Showing posts with label Biased-BBC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Biased-BBC. Show all posts

Thursday, 23 April 2020

The BBC's Ideological Drift

The open thread is looking lively. Disqus provides the flexibility that other systems lack! One negative response to - may I call it our reinvention (?) - was spotted  - not on this blog — but over on Biased-BBC.  I do hope the predicted invasion of trolls doesn’t materialise. But hey ho. You win some, you lose some. 

Anyway, there’s bound to be a certain amount of cross-pollination between ‘over here’ and ‘over there’ (one example) and on this occasion I’m borrowing from something I first saw on Biased-BBC. 


....and in more depth here.


"The Islamic prayer call states that everyone should submit to Islam and proclaims power over the area of the ​​prayer."
Church Militant (which also uses Disqus) is a site I’m not familiar with. It’s a Catholic organisation, and it could be something I might regret referring to or perhaps even mentioning, but from what I can see, as critics of the BBC, I assume we share the concerns expressed there.

The Lockdown has affected Europe, and the curtailment of mass prayers and the closure of Mosques has let to a temporary relaxation of the rules regarding loudspeaker-amplified calls to prayer.
"The Adhan being broadcast by loudspeaker is generally not allowed in Germany, except for special occasions," says Fahrettin Alptekin, a mosque representative in Essen.
It could be that the BBC’s newfound call-to-prayer policy is temporary; we’ll have to wait and see ( I won't be holding my breath.) The article concludes, quoting extensively from Robin Aitken's ‘The Noble Liar’
BBC's Ideological Drift 
"In its early years, the BBC "was consciously aligned with traditional Christian morality and conscious also of its obligation to be fair," Aitken writes in The Noble Liar: Why and How the BBC Distorts the News to Promote a Liberal Agenda.
From 1942–44, he observes, the BBC "saw fit to broadcast a series of talks about Christian apologetics [by C. S. Lewis] as if this was the most natural thing in the world." The talks were turned into the bestselling book Mere Christianity — "an example of the BBC directly abetting evangelism through the medium of its airwaves."
However, in recent years "the BBC has wholeheartedly thrown its lot in with the liberal reformers; there has been no 'impartiality' on any of the big moral issues of the past half-century. In every instance, the socially conservative argument has been depicted as callous, reactionary and dogmatic," writes Aitken, who spent 25 years as a BBC reporter and executive. 
Utley concurs. "Among my colleagues at the [BBC] World Service there was an unquestioning acceptance of western 'liberal' values on issues such as abortion, euthanasia and gay marriage," she says. "This blinded program editors and presenters to the fact that many of our millions of listeners across the world would be offended by the editorial position we were, in effect, adopting.”

Monday, 25 November 2019

Redux

August 2009

I’m aware that many of our readers are a lot less obsessed with the BBC’s anti-Israel bias than I am, but I wanted to post this video, which you don’t need to watch if you don’t fancy it. 


The reason I chose to show it to you here is that I well remember introducing CifWatch's launch on the Biased-BBC site in the form of a Press Release back in August 2009. 

Entering ‘CiFWatch’ into the B-BBC search facility brings up a considerable stash of pre-2012 material, written by me. I remember thinking, at the time (around 2008/9) that it was a good idea for me to join a general blog rather than a dedicated pro-Zionist one, knowing, (as any fule already nose) that pro-Zionist blogs and websites are no-go areas for the steadfast Israel-bashing brigade (whom I fondly hoped to influence) I actually imagined my critical take on the BBC’s anti-Israel reporting might ‘make a difference’. Embarrassingly naive, okay?

Recently the BBC’s left-wing bias has become (more or less) generally accepted, and there’s even some recognition that embedded within the heads and hearts of most of its staff is a default empathy with Israel’s detractors.  I take no credit for any of that gradual sea change if that’s what it is.  At all. I realise I am preaching to the converted and always was.

Interestingly, my original Press Release post attracted some flak from B-BBC purists who disapproved of advertising in all its forms and accused me of abusing my position. (Like, my privileged position of blogging on a controversial website constantly conscious of my responsibility to scrupulously fact-check for fear of shooting myself in the foot + scoring an own goal for “my cause” unpaid and in my own time.)  I’m a lucky son-of-a-gun.

Anyway, I didn’t know Adam Levick from (any other) Adam back then, but now we know what he’s like we can decide whether or not we like the cut of his jib. A nautical term. I think he’s good. Take it or leave it.

Friday, 9 August 2019

How to lose influence and irritate people

A recap.

ITBB was set up about seven years ago to debate or pinpoint the BBC’s bias, but Craig and I  wrote a proviso into our ‘constitution’ allowing us to deviate and go off-topic if we wanted to.
We have an invisible preemptive, written-in apology for accidentally flouting Jacob Rees-Mogg’s list of grammatical crimes up to and including the Oxford comma and the odd typo.



At that time we thought Biased-BBC (the mothership) was growing away from us; we felt edged out by the sheer volume of material posted by the one-man blitzkrieg that was ‘Alan’, who disappeared as anonymously as he arrived. (His disappearance may not be as complete as all that)
We weren’t trying to duplicate or compete with Biased BBC. We ran in tandem with it, if you like.

Craig has never had a harsh rebuke; a couple of mild ones perhaps, but I’m not afraid of being criticised or disagreed with, (as I have been) and It’s fine. The original aim was to create a lively blog with its own identity. 

It’s gratifying that Craig’s strong and stable observations, characteristically underpinned by statistics and specific examples, have been picked up by The Conservative Woman and are often cross-posted on their lively site. The one where people take notice.

