grave State funded generosity carpeting the world for us…just like Roosevelt’s New Deal…….

 

‘Michael Slote, Professor of Ethics at the University of Miami, agrees. But he wonders as well if there is not a deeper issue – an issue that goes to the heart of what it really means to be an American.

He sees that community spirit I identified at the start of this piece as a diminishing quality of American-ness. In fact, he believes it was a recent aberration. The real America is a tougher place, a place where bullying politics is part of the scenery.

He is depressed by what he sees as a nation reverting to type after a period of gentleness – brought on originally by the Depression and the New Deal politics that came after it – which suggested to Americans that in good economic times they could afford to help each other out.

 

and of course there is always that final kick in the teeth to Webb’s political bete noires….remember Romney being lambasted for not caring for the 47%…….well you know never let a good quote go to waste……‘the hatreds are ideological as well. Some Americans don’t see us as having basic obligations to our fellow citizens.”‘

 

That’s Romney told…what a nasty fellow he is….ideological hatred for the poor and downtrodden by a callous, bullying politician.

 

Gosh…Vote Democrat chaps for a nicer world! 

 

The Science is Fixed, The Politics Is Too

For the BBC any talk about climate change can only be in one direction…the science is fixed (I use that phrase rather than ‘settled’ as it seems more apt)….but so it seems is the politics for the BBC.

The Lib-Dem Ed Davey, Energy Secretary, has been jumping up and down recently sounding off about Tories destroying the planet.

 The BBC seem to have lapped it up…and as the science is fixed they feel no need to get a Tory in to answer Davey’s wild assertions.  The only other ‘witness’ to this climate crime is Vince Cable, who nods sagely in the corner and mumbles something about polar bears dying in their millions and being fed to Mitt Romney’s dogs and ice bergs floating down the Thames.

Well he might not have said that.  But I’m sure the BBC would have written it had they thought they could get away with it.

 

What was said was :  ‘Vince Cable has warned of a “populist backlash against everything green”.’

Ahhh…that old Richard Black trope….‘it is ignorant, uneducated, self interested selfish ‘Plebs’ (er…to use a phrase in current usage) that don’t know anything about science that are denying the TRUTH, Man!’

The BBC are quite unabashed to report that the Tories are turning into the Tea Party Taliban, a lunatic right wing fringe of planet destroying thugs who would only become concerned about climate change if the island tax havens of their rich capitalist  friends were going to be sunk under ever rising sea levels.

 

The BBC, never unknowingly biased.

 

 

Mardell Redistributes His Political Ideology

This post from Mark Mardell has to one of his most misguided and biased efforts yet. In an attempt to get his readers thinking that quasi-Socialism is in fact a very American ideal, he plays coy, pretending that he’s only asking a question, as if he’s merely opening debate on the topic and doesn’t have a position. It’s quite obvious that he does, although as we’ll see, his understanding of it is rather bizarre. His ultimate goal, of course, it to prove that Mitt Romney is wrong.

Is redistribution a foreign idea to the US?

Mitt Romney, in the wake of his “47%” comments, told Fox News that government redistribution of wealth is an “entirely foreign concept” to Americans.

He repeated the point today: “I know there are some who believe that if you simply take from some and give to others then we’ll all be better off. It’s known as redistribution. It’s never been a characteristic of America.”

I am not sure whether Mr Romney means that such ideas come from abroad or just that redistribution is alien to American values.

But he is on to something.

What Mardell means is that Romney may have hit on something that will appeal to the uglier instincts of the voters.

Despite being factually wrong, he has hit upon a central reason why American politics can seem so very different to what happens in Europe, including in Britain. Specifically, conservatism here is very different from conservatism there.

See, when I said that his goal was to prove that Romney is wrong, it wasn’t just my biased inference. “Factually wrong”, eh? How so?

There is a large section of the American right, indeed of the American people, which does not accept the grand central bargain of post-war politics across the other side of the Atlantic.

And we all know how well that has worked out, don’t we? Or is the sad situation in Greece and Spain, and the general death spiral of the Euro something Mardell hasn’t quite grasped? He’s writing as if Euro-style Democratic Socialism is the correct way to go, and those who don’t accept it are on the wrong side of history. So how is Romney wrong?

