John McCain -the BBC’s much loved Republican

It’s almost touching to watch how the BBC does all it can to present Sen John McCain as the standard bearer for the GOP. McCain, the guy who likes to play poker on his phone during important debates on Syria, the guy who thinks those who chant Allahu Akhbar are no different to those who attend Church and give thanks to God, is very much the hero of the hour for the BBC as Obama uses him to try and manipulate GOP opinion. It is remarkable to watch the BBC slant its coverage to put Obama in the best light possible with the teensy weensy detail that 91% of Americans oppose military action conveniently passed over. Can you imagine the OUTCRY from the BBC during the Bush years had 91% of the public opposed HIS military policy?

Makers And Shakers

 Oborne in the Telegraph lays into the BBC:

Television launched a direct, head-on attack on our traditional institutions (Parliament, monarchy, Army, Church), diminishing them, and then occupied the public space they were forced to vacate. Concepts such as truth, honour, duty, self-deprecation and service were mocked and replaced by a mixture of sensationalism and the cult of celebrity. Only a very few institutions, of which the most successful was probably the Armed Forces, managed to resist.

 

Earlier today I was listening to a couple of people with their finger on the pulse…..one being James Brown, one of the founders of Loaded magazine.

Sorry…on R4 somewhere today but can’t remember when.

Biggest load of tosh spoken for a long time.

Apparently the 90’s changed British politics forever…that was the era when politicians were sidelined  and the new social and cultural movements made the running defining what politics would be….Tony Blair and New Labour not being politically influential or definitive in any way.

Presumably Brown has never heard of the Sixties and the cultural, social and political revolution that entailed…see Oborne above…nor indeed Punk, Rap, immigration or American movies, clothes and fast food, the Vietnam War etc etc etc….

 

Always fed up when we get these cultural commentators on…..always talk bilge interpreting history not as it happened but through their own personal prism….not just from their own perspective, their own place in the actual events,  but reshaping memories and history to suit their beliefs and values.

 

 

 

Those ‘Nasty’ Tories

 

The BBC has started a 10 part series on the history of the Conservative movement:

The changing face of British conservatism

You might think ‘Oh yeah,,,I know what that’ll be like’….but reading the article based upon it the programme may give a far more rounded view of the Tories than you might expect.

 Or that’s the impression I got on first read…on a second reading I think perhaps it is no more than an ‘Occupy’ tract against Capitalism, trade, progress, work and the Establishment.

For instance:

Thomas Carlyle set himself up as the great enemy of the newly dominant idea of utilitarianism.

This preached that people should be managed on the basis that they liked pleasure and shied away from pain.

So you should never pay someone more in “poor relief” than the lowest wage.

Life seemed to be governed by a “cash nexus” of contracts and transactions.

And in this Carlyle saw the death of the old, more caring, Christian society.

 

Hmmm…isn’t that just what Occupy and Giles Fraser preach now on the BBC?  The argument about ‘poor relief,’ ie welfare, being too high compared to wages is of course very current politically…are the BBC trying a bit too hard to influence thinking however modestly?

 

And how about this:

‘….this brings us to a character who sums up the spirit of this series: Lord George Bentinck.

Here was an MP who was so keen on horse riding that he turned up to the Commons covered in mud, and didn’t bother speaking for his first eight years in Parliament.

But when Free Trade loomed, he reared up out of his apathy and joined Disraeli to defend the old social systems.

 

A ‘Tory’ MP who never bothered to speak for 8 years in Parliament and then only to defend the status quo…he ‘sums up the spirit of this series’?

Really?… what does that mean?  All Tory MPs are lazy reactionaries defending privilege and advantage?

Strange that it is a Labour MP that has rarely appeared in Parliament for over 3 years…Gordon Brown…remember him?

 

 

Or how about this:

In 1864, when the merchants of Bradford invited him to advise them on the design of a prestigious new building, he gave them a fiery lecture on how they should stop worshipping “the goddess of getting-on” and rediscover old traditions of artisanship and social harmony.

 

Ah yes…can’t have anyone getting on can we….wanting to improve their quality of life…or as the BBC calls it the evil of  ‘consumerism’.

 

or how about this:

John Arthur Roebuck revived an old Tory idea – that class hierarchies could best be maintained by letting each class enjoy their own pleasures

 

Ah yes, the Tories are a class apart….out of touch with the workers.