The Biased-BBC blog did have some genuine influence at one time. The old magenta design is still my favourite iteration of that blog. I’m thinking that 2009 - 2012 marked the high point - the pinnacle -  of my blogging life. You can still access historic Biased-BBC content via the current Biased-BBC archive, which goes waaayy back. Sadly, nothing much has changed chez Beeb. If anything the bias is worse; more entrenched and more invisible to the unseeing perpetrators.

However, the zeitgeist has shifted. Amongst huge swathes of the public the BBC is perceived as biased, lefty and shamelessly - hopelessly -  pandering to a youth market that has moved on. It’s not ordinary missing the target - it’s M & S missing the target. Dear Beeb, you’re spitting in the faces of your core customer and chasing after some unattainable target with an ardour that will never be reciprocated. More and more people say they find radio 4 unlistenable. 

This disillusionment with the BBC is so widespread that blogs like this are redundant, or soon will be. We are being self-indulgent here, especially in the light of the fact that we have had very little or no impact on the BBC at all.

I don’t really know who the Biased-BBC site owners were in 2007 (before David Vance’s reign) but they must have been delighted with these contemporaneous articles by the BBC’s Martin Belam.
Here’s what Martin Belam wrote about the Biased-BBC blog in March 2007:
“I’m sure that I qualify genetically as a Beeboid, and so view the site through a prism of my own telly-tax funded bias, but I enjoy reading the Biased BBC blog. And I do mean enjoy. I always used to keep it in my subscribed RSS feeds when I worked at the BBC, and still dip into it from time to time in Austria. 
And there are a few reasons why I still find it an useful and enjoyable place to visit on the internet, not least of which is the fact that the issues being debated on the pages of the site are issues that link me back to home.

That’s nice, ain’t it though?
“It was also at least partly as a result of the Biased BBC comments thread that the notorious From Our Own Correspondent piece where Barbara Plett said she cried about Yasser Arafat has been appended with a note that the piece had been the subject of a complaint that had been upheld by the BBC Governors.
 Excellent result!
“I find though, that there is a real difference between what is written on the blog "proper", and what is posted on the regular open comments thread. Biased BBC usually operates an "Open comments thread" near, or at the top, of the homepage, which is refreshed every few days. These threads can often run into hundreds of inter-twining comments which can be quite difficult to pick through. 
What I find a shame about all this is that I think that the mainstream body of the site, the actual posts written by the editors and named contributors, sometimes raise points that the BBC should be aware of, and seek to address within both the online journalistic and broadcast operations of the corporation.
So, a dig at some of the shakier, more fanciful contributors to the open threads, but an observation that reveals a possible weakness in the current B-BBC ‘running’ open thread format, which has virtually replaced the authored above-the-line articles.

On the other hand, (au contraire!)  the current user-friendly comments field has transformed the open threads, and many interesting nuggets of news and views can be picked up from it. Including a rare sighting of a right-wing (non-lefty) comedian H/T Stewgreen. No, it’s not Jeremy Clarkson, but Will Franken - sounds like a question. (Well will he?) I bet he’s never been asked that before.

The characters featured in 2007 B-BBC have come and gone, as characters will, but the principle stays the same. One of Belam’s blog posts features B-BBC’s take on (man-made) global warming, 
and one is about Israel and Palestine, which I’ll quote from below:
“The coverage of the conflict between Israel and the Palestinians is probably the most challenging area the BBC faces in balancing news coverage, and I'm certainly not one of those people who believes that the BBC gets it spot on in every report on every output medium. It should also be pointed out that a few minutes on Google will turn up plenty of people arguing that the BBC offers a pro-Israeli slant on the news. However, the general consensus of opinion on the Biased BBC blog is that the BBC is blatantly and repeatedly biased against Israel in their coverage of the situation.

Complaints from both sides? For a tiny moment, I thought he was going to conclude that they must be getting something right.
“An independent study commissioned by the old BBC Board of Governors didn't find that to be the case, in fact it slightly erred on the side that the BBC didn't put across fully the disparity between the two sides, and thus was doing a disservice to the Palestinians. Previous to that, the contents of the 2004 Balen Report are not fully known, thanks to the BBC's attempts to prevent it being released into the public domain, but this is thought to be more critical of the coverage in the other direction. 
Some commentators on the Biased BBC blog are not arguing that the BBC should take a neutral stance on the issue, they believe the corporation should 'grow a backbone' and stand up for what they say is right. And frequently on the site commentators leave references to the "Pretendistinians", which serves to make their own particular bias on the issue quite clear.
That was almost the same as the familiar accusation: “You don’t want balance, you just want your kind of bias” Later in the piece he says:
Biased BBC believes that the BBC is pro-Palestinian despite any evidence to the contrary because, as you've previously identified, they are right-wing loons who believe that Thatcher was a bit soft. Whenever an Israeli spokesman comes on, they're never questioned as to why they claim to be more peaceful than Iran, despite attacking all their neighbours pretty regularly, or why, despite this, they should be allowed nuclear weapons and Iran shouldn't. Obviously, by criticising Israel, I am a dreadful nazi anti-semite, but so be it.
Clearly he does qualify as a bona fide Beeboid if he believes that making a completely context-free assertion that Israel  is guilty of “attacking all their neighbours pretty regularly” is enough to invalidate its claim to be ‘peaceful’ is an example of a reasonable, ‘non-antisemitic’, criticism of Israel, not to mention negatively equating Israel with Iran in a brazen advertisement of his own ignorance. I suppose he got his dis-info from Jeremy Bowen.

