Saturday, 13 March 2010

So it Goes.

>> FRIDAY, MARCH 12, 2010

Two untypical BBC items to report.

The Culture Show BBC2 featured the Jewish Museum, soon to reopen after a £10 m refurbishment. Sharfraz Mazoor chatted to some well-known Jewish TV faces, and took us through various bits of British Jewish history. Which was nice.

Item two, Radicalization in Prison
BBC News 24 has been featuring Daniel Sandford’s report about this topic as 'news.' It even appeared slightly critical, and perhaps a tiny bit judgmental.
Which is – not nice, but comparatively frank for the Beeb.
Of course it’s not new, surely it’s been common knowledge for ages; and it goes without saying that they’re referring to ‘a distorted version of Islam,’ not the real version, which is peaceful.
There's an upcoming documentary on R5 Sunday by Donal MacIntyre.

Back to abnormal with something more typical.

Melanie Phillips reveals how the PA, led by so-called moderate Mahmoud Abbas, really feels about ‘the liberation of their own land.’ They still regard a mass murdering suicide bomber as a heroine. This might be hard to reconcile with their so-called desire for peace. But not to worry. Jeremy Bowen had this sorted in 2003:

“these people are seen by Palestinians as heroes of their would-be independence movement, and it's important for them to be mentioned [by Yasser Arafat] and it fulfils their ritualistic sloganising function”. [bless]
“Let's not forget that before Israeli independence Messrs Shamir and Begin were regarded by the British as terrorists. They went on - in the case of Begin - to win the Nobel Prize for Peace.”


The BBC is currently much more interested in the untimely granting of planning permission for a few houses for Jews. Joe Biden’s visit was just in time for that, but, dammit, just too late for the ceremonial dedication of a public square to Dalal Mughrabi. Which was a shame.

It seems that many posters and bloggers assume that it goes without saying that the BBC is terminally biased against Israel and in favour of Muslims. So much so that many of them do literally allow it to go without saying, unless something exceptional comes up and prompts them to mention it in passing. If people are so resigned to the BBC’s bias that they just sigh and roll their eyes at it, it makes B-BBC, including myself, look a bit futile and old hat. Which is annoying.

Different Strokes

When Alan (I’m telling your story) Johnston was kidnapped in Gaza we never heard the end of it from the BBC.
But when whassisname was kidnapped, silence reigned.
Now Paul Martin’s been released, and Tom Gross offers an explanation.
Something to do with wanting to tell the truth.