 

Then there was Enoch Powell and Mary Whitehouse…and finally, the nail in the coffin…the final programme on …….drum roll….Maggie!

Can’t imagine what that will be like.

 

The BBC Titter Feed

 

 

1.  You have to laugh….Mickey Clark on Wake Up To Money…surely he’s a London cabby dragged in off the street to fill the diversity quota.

The OECD has predicted British growth will outpace the US, Japan and the Euro giants.

Mickey Clark’s thought…‘My surprise is that the OECD thinks they wouldn’t…I mean the US, Japan and Europe, they’re all struggling…if we can’t beat them it’s time to pack up and go home!’

 

From a bloke, in an organisation, that has been telling us for 4 years that US economic policy is leading the way…we should do what they do…stimulate to accumulate…whilst our economy is being killed by Austerity.

He might be surprised…but it isn’t the surprise he says it is.

 

 

2. My own surprise was to hear the BBC define the Resolution Foundation as ‘left leaning’….both on the radio and in print…no surprise though that the Resolution Foundation is once again on the BBC…one of the fixtures there along with the IPPR and the New Economic Foundation.

Sarah Montague was chatting to Labour’s Rachel Reeves this morning about the Resolution Foundation’s latest claims about low wages….Reeves will be talking at the Foundation’s shindig later on….and conveniently it seems the Foundation is pushing that Miliband’s last great whiz…’predistribution’…remember that?…renamed the ‘Living Wage’…..nice of the BBC to bring it all together for us…and them.

The ‘Living Wage’….Something that is completely unworkable as proposed by Miliband, except in Labour’s dreams. We already have a ‘living wage’…it’s called a low wage topped up by tax allowances and credits and other benefits ‘redistributed’ from the richer end of society….it’s called Socialism….strange Labour want to throw it out and close down all those small businesses and throw the workers onto the scrap heap.

 

3. That aside they then got onto Labour’s little trouble with the unions…and Reeves said that the vast majority of donations came from individuals….not true…..the Unions provide by far the vast majority of money.

Sarah Montague said nothing….not bad for our most prestigious news programme…informing and educating us.

 

 

What else on the BBC’s Titter feed?

 

4. Oh yeah…the Never Fail Solution if you ever need a  stopgap example of bad BBC journalism …Victoria Derbyshire.

Talking about the police investigation into hacking to Sun journo Chris Pollard who suggested it was way over the top.

Derbyshire jumped in suggesting that such a large investigation reflects the people’s utter revulsion at the hacking of phones of celebrities and people in hospital and other such victims.

What example did she give of a ‘patient’ being hacked?  Gordon Brown…when his son’s medical condition was revealed by the Sun….though we know Brown was lying through his teeth about that…just part of his ‘war’ against Murdoch.

Why does the BBC push this lie?  Brown did nothing when he was Chancellor and PM, he took no action at all….not a thing….because he knew the truth.

 

5.  Next was Derbyshire again…talking about the economic recovery to a builder…..note that again and again on these phone-ins that they all say ‘confidence is the key’ to recovery…something that the BBC has been undermining for the past 4 years…..the other phrase callers have been using for the last couple of years is ‘Actually we’re doing quite well’…..but the BBC preferred not to dwell on that….preferring to ask ‘how on earth is employment still so high?…it’s a puzzle.’

The caller said that the resurgent housing market was boosting things.  Derbyshire shrieked in the way she does that we’re heading for a ‘BUBBLE’..and all the government schemes are doing is helping people getting into debt with mortgages they can’t afford.

Hmmm…Wasn’t it the BBC’s very own economic guru, Stephanie Flanders, who told us again and again and again that the government should build more houses…that is the solution to creating economic growth?

 

6.  Finally PMQs and John Pienaar who told us ‘We learnt nothing from this’.

 

I thought we learnt quite a lot…or it confirmed quite a lot.

Miliband is hopelessly political and floundering badly on Syria….lying too…he had all the things he demanded from Cameron….including waiting for the UN and a second vote before any military action was taken….so suggesting that he voted against ‘a rush to war’ is rubbish…not something Pienaar points out.