Of course, there wasn’t BREXIT in those days. Over the last almost seven years!! here at ITBB we’ve picked up a healthy tally of page-views and a distinct identity of our own. At present we are distinguishable from Biased-BBC by our labour intensive above-the-line offerings, (working day and night) in the hope that one day someone important from the BBC will come along and say “Hello Craig and Sue, you were right all along. How can we change for the better?”   

Dominic Casciani may not belie-e-e-ve it but we do this for nowt, (try not to make too many mistakes, trying to spell names correctly, finding links and images) and we charge £0 per hour, which is below the minimum wage.

Why do we do it? Yes indeed. Why.

Vanity; to stave off dementia; for mental exercise; for your entertainment; waiting for someone important from the BBC will come along and humbly ask ‘how can we change?’

Sunday, 23 June 2019

Not forgotten

I was searching for something on the www. last night when I stumbled upon the Biased-BBC archive. I forget what I was looking for now, but I found something interesting from June 26, 2008, instead.

Well, you may not think it was interesting, but I do because it shows that I’ve been saying the same old thing for over eleven years. It’s quite concerning because nothing has changed. In fact, come to think of it, things seem to be getting worse, which I suppose amounts to eleven years’ worth of wasting my time. 

However, I just thought it would be a good idea to post a video of Prof. Irwin Cotler speaking about the forgotten refugees, which I must have just linked to originally - in those days the magenta-themed Biased-BBC site had a comments system that was about as user-friendly as ours, i.e., not very. The big surprise (to me) was that one of the site upgrades must have propelled the video into appearing in its full glory, ‘automagically’, perhaps by some technological miracle; or perhaps manually by a loyal and dedicated techie.

As it’s tucked away behind the archive tab, all forlorn and covered in dust, I am re-posting it eleven years on because it’s still relevant. Firstly because it’s about the Forgotten Refugees (debated in the HoC on 19th use 2019) and secondly because it concludes that the very same Islam-rooted hatred of Jews lies behind the predicament of both Israeli and Palestinian refugees. Which is what I said in my previous. It’s a matter of a shared root cause, not opposite sides of a coin as many people like to believe.



The Arabs who were later to be anointed “Palestinians” by Yassir Arafat, fled or were forced to flee because of their determined opposition to the creation of the Jewish State and their decision to launch an all-out attack against Israel immediately on its declaration of independence.  A disaster based on the hatred of Jews, and the very same hatred that caused hundreds of thousands of Jewish residents of Islam-dominated countries to be turfed out of their homes and robbed of their livelihoods. 

As we all know, the Palestinian refugees were (and still are) being kept stateless and cynically used as pawns and perpetual victims for a brand of political leverage specially designed to appeal to the wider world. The aim is to ‘Free, free, Palestine from the river to the sea”. 

Not so widely known is the story of  850,000 exiled and penniless Jews who were unconditionally welcomed and absorbed by Israel. This is why the parliamentary debate is so late in the day. Victimhood and pathos are powerful emotional tools. If a fraction of the attention had been paid to this issue over the last seven decades as that devoted to the Palestinians, today's politics might have been less polarised and less toxic. 

Now for the passive aggressive remarks from that disingenuous negotiator Dr Saeb Erekat as recounted in the debate by Fabian Hamilton MP (Labour)
“As it happens, just before I came to this debate, I had a meeting with Dr Saeb Erekat from the Palestine Liberation Organisation. I told him about this debate and that we would be discussing Jewish refugees in the middle east, and asked him what he would do about that. He asked me to say quite openly that the Palestine Liberation Organisation and the Palestinian Authority believe that just as Palestinians should have their rights to return with full compensation, so should all Jewish refugees. I thought that was very interesting.”
No, Palestinians cannot have that, as it would mean the end of Israel as a Jewish state, and no, it is most unlikely that Jewish refugees (who are no longer refugees) would prefer to exercise their rights to return to the Jew-hostile countries that expelled them in the first place.

And as for the Minister for the Middle East, Dr Andrew Murrison, who should know better, opining that Saeb Erekat “is a very wise man with a great deal of experience in these matters, and the remarks that he made to the hon. Gentleman do not surprise me in the least.” 

All I can say is that Mr Erekat may indeed have a great deal of experience in these matters, but the ‘wisdom’ Dr Murrison refers to is confined to screwing the Israelis into the ground, and the disingenuous, faux generosity within the remarks he made to the hon. Gentleman should not surprise anyone in the least.

Saturday, 4 August 2018

Is the BBC Biased?

About ten years ago, when I was an occasional below-the-line commenter on Biased BBC, a pseudonymous here-today-gone-tomorrow fellow-commenter disagreed with a criticism I had made of the blog, (perhaps impertinent, but sincerely meant.) He replied to me with something like. “Why don’t you go away and start your own blog? No-one would read it.” 
I took that as a put-down rather than a genuine suggestion, and I found it rude and quite hurtful at the time, but in retrospect it was also funny, because obviously, Craig and I did eventually start a blog; admittedly, a comparatively obscure one, but the page view stats indicate that plenty of people read it. (Okay, so some of them are bots.)

The launch of this blog was delayed because of a long drawn out period of indecision over what to call it. We dithered over this for ages. We thought we should include ‘BBC’ and ‘Bias’ for the sake of search engine optimisation, but the title we settled on was deliberately worded in the form of a question.

