Tuesday, 27 July 2010

TURKISH DELIGHT

>> TUESDAY, JULY 27, 2010

The Cameron regime is sounding daily more like the opportunistic propaganda machine of the Blair years. Today, our leader's uncompromising, right-on message is that Islam is the religion of peace (you poor, deluded fools), and that the Jew-baiting Turks should be welcomed into the EU as quickly as possible. Those who oppose such zeal, says the great leader, are xenophobic bigots. For once, of course, the BBC - that ardent, dutiful supporter of all things to do with ever-closer union - is admiringly uncritical of the Cleggerons. Its fawning description of Mr Cameron's pro-Turkey homily conveniently omits that the Turks are hell-bent on their anti-Israel mission.

A BBC VIEW RARELY HEARD ON THE BBC!

>> MONDAY, JULY 26, 2010

Despite the relentless opposition to the liberation of Iraq, just occasionally the odd sensible comment gets through the propaganda machine..

Frank Gardner, BBC security correspondent tells us what he thought of the 2003 invasion of Iraq...46 mins in.

'....a massive mistake on many fronts....but having been there we knew what a horrible regime it was. One of Saddam's cronies kept a mangle through which he would feed his enemies feet first. The removal of Saddam and his odious sons removed forever the threat of that regime ever getting nuclear weapons in the Middle East.This was a regime that invaded Iran invaded Kuwait and butchered the Kurds and you need to remember that.'

Maybe Frank could spend a little more time updating his colleagues as they seem uniquely ignorant, or uncaring, of this perspective?

TRAINS, PLANES AND AUTOMOBILES...

Here is a programme that is on the face of it a harmless trip back in history...but there is an agenda...certainly from the BBC....pro nationalisation, anti-car and pro AGW belief.

'Ian Hislop goes off the rails'...first broadcast in 2008 and again this week. The timing surely to coincide with the non-Labour government's plans to make cuts and improve efficiency in public services. Hislop rounds off the programme with this appeal....

'How far do you go with cutting a public service in the name of efficiency before you lose the whole point of it, not just with the trains but with buses, post offices and the NHS. It's the same argument."

(no idea what IH's politics are....but these words fit the BBC world view nicely). The BBC blurb for the programme:


'...was Beeching little more than Ghenghis Khan with a slide rule, ruthlessly hacking away at Britain's rail network in a misguided quest for profitability ...or the fall guy implementing a short sighted government policy favouring the car over the train? Knowing what we know now, with trains far more energy efficient and environmentally sound than cars(?) perhaps Beeching's plan was the biggest folly of the 1960's.
 So there we have the BBC world view in one programme....pro big government, anti-profit, anti-business, anti-car, pro AGW and anti- Tory.....funny how many cuts the corporation is making in its own budget whilst railing against government cuts.

WORDS ARE ALL I HAVE...

I thought this was an excellent point made by a Biased BBC contributor..

Wikileaks files were 'leaked' but the CRU emails were 'stolen' says BBC.
Funny how different a thing looks when it suits your agenda.