Cameron is a fool with an innate ability to put his foot in his mouth…with terrible political judgement. (still believe he would have won a majority in 2010 if he hadn’t reneged on the promise of an EU referendum….thereby revealing himself to be the usual untrustworthy politician that he is…and he’s learnt nothing…still looking to slip out of any commitment to a vote)

Ironically whilst Putin, strongly against military action in Syria, tells us that he may back it if the UN does, Cameron, who supports military action has now decided that Britian will never  back it, under any circumstances.

Cameron defiantly tells us that we must press our point in every forum…our point being the utter revulsion we have for the use of chemical weapons.  Assad will be quacking in his boots.

What’s he going to do to help the rebels?  He’s going to support their demands for a democratic Syria.  And?  Well….er….not sure how exactly.

What’s he going to do to support those countries inundated with Syrian refugees like Jordan and Lebanon?  Well….He’s spending a lot of money on embassies in those countries…and on diplomatic niceties.

 

 

7.  Pienaar tells us Cameron doesn’t want another vote because he would lose.

Is that correct?

He lost by 13 votes last time…..if all the Tories who didn’t turn up turn up for a  second vote, if Miliband backs a new and improved Motion backed by stronger evidence, if a few MPs change their minds, as many have already intimated, it is likely Cameron would win.

 

If news stories had to be conveyed to us in 140 characters or less do you thnk we would be any the less wiser than we are after a day of relentless BBC indepth analysis and reporting?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Six Ways The BBC Gets It Wrong On the President, Congress, and Syria

The title of this post was inspired by BBC Washington correspondent Tom Geoghegan’s new analysis piece for the online Magazine.

Six ways the president will try to convince Congress

Things are so muddled and chaotic these days – from the White House’s confused policies to the BBC’s confused coverage – that it’s hard to say at this point just how much of this is due to BBC bias and how much is due to the absolute mess the President and His minions have presented. So I’ll just go with pointing what Geoghegan and whoever else helped put this together got wrong.  The numbered items are Geoghegan’s.

1. Appeal from the heart

Plain and simple, the appeal to emotion, calling the nation to war because pictures of bombed-out buildings and dead children make us feel bad. But this is supposed to be about convincing Congress, not emotional journalists or the rest of the world. I’m sure the President is not sitting there in meetings passing around pictures of bloody babies coughing up foam to Congressional leaders, going, “Come on, you guys. Think of the children!”. It’s silly to present this as a technique He’s using to persuade Congress. This is for media and public consumption, not Washington insider stuff. But Beeboid emotions have taken over for the moment, it seems, and this is presented as a genuine tactic the President is using to convince Tea Party Republicans.

2. The Oval Office Treatment

Geoghegan suggests that the President’s star power can sway intransigent Republican minds. He wrongly uses two very poor examples to set up his assertion. Speaker Boehner has been open about his skepticism on going after Assad. Even last year, before the 2012 election, he was in the “Not justified at this time” school of thought, siding with Romney and not McCain during the Republican nomination contest. However, Sen. Graham was already in favor of going after Assad even back then. So it’s bogus for Geoghegan to use his support now as evidence of some sort of Damascene conversion due to the personal touch of power.

As for Boehner, only someone completely ignorant of the world of politics and what’s currently going on in Washington can think that somehow the personal star touch got him on side. First of all, consider that Boehner, as Speaker and leader of the Republicans in the House, has a whole lot of other issues to worry about. We’re coming up on yet another budget crisis, a main part of ObamaCare is about to bite us all in the ass, so there’s defunding to discuss, and there are still ongoing investigations into the IRS scandal and Benghazi. Can you say “horse-trading” and “backdoor deals”, boys and girls? I knew you could.

Secondly, Boehner said earlier this year that bombing Syria was “premature”, and that he wouldn’t think about approving war unless there was something like a concrete plan being offered. He sort of drew his own version of a red line there, which we’ve now crossed. Supposedly, the White House has a plan now, or at least a gesture towards one. It’s not a stretch of the imagination to see this as a situation where Boehner saw a political opportunity to squeeze a concession on something else from an obviously desperate President, as well as an excuse for him to change his mind on going to war.

Geoghegan addresses none of this (at this point – he at least brings up horse-trading later), and instead presents Boehner and Graham’s support to set up his contention that the President’s personal touch and star power can persuade. Then we get the appeal to authority, citing an academic who says that weaker-minded Congressmen can get all giddy from meeting with a President and come a way with the feeling that “He listened to me”, and having had a personal effect on whatever is going to happen. There’s probably something to this, but powerful figures like Boehner and Graham are not examples of this phenomenon at all. Geoghegan should have found better examples of rank-and-file Congressmen being persuaded just from being given an audience with the President.

