Listen to this interview by Sarah Montague and in particular focus on her tone when she engages with Conservative Francis Maude. The glacial edge is so obvious, hostility barely disguised when she gets going. I can't understand why the Conservatives indulge the BBC, treating it as some sort of benign national treasurer when in fact it is an international malignancy. It's the big issue of the day. Well, it is the BBC big issue of the day. Are immigrants "drawn" to Britain because it is a fair society? Do they think they will be treated fairly, investigates John Humphrys. Mmm - I suppose if one translates "fairness" as meaning instant access to welfare largesse and an acceptance that assimilation is not required, then there's not a fairer country in the world? One of the new causes that the BBC is fervently supporting is the mantra that prisons don't work. During the Labour years, the corporation was virtually silent on this issue, mainly because Blair, Straw, Brown and their lackeys clearly diasagreed. Excellent post by Mailman here and I wanted to share the detail more broadly - see below! Nice to see the BBC providing a platform for those seeking to put a shineon what is going to be a VERY bad set of mid-term election results for Obama. As a Biased BBC contributor puts it - wishful thinking. Neil Midgley reports optimistically in the Daily Telegraph today that theBBC's new editorial guidelines will force our greenie friends at the corporation to start including more so-called sceptics in their climate alarmist reporting, because for the first time, science is included in rules about impartiality. ![]()
THE AXEING OF THE QUANGOS
>> THURSDAY, OCTOBER 14, 2010
SAY FAIRNESS, THINK WELFARE.
WHAT ABOUT THE VICTIMS?
But now that the Cleggerons seem hell bent on reducing the prison population sharply, our nice BBC reporter friends are on a full-scale hunt for every snippet that will support their case. Today it's a platform for those perennial do-gooders the Howard league for penal reform to trumpet that only 6% of prison governors believe that short prison sentences work in helping to rehabilitate prisoners. Well hang on. Short prison sentences are not, and have never been intended to rehabilitate as a primary purpose. They're there to send the message that in a civilised society, certain anti-social, irresponsible behaviour leads to a loss of liberty and all the inconveniences that go with it. It's also a way of protecting the public and of spreading the reassuring message that if you do bad things, bad things happen to you.
The survey question was as inane as asking whether hanging would help in rehabiliating someone. I note that in the article that there is not a peep from anyone who supports jail as a deterrent or from those (like me) who are deeply uneasy about further ill-considered liberal experimentation in this complex area. Of course, we would all like more effective ways of rehabilitating people, but there is no sign that anything like this is being offered; the alternative to jail seems to be to not jail them - because it saves money - and/or give offenders community sentences (which are so circumscribed by human rights restrictions as to be a useless joke). Note also the careful selection of a quote from a supposed university expert saying that we should "address the needs of offenders". Right on. Exactly the BBC mentality. But what about the victims of crime? And public safety?ON BBC EDITORIAL GUIDELINES
>> WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 13, 2010
"Sorry but the BBC's issues with impartiality are one of culture, which cannot simply be addressed by adding a few words to a document your staff will never really read.
If the BBC was serious about impartiality you wouldnt need a document like this telling us how awesome you are simply because the BBC would already be impartial.
I mean lets face the truth here. The BBC stopped reporting the news decades ago and instead started reporting its opinion as the news. You want to be serious about reporting the news, get rid of all the BBC blogs which are nothing more than a collection of leftist ideology.
Please do tell us underserving underlings how exactly the BBC will change how it reports Mann Made Global Warming (tm), Immigration, Islam, Republicans, British way of life, multiculturalism over night? Actually, lets be slightly more realistic, how does the BBC plan to report on any of these items over the next 10 years?
Sadly, each of the above items I have listed the BBC has shown a marked bias towards. Mann Made Global Warming, the BBC is an advocate. Immigration, the BBC is an advocate for unlimited immigration. Islam, the BBC is an advocate for Islam and censors any and all stories that shines light in the true nature of the beast (anyone seen an in depth analisys of Wilders trial or Theo Van Goughs murder? No, didnt think so). Republicans, how many times did the BBC regurgitate the lie of Palins beautiful son being her grand son? Dont even get me started on how the BBC has treated and still does treat GW. British way of life...the BBC is an advocate for the destruction of the British way of life, after all its unfair to expect all those immigrants to adapt to Britain and fit in.
So yes, please do explain how you intend to change the BBC when so many of the biases I have listed above are so deeply ingrained in to the corporations leftist culture."ALWAYS LOOK ON THE BRIGHT SIDE OF LIFE...
DON'T HOLD YOUR BREATH...
My advice is not to hold your breath. I have a letter from Ceri Thomas, editor of Today, saying that because there is a 'consensus' about global warming, reporting of the subject only needs to give "due impartiality" to sceptics. In other words, sceptics are wrong, the consensus is right, and programmes should only pay minimal lip-service to them.
Nothing that I can see in the new guidlines changes this. Mr Thomas is pretty much representative of the entire BBC management class, and he sits on the board of a warmist organisation that camapaigns to give the warmist cause more prominence, and excludes sceptics.
Meanwhile, tens of thousands of pounds of our money are being wasted indistributing 12,500 of these useless new guideline documents to BBC staff in Britain "and round the world". What wonderful self-love!
Thursday, 14 October 2010
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