The Republican candidate of course protests too much. In a technical sense, any system of taxation involves a redistribution of wealth, from the individual to where the government chooses to spend it.  

Ah, here we go, Mardell is going to demonstrate how Romney is wrong.

Of course, hundreds of years ago it was distributing the wealth of the masses upwards to the kings and lords. But nowadays, even if every citizen paid exactly the same in a minimalist state there would still be redistribution to defence manufacturers, or to the police force, or whatever.

???????

This is a joke, right? Some under-educated teenage prankster has hacked into Mardell’s blog and stuck this in, right? Can he seriously believe that the basic business of government – defending the borders, keeping the peace, or whatever – is the same thing as the kind of wealth redistribution we’re all talking about? I mean, technically, using tax revenue to fund government agencies like the military and the police meets the definition of the word “redistribution”, but that’s got absolutely nothing to do with the concept that’s causing all this debate. Yet Mardell seems to equate anything the government is supposed to do on the most basic level with everything it can do if it wants.

In other words, he’s claiming that Romney said that not funding basic local services is the real American way. Which couldn’t be further from the truth.

Mardell has actually revealed his misguided beliefs before. In March, he displayed a serious misunderstanding of the entire argument against the individual mandate of ObamaCare, which forces people to purchase health insurance or face a serious tax penalty.

The centrepiece of Obama’s changes to the healthcare system is what’s called “the individual mandate”.

This means that Americans have to buy health insurance, just as in most countries you have to have car insurance if you drive.

The opponents say the government can’t require people to buy services, any more than they can make them buy bananas.

Notice how he doesn’t understand the difference between health insurance and car insurance, or the concept of commerce. The Supreme Court thought otherwise. Even the liberals on the Court understood how Mardell is wrong. As Justice Kennedy would point out in the hearing, when one buys car insurance, one has already engaged in commerce by buying the car. ObamaCare is forcibly creating commerce just so they can regulate it.

Furthermore, car insurance is first and foremost about protecting other people against what the insurance policy-holder might do. All the other coverage is subsequent. Not so with health care. Yes, the Court eventually upheld the individual mandate, but my point isn’t about whether or not it’s constitutional. The point is that Mardell’s analogy is wrong, that he has a poor grasp of the subject, and that his personal belief system shows through in his commentary. In fact, he also showed this same misguided opinion in this piece, where he says that the Individual Mandate is:

weird jargon for an accepted fact of life in most countries, that everyone has to have health insurance, just as in most places everyone has to have car insurance if they want to drive.

His bias on the issue makes him criticize the opinion of people on which he’s reporting. Even if he provides space for the other side of the argument, he’s not supposed to take sides. Yet he does, repeatedly. Like when he declared that the Supreme Court’s approval of ObamaCare was “good for democracy”. He’s a titled BBC “editor”, so that means he’s allowed to write opinion pieces. How or why one is supposed to separate his opinions from his allegedly impartial reporting, I have no idea.

Mardell then writes a couple of paragraphs demonstrating that he actually does know the difference between progressive wealth redistribution and basic government spending. Which makes it all the more ridiculous for him to conflate the two as he does elsewhere. He opens the next section of his piece by again using biased terminology, although very cleverly begins what he thinks is an epic takedown of Romney with this setup:

But he is right that in America has only slowly embraced anything that looks like redistribution of wealth. After all it was that arch-reactionary, Otto von Bismarck, who introduced the world’s first welfare system, including the old-age pension, in Germany in the 1860s.

America didn’t get anything like it until Franklin Roosevelt – FDR – brought in the New Deal, including a pension for the poorest in 1935.

Maybe it is something about presidents with three initials, but the real expansion of redistribution came with LBJ’s Great Society.

“Embraced”. And then he uses von Bismarck as some kind of “Mikey likes it” example of the palatability of wealth redistribution. Gosh, if an “arch-reactionary” can like it, what’s my problem, right? Never mind the vastly different political, social, cultural, and economic heritage of an only recently largely feudal Europe and the clean break, independent-minded heritage of the US.