That academic authority he sites, by the way, is Larry Sabato, a well-known political analyst who, while often giving reasonable, impartial analysis of political trends and campaigns, tends to be a little over-enthusiastic about The Obamessiah’s magnificence. For example, in 2008, he praised Him for an historically fast setting of His transition team after being elected.

“This is really unprecedented. But it’s an unprecedented situation,” said Larry Sabato, a presidential scholar at the University of Virginia. “Obama is doing what the public and the markets demand be done — and that is to show that the next president is really in charge before he even takes the oath of office.”

How’s that “really in charge” thing going now, Larry? Actually, as the article shows, it was only His minions leaking names, and that was just for a transition team, not the real work the President had to do. And as we know now, the President was historically slow (“too cautious” – does that sound familiar?) in making judicial appointments, not to mention in more important departmental positions. He was ridiculously slow restocking the Cabinet for His second term. I guess it’s not so important to show the President is in charge after being re-elected. And don’t tell met that someone who wrote two books about the awesomeness of His political campaigns and than about how we need to tear up the Constitution and make “fairer” one is anything but Left-wing, and someone who believes this President has more going for Him than reality reflects. In other words, I’m saying that the idea that star power alone will convince a few intransigent Republicans is a bit of stretch and betrays a bit of bias.

3. Let the dogs out

 The vote on Syria will be a free vote and the leadership in both Republican and Democratic parties backs Obama, but there’s still work for the whips.

“The Democrat whips will be whipping for the president,” says Sabato. “The Republican whips will be supplying their leadership with the numbers, because Boehner and Cantor will want more information on who they want to sway.

“They could send certain people [who would vote against a strike] out for coffee during the vote or say, ‘take a walk’.”

That’s not actually a tactic the President will be using, but normal Washington procedure. This is astute political analysis? What Geoghegan left out of what the Democrats will be doing is that their main argument will be that Dems must remain loyal to Him, regardless of their personal feelings about war or questionable intelligence or anything else. When he says “whipping for the president”, he simply means getting them on side. He’s not being honest about what they’ll really be saying. “Let’s go to war for party political reasons and loyalty to a man, not the country” isn’t exactly the rallying cry a BBC journalist can be proud of, so that’s left out.

And we must also remember that the door is still left wide open for the President to act anyway. So why should anyone in Congress take this seriously?

4. Horse trading

Now we get there. This should be combined with #2, and is possibly the biggest tool at His disposal. I’ve already explained why. “Discreet inducements” about easing cuts in military spending or more assurances about action in Syria? Baloney.

5. The president’s on the line

This is a combination of Geoghegan’s #2 and #3. Why stretch this out? Now we get the admission that the appeal is really about Him. “Why emasculate your president?” Shameless, but that’s where we are these days: loyalty to a man is more important than anything else. I don’t remember anything about loyalty to the President in the oath Congressmen have to take when they take their seats. And nobody at the BBC seems to mind, or wonder out loud about how dangerous this is.

I laughed at the inclusion of Sec. Kerry referring to this as a Chamberlain-esque “Munich moment”. Most of us thought that was the President’s Cairo speech back in 2009.

6. Get your lieutenants to present the case

This last one has to be a joke. Geoghegan is clearly writing this after yesterday’s comical hearing with Kerry in front of the Senate committee. He insisted that he defined war as something involving ground troops, and that these piddling little bombing runs the President wanted didn’t count. The President is not asking us to go to war, he claimed. He asked General Dempsey to back him up on this new definition as a fellow soldier who had been to war, and there was audible laughter when the General had the good sense not to. Kerry was clearly not happy, saying, “Right, pull the rug out from under me.” (last 10 seconds of the video)

Like I said above, there’s no assurance that the President will respect a No vote from Congress. Especially since He claims He wants to make a limited strike only, which He has the authority to do without Congressional approval, and has already said as much. Kerry wouldn’t even assure Sen. Paul that this wouldn’t escalate to having boots on the ground at some point. He, Sec. Hagel, and Dempsey were very clear that this resolution didn’t limit US actions to the few missiles the President and his lieutenants insist this will be.