We wanted to differentiate our blog from the Biased-BBC blog, which someone once described as having bagged “the best domain name evah”. That may be true enough, but we thought the assertive, ‘settled-question’ title invited rants from people who’ve heard or seen something on the BBC they personally disagree with, which seriously dents the blog’s credibility. I mean, there’s bound to be the occasional bias on the BBC in some shape or form; it’s just that a reasonable balance is required. As the saying goes: “remember! journalists are humans too.”

At the time, we saw our chosen title as a genuine question. At the risk of sounding like Jeremy Corbyn, we wanted a conversation. But we’ve all been on a proverbial journey, and nowadays it’s almost a given that the BBC is biased, albeit with minor disagreements about the precise nature of the bias. Overall, it’s generally accepted that the thrust of the BBC’s editorial bias is ‘left-liberal’ or ‘Metropolitan bubble’. You know, anti-British, anti-Brexit, and anti-Israel with antisemitic implications.

To date, the question in the title of this blog is still relevant, but in a completely different sense than the one originally intended. It’s no longer a genuine question, but it’s more appropriate than ever now, in the sense of that well-worn and unmistakably sardonic query about the religion of his holiness. Not to mention bears.  It’s sardonic. “Is the BBC Biased?  / Do bears shit in the woods?”

Originally we gave ourselves leeway by including the caveat “any other matters etc”. So it seems we’ve travelled, the long way round, from trying to discourage personal rants with little immediate connection to actual BBC bias, all the way to not only allowing such rants but giving them prominence, like I am about to do right now.


Melanie Phillips is a person you’d like to have on your side. Her defence of Israel is unparalleled in its eloquence and clarity. She can deftly deconstruct an argument and make her point with breathtaking precision and economy of language. Therefore it’s doubly disappointing to see that she has taken a strange and blinkered path over the Tommy Robinson fiasco.

It’s pretty obvious that she’s au fait with the legal intricacies of the case. She is married to an eminent legal beagle. He is even the BBC’s go-to legal expert. Perhaps this is why she can’t seem to see the wood for the trees over the Tommy Robinson affair, which is doubly puzzling because the media’s demonisation of “Tommy” bears quite a similarity to its demonisation of Israel. 

In her recent article, which she has titled: THE TOMMY ROBINSON CIRCUS OF FOOLS she falls into the very same elephant traps as the ones she so cleverly exposes and demolishes when they happen to have been laid by the anti-semites and anti-Zionists one might find in the Guardian.


The first alarm-bell rang over her use of pejorative language, which she criticises when she sees it used by others.  In the very first paragraph, she uses the term “crowing”. As soon as I read that word my heart sank.
”His supporters are crowing that this (his release) proves they were right all along.” 
If that word was the ‘giveaway’, then the general lumping together of ‘his supporters’ and the accusation that they were ‘crowing’, heralds the straw man she constructs next. A portrait of Robinson’s supporters as one homogenous bunch of brainless far-right football hooligans and thickos.

Now I haven’t been following Tommy Robinson’s output very closely. I haven't seen his ‘live-streamed’ broadcast, I haven’t followed his twitter timeline and I can’t argue authoritatively about whether his own claim that “I was merely reading from the BBC website outside the court" was true, partially true - or a complete load of cobblers. 

But I can say that out of all the Tommy-supportive articles I’ve read, not one of them has shied away from admitting that he was a very naughty boy, and that deliberately violating the court’s conditional discharge or suspended sentence  (or whatever it was that he was warned against doing) was utterly stupid and counter-productive. Ezra Levant for one has always said as much. 
However, in my humble opinion, with regret, I have to say I suspect that Melanie Phillips has misjudged this one by dwelling on legal intricacies to such an extent that the bigger picture has been obscured completely. I think a suitable expression would be that she has lost the plot.

Melanie says of the collective, brainless, conspiracy theorists that comprise Robinson's supporters  “there is simply no evidence that will ever persuade a conspiracy theorist that he or she is wrong.” 

Now, where have we heard that kind of thing before? It is a familiar lament, and it is only too true. Just not true of the bulk of Tommy Robinson's supporters - the majority I’d contend - of whom happen to fall outside the straw-man caricature she has tailor-made to fit her theory.

She states that these deplorables allege that
 “the state had locked him up to stop him speaking the truth about Islamisation, that he had done nothing at all wrong, it was a kangaroo court, it was a secret court, he was a political prisoner treated as an enemy of the state, he had been jailed because the state wanted him murdered in prison, Britain was now under the rule of sharia law, and so on and imbecilically on.”

If that’s not pejorative, manipulative and downright devious language I’m a Dutchman. Yes, Tommy has written a book titled ‘Enemy of the State’. I haven’t read it, but I have read enough about what has happened to this man and his family to know that he was, effectively, a political prisoner. I don’t see myself as an imbecile. Not particularly. This sort of exaggeration and spin is unworthy stuff from such a clever purveyor of logic, morality, and ethics as Melanie Phillips, whom I still admire.
Oh — and guess what. The state hadn’t “sentenced him to death”. It held him in solitary confinement to protect his safety. And Britain is not under sharia law; the courts have continued to uphold the rule of English law by addressing a serious procedural error, as from time to time they habitually do.

I have watched various film clips, mainly via that invaluable source of info, the comments section over at Biased-BBC, in which Tommy poses one particular question Melanie skirts around. Why was he moved from a relatively ‘safe’ prison to one with a disproportionate number of Muslim inmates? Thus leading to his solitary confinement ‘for his own safety.’ By accident, coincidence, or some other well-meant happenstance? 

Did he need to be incarcerated in a cell where shit and spit could be pushed in through the window? I only ask because I’d like to know the answer. 