Richard Nixon built on this, but many conservatives have never accepted the changes.

The one time Leftoids use Nixon as a good example of anything. Yawn.

This is in contrast to Europe, where both main political traditions after World War II seemed to broadly agree that while Soviet Union-style socialism didn’t work, capitalism if left to its own devices produced inequalities which if not softened could prove dangerous.

Dangerous when? How? Shut up, just accept the Gospel.

We know from Mardell’s infamous appearance at the BBC College of Journalism that he believes that Britain is superior to the US because of this difference.

He then holds up “Butskellism” and Mrs. Thatcher as still more proof that Conservatives ♥ wealth redistribution (his line about how she actually didn’t destroy the welfare state after all ought to shock a few BBC producers and favored edgy comedians, no?). Again we see that Mardell is showing his own personal bias on this political issue. Look, he’s saying, proper Conservatives and reactionaries (Tea Partiers take note) have long embraced wealth redistribution. Those who still reject it are wrong-headed.

Mardell then makes a fatal error.

Until a few months ago it was a core part of Mitt Romney’s argument that President Barack Obama was leading the US towards a “European-style entitlement society”.

Until a few months ago? Never mind that Romney’s only been the actual nominee for about three weeks, as he’s been the de facto nominee for a few months now. Mardell is suggesting that Romney hasn’t mentioned it much since, I suppose, Rick Santorum dropped out. Even so, during the Republican challenge for the nomination, the candidates were picking apart each other and not really focusing too much on the President. However…..

Mardell opened this piece with a mention of Romney’s recent interview on Fox News. Apparently he didn’t he notice that Romney said this:

Obama, supporters, ‘more European than American’ in outlook

Oops. Did Mardell miss this part? Not understand it? Ignore it entirely because it didn’t suit his agenda for this article? I mean, what does Mardell think that whole 47%er thing was about? Think it’s only just now popped back up? Think again:

June 27: “He’s taking us down a path towards Europe.”

Sept. 22: ‘European socialist policies not right for US’

In reality, it’s still a core part of his argument. I have no idea why Mardell chose to say that. Quite frankly, it destroys his credibility. Finally, this being a Mark Mardell report for the BBC, he has to get in a dig at the Tea Party movement.

The Tea Party stands for “taxed enough already”, but it was given life by one man’s revulsion at the Obama administration’s financial help for home owners who couldn’t pay their mortgages – a classic redistribution of wealth.

The “one man”, as Mardell’s link shows, is Rick Santelli, the CNBC reporter whose rant from the trading floor of the Chicago Stock Exchange gave the name to a movement which had already quietly started about a month earlier. But, contrary to Mardell’s narrow mischaracterization, Santelli was talking about sub-prime mortgages which should never have been given out to people who – as we now know – could not have afforded them in the first place. It was that whole Fannie Mae-Freddie Mac propping them up which led to the disastrous debt bubble which crashed our economy. Santelli’s point was that this was the government promoting bad behavior by supporting the idea that it was okay to get into massive debt that you could never pay because the Nanny State would take care of it.

Instead, Mardell wants you to think this was about the government merely stepping in to lend a warm helping hand to those temporarily in need, tending to the poorest and most vulnerable. So he demonizes millions of people for their “revulsion” (an emotional term chosen to manipulate you against them) for something he believes he’s already established is right and just and already accepted by proper Conservatives. Because that’s how he sees it.

His personal political ideology informs his reporting from start to finish. It leads him to misinterpret, misrepresent, and misunderstand what’s going on.

Now for an alternative viewpoint about the US and the inherent “revulsion” at “classic redistribution of wealth”. It’s a quote from early United Statesian icon Davy Crockett. Yes, that Davy Crockett. It’s rather long, but well worth your time, and hopefully you’ll get a better understanding of the US perspective than anything the BBC’s US President editor can provide.

SEVERAL YEARS AGO I was one evening standing on the steps of the Capitol with some other members of Congress, when our attention was attracted by a great light over in Georgetown. It was evidently a large fire. We jumped into a hack and drove over as fast as we could. When we got there, I went to work, and I never worked as hard in my life as I did there for several hours. But, in spite of all that could be done, many houses were burned and many families made homeless, and, besides, some of them had lost all but the clothes they had on. The weather was very cold, and when I saw so many women and children suffering, I felt that something ought to be done for them, and everybody else seemed to feel the same way.