In any case, it’s hardly considered a tactic for the Sec. of State to be called in front of the Senate to explain the case for war. And Mark Mardell was saying last week that it was Kerry the cowboy ramping up the rhetoric which forced the President to call for military action he didn’t really want to take. So it’s all a mess, and nobody at the BBC is getting it straight.

There’s another error here as well. In the inset “What the sceptics say” on the right, half way down the page, the BBC lists this as one objection:

“Threat to the US not clear”

This is completely wrong, and everyone at the BBC knows it. I say they’re lying. There is no threat to the US. That’s what the whole hypocrisy charge is about, something which the BBC has steadfastly refused to address openly and honestly. The Junior Senator from Illinois, and later as Candidate Obamessiah, was very clear in His opposition to the Iraq war because Saddam was not a threat to the US. Now He’s changed His tune to one of being the world’s policeman who enforces humanitarian international law. It’s not that those who oppose the war aren’t clear about what Assad’s threat to the US is: it’s that everyone – including those who support the war, like the President Himself – knows there isn’t any. That’s why His draft resolution (pdf file) seeking Congressional approval is about enforcing international laws about chemical weapons, and includes only vague talking points that Assad is a threat to regional stability and US national security interests. There is no imminent threat, which is what we were told was necessary to go after Sadaam. What the BBC has written here is a lie.

And again, there is no mention that the President decided He didn’t need Congressional approval to do even more against Ghaddafi in Libya than He’s claiming He wants to do now against Assad. The only difference now is there’s more political and public pressure on Him to do it. This is His own fault, not anyone else’s, yet the BBC refuses to call Him on it.

Recall this from His 2008 nomination acceptance speech, and judge for yourselves how much of it is the opposite of what He’s actually accomplished, and how the BBC has presented it to you:

We are the party of Roosevelt. We are the party of Kennedy. So don’t tell me that Democrats won’t defend this country. Don’t tell me that Democrats won’t keep us safe. The Bush-McCain foreign policy has squandered the legacy that generations of Americans — Democrats and Republicans — have built, and we are here to restore that legacy.

As commander in chief, I will never hesitate to defend this nation, but I will only send our troops into harm’s way with a clear mission and a sacred commitment to give them the equipment they need in battle and the care and benefits they deserve when they come home.

His foreign policy is a disaster. He has squandered the legacy so much that the only ally we have at the moment is France. There is no clear mission on Syria, and only loud complaints from all sides forced Him to even act like He might have one. Of course, as Kerry claimed yesterday, no US troops will be put in harm’s way this time, since it’s only a couple of missiles being launched from ships hundreds of miles away, and nothing else will happen. And now He’s asking for military action with no measurable goal, based on what even the BBC has admitted is questionable, secret intelligence.

In 2002, at an early anti-Bush’s war rally in Chicago, State Senator Obamessiah said this:

What I am opposed to is the attempt by political hacks like Karl Rove to distract us from a rise in the uninsured, a rise in the poverty rate, a drop in the median income — to distract us from corporate scandals and a stock market that has just gone through the worst month since the Great Depression.

That’s what I’m opposed to. A dumb war. A rash war. A war based not on reason but on passion, not on principle but on politics.

Now let me be clear — I suffer no illusions about Saddam Hussein. He is a brutal man. A ruthless man. A man who butchers his own people to secure his own power. He has repeatedly defied UN resolutions, thwarted UN inspection teams, developed chemical and biological weapons, and coveted nuclear capacity.

He’s a bad guy. The world, and the Iraqi people, would be better off without him.

But I also know that Saddam poses no imminent and direct threat to the United States, or to his neighbors, that the Iraqi economy is in shambles, that the Iraqi military a fraction of its former strength, and that in concert with the international community he can be contained until, in the way of all petty dictators, he falls away into the dustbin of history.

I know that even a successful war against Iraq will require a US occupation of undetermined length, at undetermined cost, with undetermined consequences. I know that an invasion of Iraq without a clear rationale and without strong international support will only fan the flames of the Middle East, and encourage the worst, rather than best, impulses of the Arab world, and strengthen the recruitment arm of al-Qaeda.

I am not opposed to all wars. I’m opposed to dumb wars.