And yes Melanie, you and Andrew Norfolk have been saying this stuff for years. And you’ve been marginalised for saying it and dismissed as “Mad”. Tommy Robinson has broken the law, kicked up a fuss, perhaps made himself into a martyr and brought the issue into the limelight. A bit like the suffragettes, when you come to think of it.
“Everything I wrote about all this was true. And yet Robinson is even now still being misleadingly supported by people who should know better, who are still claiming “kangaroo court”, “secret trial” and all the rest of the rubbish, as well as (after yesterday’s judgment) “vindication” and “victory”. Their arrogance is even greater than their ignorance of the English legal system and their consequent utter inability even to understand the words of a judge’s ruling.

Indeed, if you say so, some stupids may well be claiming the things you say - kangaroo court - secret trial etc. Every cause has its unfortunate followers. Even those that insist the BBC is biased.

Your last sentence says it all. 
“The current climate of ignorance, gullibility, and unreason is even worse than anyone could ever have imagined.”
And that is just as applicable to Israel-bashers, antisemites, Corbynistas, "literally Communists" and Guardianistas as it is to detractors of “ex-EDL founder Tommy Robinson aka Stephen Christopher Yaxley-Lennon” as well as a few of those imbecilic, crowing, legally illiterate supporters. 

Thursday, 19 April 2018

Blast from the past.

Remember a few years ago when an pseudonymical poster with the moniker “Soothsayer”  ‘leaked’ an internal BBC message to the comments field at Biased BBC? It caused no end of confusion. From November 2012:  BBC Watch summed it up thus:
“Some unidentified BBC persona, perhaps resentful at being advised to report Operation Pillar of Cloud in a fair and impartial manner rather than with the usual partisan anti-Israel  twist, “leaked” the e-mails by posting them verbatim on Biased-BBC, confusingly and mischievously omitting to clarify that they were in fact BBC internal memos.”


“The way we have been wording our paragraph on when the fighting started is causing endless complaints. It’s the specific reference in time which is upsetting people.
We have been saying:
The conflict began last Wednesday when Israel killed a Hamas military leader, saying it wanted an end to rocket attacks from Gaza. More than 110 Palestinians and three Israelis have been killed.
To a lot of people, the conflict was already raging, and they interpret that as blaming or putting undue emphasis on Israel.
Can we please use the following form of words which gets round that:
Israel launched its offensive, which it says is aimed at ending rocket fire from Gaza, with the killing on Wednesday of a Hamas military leader. More than 110 Palestinians and three Israelis have been killed since then.
Thanks
Raffi Berg
Middle East desk
BBC News website
+44 203 614 xxxx
raffi.berg@bbc.co.uk
http://www.bbc.com/middleeast

and later:
Please remember, Israel doesn’t maintain a blockade around Gaza. Egypt controls the southern border. Israel maintains a blockade around its borders with Gaza, as well as a naval blockade. It also controls Gaza’s airspace.
We’ve mistakenly said “around Gaza” in a number of recent stories, which has generated complaints.
Raffi Berg
Middle East desk
BBC News website
+44 203 614 1824
raffi.berg@bbc.co.uk
http://www.bbc.com/middleeast

Because of the complete absence of explanation or background, at first glance these comments appeared to be questions posed by a BBC employee and apparently aimed at his critics at Biased-BBC. Messages that were eventually recognised as internal memos from a BBC journalist (presumably addressed to his superiors at the guidelines HQ) initially looked as if someone at the BBC had mysteriously begun to listen, perhaps with the intention of pandering to the 'notorious Israel lobby' at Biased-BBC.  This individual, based in the Middle East, appeared to be asking ‘our’ permission to use terminology we would find acceptable, so that we’d ease off with our constant criticism.  The pro-Palestinian bias is, and has been the status quo at the BBC for a number of years, and a complex variety of events have only emboldened the BBC and allowed it to become more openly pro-Palestinian than ever. Islamist terrorism and the cultural upheaval engulfing the western world has hardly dented the BBC’s anti-Zionist position. (What would it take?)


Who was this Raffi Berg, we wondered, and who was his pseudonymous saboteur? I don’t think we’ll ever know the identity of Mr or Ms Soothsayer, but the answer to the first question can be found in a remarkable Israel-related story has appeared on the BBC website; remarkable in that it goes against the flow. It’s a positive story about Israeli ingenuity, intrigue, suspense and even glamour and it’s written by the very same Raffi Berg.  The Holiday Village Run by Spies.
 H/T Harry’s Place, where it’s going down well.


Tuesday, 26 December 2017

Truth-seeking on the Mongolian Steppes


Big G

I know I really shouldn't but sometimes you just have to for the sake of your own sanity (and while Rob Burley away drinking cocktails - cheers! - surely someone needs to do this kind of thing)...

*******

Here's something that someone got up to post at 6:39 on Christmas Day on a neighbouring blog (perhaps eager to see what Father Christmas had brought). It's got 36 'likes' and counting so far too. Well done, sir!