The next morning a bill was introduced appropriating $20,000 for their relief. We put aside all other business and rushed it through as soon as it could be done. I said everybody felt as I did. That was not quite so; for, though they perhaps sympathized as deeply with the sufferers as I did, there were a few of the members who did not think we had the right to indulge our sympathy or excite our charity at the expense of anybody but ourselves. They opposed the bill, and upon its passage demanded the yeas and nays. There were not enough of them to sustain the call, but many of us wanted our names to appear in favor of what we considered a praiseworthy measure, and we voted with them to sustain it. So the yeas and nays were recorded, and my name appeared on the journals in favor of the bill.

The next summer, when it began to be time to think about the election, I concluded I would take a scout around among the boys of my district. I had no opposition there, but, as the election was some time off, I did not know what might turn up, and I thought it was best to let the boys know that I had not forgot them, and that going to Congress had not made me too proud to go to see them.

So I put a couple of shirts and a few twists of tobacco into my saddlebags, and put out. I had been out about a week and had found things going very smoothly, when, riding one day in a part of my district in which I was more of a stranger than any other, I saw a man in a field plowing and coming toward the road. I gauged my gait so that we should meet as he came to the fence. As he came up I spoke to the man. He replied politely, but, as I thought, rather coldly, and was about turning his horse for another furrow when I said to him: “Don’t be in such a hurry, my friend; I want to have a little talk with you, and get better acquainted.”

He replied: “I am very busy, and have but little time to talk, but if it does not take too long, I will listen to what you have to say.”

I began: “Well, friend, I am one of those unfortunate beings called candidates, and…”

“’Yes, I know you; you are Colonel Crockett. I have seen you once before, and voted for you the last time you were elected. I suppose you are out electioneering now, but you had better not waste your time or mine. I shall not vote for you again.’

This was a sockdolager… I begged him to tell me what was the matter.

“Well, Colonel, it is hardly worthwhile to waste time or words upon it. I do not see how it can be mended, but you gave a vote last winter which shows that either you have not capacity to understand the Constitution, or that you are wanting in honesty and firmness to be guided by it. In either case you are not the man to represent me. But I beg your pardon for expressing it in that way. I did not intend to avail myself of the privilege of the Constitution to speak plainly to a candidate for the purpose of insulting or wounding you. I intend by it only to say that your understanding of the Constitution is very different from mine; and I will say to you what, but for my rudeness, I should not have said, that I believe you to be honest. But an understanding of the Constitution different from mine I cannot overlook, because the Constitution, to be worth anything, must be held sacred, and rigidly observed in all its provisions. The man who wields power and misinterprets it is the more dangerous the more honest he is.”

“I admit the truth of all you say, but there must be some mistake about it, for I do not remember that I gave any vote last winter upon any constitutional question.”

“No, Colonel, there’s no mistake. Though I live here in the backwoods and seldom go from home, I take the papers from Washington and read very carefully all the proceedings of Congress. My papers say that last winter you voted for a bill to appropriate $20,000 to some sufferers by a fire in Georgetown. Is that true?”

“Certainly it is, and I thought that was the last vote which anybody in the world would have found fault with.”

“Well, Colonel, where do you find in the Constitution any authority to give away the public money in charity?”

Here was another sockdolager; for, when I began to think about it, I could not remember a thing in the Constitution that authorized it. I found I must take another tack, so I said:

“Well, my friend; I may as well own up. You have got me there. But certainly nobody will complain that a great and rich country like ours should give the insignificant sum of $20,000 to relieve its suffering women and children, particularly with a full and overflowing Treasury, and I am sure, if you had been there, you would have done just as I did.”

“It is not the amount, Colonel, that I complain of; it is the principle. In the first place, the government ought to have in the Treasury no more than enough for its legitimate purposes. But that has nothing to do with the question. The power of collecting and disbursing money at pleasure is the most dangerous power that can be entrusted to man, particularly under our system of collecting revenue by a tariff, which reaches every man in the country, no matter how poor he may be, and the poorer he is the more he pays in proportion to his means. What is worse, it presses upon him without his knowledge where the weight centers, for there is not a man in the United States who can ever guess how much he pays to the government.