We are now through the looking glass. How’s that hopey-changey stuff workin’ out for ya now, BBC? When are you going to stop shifting blame and spending so much effort to prop up this image of a canny, statesmanlike President? And when are you going to mention His Nobel Prize for Peace in this context?

Al Qaeda Has Us In Their sights

 

Back in November 2012 we had a visit from someone calling themselves ‘Soothsayer’ (allegedly posing as BBC man Raffi Berg)…apparently he is an Israeli subversive who has infiltrated the BBC to push the Zonist agenda…and we’ve been helping him out as Sue at the ‘pro-Israeli’ ‘Is the BBC biased’ site relates.

 And now we’ve been rumbled and so has Raffi:

According to Electronic Intifada, the emails were originally posted onto the Zionist website Biased BBC on 21 November 2012 by a user going by the name “soothsayer”. They were reposted on another pro-Israeli website, Is the BBC biased?, on 13 April this year.

 

Good to know that we were wrong about Purnell and Co…not Labour lackeys…..they are, like us,  ‘Zionist Pimps.’….not only that but ‘notorious’ to boot….

 

Berg is not the only Israel pimp working at the BBC. Others include the notorious Zionist James Purnell, who in February this year was put in charge of BBC policy and strategy, and the head of BBC News, James Harding.

Raffi Berg is relatively junior compared to Purnell and Harding, the audacity and blatantness with which he is trying to shape the BBC News website’s coverage of the Palestine-Israel conflict is a cause for grave concern and should be urgently investigated by an independent authority.

 

Yes indeed….Guess that’s just another case of BBC bias then that we’re happy to pass along.

 

 

Small world…remember Mike Berry from Cardiff University who just recently was telling us that the BBC is in fact ‘right wing’?

He gets an admiring  mention from this anti-Zionist rabble above:

Seven years ago the BBC’s governing body commissioned an independent report which concluded that BBC coverage of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict “does not consistently constitute a full and fair account of the conflict but rather, in important respects, presents an incomplete and in that sense misleading picture”. The reasons for this have long been the subject of serious academic studies, the best known of which is Greg Philo’s and Mike Berry’s More Bad News from Israel.

 

 

Might just be that academic Mike Berry is the cuckoo in the BBC nest and not old Raffi.

 

 

 

Donnison Down And Dirty Down Under

 

So that’s why Australia has so many sheep…they mine them!

 

 Jon Donnison hasn’t changed much, still bringing us his unique take on the news.

Whilst the BBC cheers on the doughty Hamas approved miners tunnelling their way to Egypt in the quest for non-Israeli approved  brands of corn flakes or whatever their fancy is,  Jon Donnison down under gives us the sense that he doesn’t really approve of the Aussie miners tunnelling for dirty old coal.

He asks:

Why are Australians worried about the economy?

 

He concludes it is down to coal mining one way or another.

However one economic burden he doesn’t consider is the massive, in fact world record, carbon taxes and emissions trading schemes imposed by government on business:

The 50 to 1 project (via Bishop Hill)

 

(You can turn the captions off)

 

Here also via Bishop Hill are two climate related stories of note:

The first is actually the BBC doing the job properly and debunking climate change hothead’s alarmist numbers (A transcript of the programme):

Source: BBC Radio 4: More or Less

URLhttp://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b038zhb7

Date: 30/08/2013
Event: Climate refugee projections unquestioningly adopted by IPCC are “iffy”
 
 
 
 
The second is a bit of schadenfreude…..you know the Northwest Passage is now open to yachts and pleasure boating…well, not so much…there is 60% more sea ice this year than last….must be ‘extreme weather’ caused by climate change.
 
The Northwest Passage after decades of so-called global warming has a dramatic 60% more Arctic ice this year than at the same time last year. The future dreams of dozens of adventurous sailors are now threatened. A scattering of yachts attempting the legendary Passage are caught by the ice, which has now become blocked at both ends and the transit season may be ending early. Douglas Pohl tells the story: The Passage has become blocked with 5/10 concentrated drifting sea ice at both the eastern and at the western ends of Canada’s Arctic Archipelago. At least 22 yachts and other vessels are in the Arctic at the moment. Some who were less advanced have retreated and others have abandoned their vessels along the way. Still others are caught in the ice in an unfolding, unresolved drama.

