Friday 18 November 2016

Controversial hardliners


Controversial BBC hardliner, Nick Bryant

I drove home tonight listening to PM and picked up the message that Donald Trump's latest appointments were "controversial". I picked up on that because Gary O'Donoghue kept saying they were "controversial". ("Very controversial", "controversial" and "quite controversial" he variously called them). 

From Nick Bryant on BBC One's News at Six, however, I learned that the other word to use alongside "controversial" is "hardline". (Nick used it three times within the space of 38 seconds.) 

And it's the word the BBC News website favours too in its variant form "hardliner". Its main headline reads: 


...and the main article begins by saying, "Donald Trump has named more conservative hardliners for key posts". Further down the same article we find Anthony Zurcher beginning his 'analysis' by saying, "The Trump administration is taking shape, and so far he is filling the top slots with men who are hardliners, close allies or both". 

That article (as David Vance noted at Biased BBC) might also be accused of going low when it could have gone high in its fourth paragraph by making it a matter of global importance that ex-KKK grand wizard David Duke has tweeted in praise of the appointments (nudge, nudge, wink, wink):
Donald Trump has named more conservative hardliners for key posts, with Alabama Senator Jeff Sessions nominated as attorney general.
Mr Sessions, a former prosecutor, was turned down for a federal judgeship in 1986 because of alleged racist remarks.
Congressman Mike Pompeo is nominated as CIA director and retired Lt Gen Michael Flynn made national security adviser.
Mr Trump's latest picks were praised on Twitter by David Duke, former leader of the white supremacist KKK group. 
Nick Bryant's BBC One report - also not exactly free from 'dog whistle' nudging like that (eg. the "Deep South state of Alabama" bit - see below) - was striking for not giving us any positive reasons why Mr Trump might possibly have chosen Lt-Gen Michael Flynn as his National Security Adviser or Alabama Senator Jeff Sessions as Attorney General. Do these men have no accomplishments whatsoever (other than being racist Islamophobes)? All we got was this: 
This is America's next National Security Adviser, Gen Michael Flynn - a retired intelligence officer whose views on Muslims have been accused of being Islamophobic. In a speech this summer he likened the world's second largest religion to a malignant cancer.
Lt-Gen Michael Flynn: Islam is a political ideology. It is a political ideology. It definitely hides behind this notion of it being a religion. 
Donald Trump's choice of Attorney General is just as controversial: Senator Jeff Sessions for the Deep South state of Alabama who had to withdraw from consideration for a federal judgeship in the mid-1980s after being accused of making racist comments, allegations he's always denied.  
You would think from this that the BBC doesn't like these appointments one bit but, as we all know, the BBC is impartial so that cannot be!


Of course, the BBC isn't alone in this. Non-licence-fee-enforcing ITV, for example, is up to the same thing. Its latest online article begins, "Donald Trump's latest appointments to his administration have fuelled the fears of civil rights groups - but delighted the former head of the Ku Klux Klan and neo-Nazis."

2 comments:

  1. The thought that Lt-Gen Michael Flynn understands that
    "Islam is a political ideology. It is a political ideology. It definitely hides behind this notion of it being a religion. " I find deeply comforting! :)

    ReplyDelete
  2. Trump's team is way ahead of the BBC and MSM outlets on his administration posts. While the BBC tries childish tactics like "Breitbart is anti-semitic", Trump is getting direct advice from Alex Jones (Media Wars), and a few other alt-media stars who are cognisant of the out-dated tactics of the slowly rotting MSM. Where it comes to media, Trump will use different tactics to undercut anything the BBC or CNN throws at him - they will always remain the enemy, and he wants to retain his supporters.

    While the BBC tires to force the terrifying idea of false stories and alt-right media influence down our throats, the real alt media (not alt-right) are being ignored and running rings around the confused MSM who remain in denial about an awful lot. The real alt media (Infowars, Molyneux, Crowder, Rebel, Corbett et al) are a fairly well informed bunch and have a fair bit of influence. More to the point, their reports make sense. Even more to the point, they will criticize Trump if he makes mistakes, and their viewers know that.
    Crowder is setting up a new internet conservative news outlet with Mark Steyn and Ben Shapiro - beat that BBC !

    And whereas Sargon of Akkad could make a film summing up the 2016 US election, the BBC will never be able to. Why? Because it has been fundamentally dishonest and would have to confront itself and its viewers with facts : the Wikileaks releases, Donna Brazile's resignation, HRC's knowledge of the DNC's "violence at Trump rally" tactics, the history of the Podesta brothers, and the DNC resignations after the Project Veritas videos were released. These things aren't conspiracy theories, they're real, and the BBC ignored them all, preferring to say "pussy" a lot, then rush off to the rust belt and film heroin addicts after the event. Hmmmm, maybe they've underestimated something.
    The importance of the whole story, perhaps.


    Mehdi Hussain interviewed Flynn on Al Jazeera a while ago - well worth a watch :
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SG3j8OYKgn4

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