It concerns a BBC News website article headlined Modern women in the land of Genghis Khan, about which I also penned a world-conquering piece a few days ago:

I have been waiting for a fortnight or so in the hope that someone more knowledgeable and accomplished would tackle this one.
No one has, so this is my best effort.
TWMTB has an article. About women, naturally. Non white women naturally. muzzies, naturally.
Entitled “Mongolia: Modern women in the land of Genghis Khan”
Which starts with a panoramic view of a 100m high statue of a man on a horse.
Not just any man, but Ghengis Cunt, one of the all time, by Confucian, Christian, Hindu and Bhuddist (ie the highest) ethical standards, Grade A assholes.
Ghengis Cunt, and his immediate, islamic, descendants, killed about 25 million people. Some feat, given they were armed with swords and bows. They were dedicated.
However, the muzzie Mongolians must have been disappointed, since the stated aim of GC was to destroy all the agriculture in the Chinese Sung Empire. About 200 million people would have died. But that is what muzzies do.
They failed. However GC did succeed in destroying the Northern (Hsia) branch of the Chinese empire. All agricultural land replaced by pasture for their horses.
GC, and islamic progeny, also destroyed the Khwarezmian Empire. Iranian based with an intellectual and political history since Cyrus the Great. So successfully that the infrastructure for the water supply has never been restored.
The islamic descendants of GC exacted tribute from Kievan Rus and its successors for over two hundred years.
The (islamic) Crimean Tatars continued the depredation until c19. That is what you do when you are a superior muzzie.
islamic al-beeb starts frothing at the mouth when a photograph of the Venus of Willendorf (100mm high) is displayed. Because it’s “European”.
900 million dead due to the muzzies, it’s only a statistic, uncle Joe said so, so it is OK.
Do not be disappointed lefty beeboids, your predecessors murdered nearly as many as the muzzies, and the future is yours.
Let us celebrate the muzzie murders together. And exceed their “achievements”, you know it makes corbynsense.

Love the "Islamic a-beeb starts frothing at the mouth" bit there!

Alas for this particular truth-seeking chap, Genghis Khan wasn't a Muslim, and nor were any of his immediate descendants. They were all either Tengrists (pagans) or Buddhists. It was several generations before the first one of them converted to Islam, by which time the truly heavy-duty slaughter was over.

And it wasn't 'muzzies' who destroyed the Khwarezmian Empire. That was actually a case of pagans destroying a Muslim empire!  

And as for, "TWMTB [code for the BBC, 'the world's most trusted broadcaster] has an article. About women, naturally. Non white women naturally. muzzies, naturally", well, I very much doubt that any of the women featured in that article are 'muzzies'. They don't have Muslim-sounding names and, besides, there are very few Muslims in present-day Mongolia. 

Other than that....!!

Tuesday, 7 November 2017

Priti pickle

Criticism of Priti Patel for her ‘holiday’ was all over the BBC yesterday, even partially eclipsing other  sensational news, and I couldn’t help wondering, like esteemed commenter “deegee”…..

……whether the BBC was being more antisemitic than was absolutely necessary. 

Needless to say, Tweets praising the merits of James Landale's investigative journalism  have attracted a predictable type of fly.

However, it seems that esteemed commenter “Pounce” has the low-down on the matter.



It truly was a matter of ministerial code. But did James Landale need to actually slavver over it?

Update.

Labour seems to think the way to get Jeremy Corbyn into Number Ten is to knock the Tory cabinet down one by one like skittles.

“Did she have any meetings on the Palestinian side because she of course will appreciate the importance, as a Middle East minister, of a wholly balanced approach to the ME peace process, not a one-sided one. 

[…] and if we had a PM who wasn’t so weak both (Priti+Boris) of them would have been sacked.

I’d love to know how many times a call for the “Israeli side to be heard” have been uttered by Ben Bradshaw when a member of his own party has brought up some Palestinian grievance or other in the house.


Sunday, 15 October 2017

More recommended reading


There's a very interesting post at Biased BBC from VX which questions the impartiality of the man responsible for those hate-crime figures which the BBC cites so often in connection to the Brexit vote. 

It's well-sourced and worth a close read.

It's to be presumed that the BBC's home affairs/crime reporters are familiar with Superintendent Paul Giannasi. Should they be taking his figures on trust?

Thursday, 3 August 2017

Silly Season

Should ITBB have a celebrity sidebar to attract more readers?
When you’re looking at the Daily Mail online to read Peter Hitchens or a bold expose of something disturbing to do with Islam, your eyes slide sideways all by themselves and you absent-mindedly click on something just to see what some scantily dressed celeb has gone and done now. 
Trivia about reality TV personalities you’ve never heard of is of zero interest but stuff about Victoria Beckham or Mariah Carey, 47, who is allegedly starting to look like a whale has a certain pull. 



ITBB’s sidebar would consist of pictures of Theresa May in some of her more ghastly clothes, and instead of saying “Theresa flaunts her eye-popping assets as she sets off on holiday with entourage” we’d say something rude about her knees, not for the first time. 


***************

If you’re still interested in Kevin Myers, here’s that clip of his Radio 5 interview with the ubiquitous Emma Barnett.

(I note that Alan on Biased-BBC has taken a view on this affair. I hope Alan will forgive me for pointing out that in his quest to denounce the BBC he has lost sight of the fact that Kevin Myers himself, in a somewhat Naz Shah moment,  has admitted that his unwise, thoughtless  innuendo amounted to casual racism. Myers certainly may not be your common or garden antisemite, or any kind of antisemite at all, but he made an offensive remark and apologised. 

That is not to say that the BBC and the Guardian have anything to crow about in that regard.

****************

Is the BBC’s gay jamboree is beginning to get too “in-yer-face?
Footage with social history content, such as film about the Peter Wildeblood / Lord Montagu of Beaulieu legal case is fascinating, but when blanket coverage of gay issues starts making heterosexuality look uncool it’s a bit  elgy beety queue & I too far.