‘Dangerously English’

 The proms don't promote new British values

 

Something on the loose at the English seaside is ‘Dangerously English’ says ex-BBC 3 man Sir Nicholas Kenyon 

What might that be?  A swarm of English football fans, James Bond, the EDL?

 

No..it’s the Proms….that well known recruiting festival for the BNP.

Last Night of the Proms were ‘dangerously English,’ says ex-BBC boss Sir Nicholas Kenyon

But the panic is over…it is now safe for ethnic minorities to venture out of doors once again…the beast has been tamed:

The former BBC Radio 3 controller welcomed the fact this year’s concert will feature talent from overseas.

He told BBC Radio 4’s Broadcasting House programme yesterday: ‘The Last Night of the Proms, from being something dangerously English, has now become something totally inclusive.

 

 

Next up the  dangerously Asian ‘Asian Network’ and the dangerously Black Black Music station  1Xtra.

So Solid Crew

 

Guess he was only obeying the Boss:

The culture minister, Margaret Hodge, is facing a chorus of criticism from across the political spectrum after attacking the Proms for not being multicultural enough.

Downing Street was forced into an immediate U-turn and denied that the Government, or Mrs Hodge, had attacked the Proms.

Gordon Brown’s spokesman praised the concerts as a “wonderful, democratic and quintessentially British institution”.

 

Typical arrogance of the BBC to attack a unique ‘institution’,  imposing their own small minded, condescending, pretentious view of what the world should look like upon everyone else…..wasn’t so long ago that they were telling us that mixed race people were better looking, more intelligent and more psychologically stable than those of  supposedly ‘pure’ stock….more genetically fitter.

 

The proof….mixed race Lewis Hamilton is a top Formula 1 driver….er…just like this guy:

 

 

(of course the research came from the BBC’s favourite university…Cardiff)

Unsure just when you become ‘pure’ or what level of ‘mixing’ is ‘mixed’….does a black great great grandfather make you ‘black’ or mixed race…or are you white because you look white?

Still nice to know that racial profiling is alive and kicking on the ‘inclusive’ BBC.

Just imagine the BBC saying the same thing about the ‘White race’.

 

Yeah..hard to imagine that.

 

We Sikh Him Here, We Sikh Him There…That Damned Elusive …er…Muslim

 

 

Guest Who and George R have noticed a bit of BBC editing that completely alters a story.

 

In this report, on the main UK news page, about another BBC report, the BBC may give the reader the impression that sexual abuse of Sikh girls is carried out by those within that community…there is no mention of who the culprits might be…even the title is suggestive:

Is there a Sikh code of silence on sexual grooming?

This is the closest we get to an identity:

Inside Out has also discovered that groomers are actually exploiting the fact that Sikh families are less likely to report incidents of abuse.

The programme has spoken to one man who recently broke away from a grooming gang and is now campaigning for greater awareness of the problem.

He says there are groomers who specifically target Sikh girls because they feel they can get away with it.

They see Sikh girls as ‘easy targets’ because they know codes of honour mean the child will be too scared and ashamed to tell their parents about the abuse and “their parents would not even report it if they were to find out”.

 

Ironically at the end it says:

Some names have been changed to protect the identities of victims

It just forgets to mention that the identity of the guilty have been left off as well.

 

As an aside that is also interesting because it proves that there is a link between religious identity and the choice of victim.

 

However in the blurb for the actual programme that is reporting this there is a very definite culprit:

An Inside Out London special, uncovers the hidden scandal of sexual grooming of young Sikh girls by Muslim men.

Breaking their silence, they speak to Chris Rogers about their experiences at the hands of these predatory men and why justice is being denied to them by their own community and the police.

 

 

 

This follows on from the post about the identity of the arsonists at the Darul Uloom school…although presumably ‘white’, non-Muslim…as the head master said they were caught on CCTV…but we don’t know for certain as their identity has been kept under wraps for 3 months…..so we are left guessing and blaming the ‘usual suspects’

Here the BBC in one article is protecting the ‘Muslims’ whilst allowing the Sikh community to be tarred with suspicion because it is not made clear that the guilty are Muslims and not Sikhs.

When you start manipulating the news for your own political and social ends as the BBC so often does, there are always consequences…in this case Sikhs become victims twice over.

 

Praise due though for Inside Out for mentioning exactly who is doing what to whom.