So you see, that while you are contributing to relieve one, you are drawing it from thousands who are even worse off than he. If you had the right to give anything, the amount was simply a matter of discretion with you, and you had as much right to give $20,000,000 as $20,000. If you have the right to give to one, you have the right to give to all; and, as the Constitution neither defines charity nor stipulates the amount, you are at liberty to give to any and everything which you may believe, or profess to believe, is a charity, and to any amount you may think proper. You will very easily perceive what a wide door this would open for fraud and corruption and favoritism, on the one hand, and for robbing the people on the other.

No, Colonel, Congress has no right to give charity. Individual members may give as much of their own money as they please, but they have no right to touch a dollar of the public money for that purpose. If twice as many houses had been burned in this county as in Georgetown, neither you nor any other member of Congress would have thought of appropriating a dollar for our relief. There are about two hundred and forty members of Congress. If they had shown their sympathy for the sufferers by contributing each one week’s pay, it would have made over $13,000. There are plenty of wealthy men in and around Washington who could have given $20,000 without depriving themselves of even a luxury of life. The Congressmen chose to keep their own money, which, if reports be true, some of them spend not very creditably; and the people about Washington, no doubt, applauded you for relieving them from the necessity of giving by giving what was not yours to give.

The people have delegated to Congress, by the Constitution, the power to do certain things. To do these, it is authorized to collect and pay moneys, and for nothing else. Everything beyond this is usurpation, and a violation of the Constitution.”

I have given you an imperfect account of what he said. Long before he was through, I was convinced that I had done wrong. He wound up by saying:

“So you see, Colonel, you have violated the Constitution in what I consider a vital point. It is a precedent fraught with danger to the country, for when Congress once begins to stretch its power beyond the limits of the Constitution, there is no limit to it, and no security for the people. I have no doubt you acted honestly, but that does not make it any better, except as far as you are personally concerned, and you see that I cannot vote for you.”

I tell you I felt streaked. I saw if I should have opposition, and this man should go talking, he would set others to talking, and in that district I was a gone fawn-skin. I could not answer him, and the fact is, I did not want to. But I must satisfy him, and I said to him:

“Well, my friend, you hit the nail upon the head when you said I had not sense enough to understand the Constitution. I intended to be guided by it, and thought I had studied it full. I have heard many speeches in Congress about the powers of Congress, but what you have said there at your plow has got more hard, sound sense in it than all the fine speeches I ever heard. If I had ever taken the view of it that you have, I would have put my head into the fire before I would have given that vote; and if you will forgive me and vote for me again, if I ever vote for another unconstitutional law I wish I may be shot.”

He laughingly replied:

“Yes, Colonel, you have sworn to that once before, but I will trust you again upon one condition. You say that you are convinced that your vote was wrong. Your acknowledgment of it will do more good than beating you for it. If, as you go around the district, you will tell people about this vote, and that you are satisfied it was wrong, I will not only vote for you, but will do what I can to keep down opposition, and, perhaps, I may exert some little influence in that way.”

“If I don’t,” said I, “I wish I may be shot; and to convince you that I am in earnest in what I say, I will come back this way in a week or ten days, and if you will get up a gathering of the people, I will make a speech to them. Get up a barbecue, and I will pay for it.”

“No, Colonel, we are not rich people in this section, but we have plenty of provisions to contribute for a barbecue, and some to spare for those who have none. The push of crops will be over in a few days, and we can then afford a day for a barbecue. This is Thursday; I will see to getting it up on Saturday a week. Come to my house on Friday, and we will go together, and I promise you a very respectable crowd to see and hear you.”

“Well, I will be here. But one thing more before I say good-bye… I must know your name.”

“My name is Bunce.”

“Not Horatio Bunce?”

“Yes.”

“Well, Mr. Bunce, I never saw you before, though you say you have seen me; but I know you very well. I am glad I have met you, and very proud that I may hope to have you for my friend. You must let me shake your hand before I go.”