**************

This is the silly season, but the subject itself is far from silly. What is silly is the fact that the BBC, as a broadcaster with a massive number of employees who are supposed to be on the lookout for material, missed the story completely. Especially as it concerns a ‘broadcasting’ controversy for once not related to the BBC itself.
This piece by Stefan Frank for Gatestone Institute reminded me again of the story.  (The film about antisemitism that was too sensitive for the Franco-German culture channel, ARTE. )
Frank’s article was originally written in German, and I hope it reminds Germany’s good people what a devious lot broadcasters can be. 
Well, they were eventually pressurised into a one-off showing of the film, but with “health warnings”:
“The way WDR broadcast it, however, was unique: at the beginning of the film and in brief intervals throughout, warning signs were inserted again and again, indirectly urging viewers not to believe what they saw in the film.”

The film is to be shown in US United States for one night only, on August 9. 
“The Simon Wiesenthal Center in Los Angeles announced that it would screen the film after the German and French networks tried "to bury the documentary, before it could contaminate the viewing public with the truth," according to the Center's Associate Dean, Rabbi Abraham Cooper, in an interview with Gatestone Institute. "It is a film that needs to be viewed by anyone concerned about anti-Semitism and anyone concerned about the democratic future of Europe. It is a truth-telling, and 'PC'-busting documentary", he said. 
The truth is that in today's Europe, it is becoming more and more difficult to tell the truth.”


Douglas Murray’s lecture about ‘freedom of speech’ is apposite here, and I commend Biased-BBC for bringing it to out attention.

***********************

I binge watched Top of the Lake: China Girl. I have no idea why you can catch all 12 episodes on iPlayer, but you can. It was gripping till the last episode, which in the usual tradition of TV drama was not the best one. I thought it was a good series. The Telegraph’s critic didn’t think much of the first episode but he probably would have changed his mind had he stuck with it.  I’m not one of Elizabeth Moss’s biggest fans, but her performances in this, Mad Men and The Handmaid’s Tale were fine and dandy.  However, in my opinion the best performances were by the minor characters. The ‘madam’ in the brothel and all the ‘girls’ were terrific. As for all those complaints that it was pretentious, I must like pretentious.

Saturday, 21 January 2017

Other reading


The BBC's Trump coverage this week reached an absolute crescendo of bias and other related blogs have posted such fine, details, excoriating critiques of this astonishing outpouring of overwhelmingly one-sided bile.

Not a John Sweeney fan


Over at The Conservative Woman David Keighley wrote that last Monday's Panorama -Trump: The Kremlin Candidate? marked the final "descent to the pits" of that once-proud BBC flapship, reducing it to scaremongering and further disseminating fake news:
So bad was this malicious offering that it does not deserve to be even remotely classed as journalism. It was a party political broadcast on behalf of the discredit-Trump-at-any-price party.
This week's Newswatch included another criticism of the programme, from viewer Ian Shaw, which also deserves quoting:

John Sweeney does an excellent job of irritating people, and does very little reporting whatsoever, managing to have two of his interviewees leave the set and refuse to continue in anger. It was genuinely uncomfortable to watch him ask questions in an undeniably accusatory way. Moreover, when they do leave or argue back, the show cuts to John Sweeney explaining that these people don't take criticism. Well, this is childish, absolutely galling. 
Then there was Harry Phibbs at Heat Street on why the BBC's Trump coverage in general has been a "disgrace". 

To summarise: Before the election the BBC were confident Trump would lose and Hillary win. They assumed Trump's support was largely confined to angry, white, older men. They didn't dwell on the danger for Hillary of calling such people "a basket of deplorables"; nor spend any great amount of time on examining why Hillary was unpopular. Too many BBC reporters were "fans" of Hillary. 

Used in John Sweeney's Panorama

Why did Trump get 29% of the Latino vote? Why did he get 42% of the female vote? Why did more African-Americans vote for him than Mitt Romney? The BBC was at a loss to explain any of those. Why have they ignored the fact that 43% of college graduates voted for Trump? 
Any false claims by Trump will be given great attention – even a typo in one of his tweets. Yet when he is the victim of fake news, the BBC is desperate to give the claims as much credence as possible. It aches to believe them, notably, of course, with regards to the dossier claiming that Russian intelligence operatives have compromising information on him which fell to pieces when the details were examined. 
There will also by a willingness by the pundits to predict disaster – some of the claims from election night have already proved wrong. For instance that the Republican Party would fall apart, or that news of his election would spark a crash in the Dow Jones Index. 
Even the BBC World Service – which traditionally took great care to be balanced – has been unrestrained in its message of contempt for the President-elect.
Alan at Biased BBC also gave the BBC's coverage a thorough going-over, noting the sheer range and extent of the BBC's Trump bashing in the days leading up to the inauguration, for 5Live to the BBC website, from Radio 4 to BBC TV. Alan calls it a "torrent of abuse, contemptuous mockery and sanctimonious lies".

I agree with them all.

Saturday, 17 September 2016

Seriously, BBC?


I was reading Biased BBC and came across a series of astonished comments about a new BBC News website article on Donald Trump headlined US election: Clinton security should be disarmed, says Trump

Its opening paragraph reads:


...and the article reads as if there might be some truth in this criticism (and is thoroughly one-sided from start to finish).

The point being made at B-BBC is that when you watch the video of Mr Trump saying what he said....


...it should be patently obvious to anyone (who isn't merely intent on twisting his words) that Mr Trump wasn't seriously calling for Hillary's bodyguards to be disarmed.

He was being sarcastic and making a point.

And he certainly wasn't hinting at the assassination of Mrs Clinton or "inciting violence" against her either.

His point was that Mrs Clinton, an advocate of gun control, believes in guns well enough to be surrounded by a large body of gun-carrying bodyguards. She knows the danger she'd face in if her bodyguards gave up their guns, so that's why she won't disarm them.