We shook hands and parted.

It was one of the luckiest hits of my life that I met him. He mingled but little with the public, but was widely known for his remarkable intelligence and incorruptible integrity, and for a heart brimful and running over with kindness and benevolence, which showed themselves not only in words but in acts. He was the oracle of the whole country around him, and his fame had extended far beyond the circle of his immediate acquaintance. Though I had never met him before, I had heard much of him, and but for this meeting it is very likely I should have had opposition, and had been beaten. One thing is very certain, no man could now stand up in that district under such a vote.

At the appointed time I was at his house, having told our conversation to every crowd I had met, and to every man I stayed all night with, and I found that it gave the people an interest and a confidence in me stronger than I had ever seen manifested before.

Though I was considerably fatigued when I reached his house, and, under ordinary circumstances, should have gone early to bed, I kept him up until midnight, talking about the principles and affairs of government, and got more real, true knowledge of them than I had got all my life before.

I have told you Mr. Bunce converted me politically. He came nearer converting me religiously than I had ever been before. He did not make a very good Christian of me, as you know; but he has wrought upon my mind a conviction of the truth of Christianity, and upon my feelings a reverence for its purifying and elevating power such as I had never felt before.

I have known and seen much of him since, for I respect him—no, that is not the word—I reverence and love him more than any living man, and I go to see him two or three times every year; and I will tell you, sir, if everyone who professes to be a Christian lived and acted and enjoyed it as he does, the religion of Christ would take the world by storm.

But to return to my story: The next morning we went to the barbecue, and, to my surprise, found about a thousand men there. I met a good many whom I had not known before, and they and my friend introduced me around until I had got pretty well acquainted—at least, they all knew me.

In due time notice was given that I would speak to them. They gathered around a stand that had been erected. I opened my speech by saying:

“Fellow citizens—I present myself before you today feeling like a new man. My eyes have lately been opened to truths which ignorance or prejudice, or both, had heretofore hidden from my view. I feel that I can today offer you the ability to render you more valuable service than I have ever been able to render before. I am here today more for the purpose of acknowledging my error than to seek your votes. That I should make this acknowledgment is due to myself as well as to you. Whether you will vote for me is a matter for your consideration only.”

I went on to tell them about the fire and my vote for the appropriation as I have told it to you, and then told them why I was satisfied it was wrong. I closed by saying:

“And now, fellow citizens, it remains only for me to tell you that the most of the speech you have listened to with so much interest was simply a repetition of the arguments by which your neighbor, Mr. Bunce, convinced me of my error.

“It is the best speech I ever made in my life, but he is entitled to the credit of it. And now I hope he is satisfied with his convert and that he will get up here and tell you so.”

He came upon the stand and said:

“Fellow citizens—It affords me great pleasure to comply with the request of Colonel Crockett. I have always considered him a thoroughly honest man, and I am satisfied that he will faithfully perform all that he has promised you today.”

He went down, and there went up from the crowd such a shout for Davy Crockett as his name never called forth before.

I am not much given to tears, but I was taken with a choking then and felt some big drops rolling down my cheeks. And I tell you now that the remembrance of those few words spoken by such a man, and the honest, hearty shout they produced, is worth more to me than all the honors I have received and all the reputation I have ever made, or ever shall make, as a member of Congress.

“NOW, SIR,” concluded Crockett, “you know why I made that speech yesterday. I have had several thousand copies of it printed and was directing them to my constituents when you came in.

“There is one thing now to which I will call your attention. You remember that I proposed to give a week’s pay. There are in that House many very wealthy men—men who think nothing of spending a week’s pay, or a dozen of them for a dinner or a wine party when they have something to accomplish by it. Some of those same men made beautiful speeches upon the great debt of gratitude which the country owed the deceased—a debt which could not be paid by money, particularly so insignificant a sum as $10,000, when weighed against the honor of the nation. Yet not one of them responded to my proposition. Money with them is nothing but trash when it is to come out of the people. But it is the one great thing for which most of them are striving, and many of them sacrifice honor, integrity, and justice to obtain it.”

(Source)