I can't put it any better than those B-BBC commenters here:

  • MartinW
    Any sensible person would have immediately known that Trump was merely making a point, and not actually advocating that Clinton should be deprived of armed protection. After all, the same would have had to apply to all candidates. The BBC is either stupid (which it is not) or malevolent and politically biased (which it very much is). And if day-listeners to the BBC are furious at BBC bias, lies and omissions, they should try listening to the reporting of the US election by its ‘World Service’. That is more extremely anti-Trump and Clinton-supporting, and unbearable to those of us who want truth and honesty.
  • Roland Deschain
    I came on here to comment on that article, but it doesn’t surprise me that someone else has got there first. It really is a masterclass, not just in bias but in trying to convince yourself of something you know isn’t true. It’s quite obvious what Trump meant, even to those who might not support him but the BBC is pretending to itself that it can be spun as advocating assassination.
    I’m actually rather heartened by this as this level of self-deluding bias must be becoming increasingly obvious far beyond those of us who frequent this site. It smacks of desperation.

Friday, 17 April 2015

End of the debate?



Before I leave the subject...

I must note that others have put forward points that readers familiar to this blog will doubtless already be well aware of - points we've (repeatedly) endorsed in the past (in connection with BBC One's Question Time)...

Doublethinker and John Anderson, commenting at Biased BBC, made the same point that people like Janet Daley and Nigel Farage have previously made (over the past couple of years): 
Doublethinker: As to the bias of the audience there are only two explanations, either it was selected with a large far left bias, or those who weren’t leftists were cowed into silence for some reason or other. Perhaps being at a BBC event makes non leftists fearful.
I am now thinking that the PM will get a very rough ride when he appears on Question Time shortly. Even if a few Tories have slipped into the audience they will be terrified into silence by the leftists surrounding them who no doubt will bay for his blood and scream their support for the Mad Marxist.
John Anderson: Yes all the noise in the audience came from lefties. But on several occasions it looked as though a lot of people in the audience were not joining in the applause for leftie nonsense, they were just sitting on their hands.
I suspect Doublethinker's prediction that the forthcoming Question Time will turn out to be a rough ride with the BBC audience for David Cameron will prove to be right.

And John is certainly correct to say that - re-looking at it - a lot of the audience last night did appear to be sitting on their hands. 

This, as I've said before, is a problem the BBC really needs to tackle, though I'm not sure how. It afflicts episode after episode of Question Time, and results in the appearance (if appearance it be) of a massive bias.

And last night it may have further discredited the corporation with a swathe of licence fee payers.  

I thought Farage was rather good in that debate yesterday. It’s about time someone stuck it to the bovine, self-important, audiences – it takes a bit of guts to do that. My suspicion is not that the audience was unrepresentative (although it often is in these shows) but that the liberal left simply will not listen to views with which they disagree and feel a childish need to boo. It is the mindset which insists not that other people may be mistaken, but that they are foul for having the views they hold and should be subjected to spite and nastiness. As you are aware, I hate these totalitarian people and – pace my earlier blog – yes, I do understand that a large proportion of them are Labour supporters.
Another explanation espoused at the Speccie, from Ross Clark, is that the audience was engaging in groupthink (another Orwellian term) resulting from the 4 Left v 1 Right bias of the 'contestants': If all but one speaker was saying roughly the same (left-wing) thing then the audience might, lemming-like, follow them over the (left-wing) cliff {not, I feel the strong need to say - and putting my scientific hat on - that lemmings actually behave like that at all}.

This explanation, I think, would only work, however, if conjoined with the 'intolerant lefties silence shy righties' theory outlined above.

The fact remains that there was something seriously wrong with that studio audience last night. (Even quite a lot of gloating leftists on Twitter seem to have recognised that). The BBC may be officially 'intensely relaxed' about that, but a good portion of its audience isn't....

....and a truly impartial BBC, rather than imperiously brushing off all complaints, would surely seek to tackle the problem. Wouldn't it?

*******


Yesterday the BBC refused to disclose how many people had complained about its broadcast.
‘Our data shows the number of audience contacts were heavily influenced by the issue being raised during the debate and therefore we won’t be giving out figures,’ a BBC spokesman said.
John Hemming, Liberal Democrat MP for Birmingham Yardley, said the BBC’s behaviour was ‘ludicrous’ and its refusal to publish the number of complaints ‘added insult to injury’.
*******

The BBC has, of course, being tardy about answering questions over this from the very beginning. They had to be forced into it. Also according to the Daily Mail:
The BBC initially refused to disclose the political make-up of the audience but eventually released figures late yesterday. Of the 200-strong audience, about 58 were Conservative or Ukip supporters while about 102 backed left-leaning parties – Labour, the Lib Dems, SNP, Plaid Cymru or the SNP. The rest – 40 – described themselves as undecided.
The BBC told ICM to make sure a fifth were so-called floating voters, and for every five Labour supporters in the room, it made sure there were five for the Conservatives, four for the Lib Dems, two for the Scottish National Party, two for the Green Party and one for Plaid Cymru.
The figures suggest supporters of the Tories and Ukip were significantly under-represented.
Conservative MP Andrew Percy said: ‘The audience should reflect the opinion polls and the fact is that nearly half of the country say they would vote Conservative of Ukip’.
The Daily Mail writer makes that look worse for the BBC (unintentionally no doubt) by forgetting to include UKIP in those figures! The Daily Telegraph, more accurately, writes,
About 20 per cent of the audience were undecided. Of those who were decided there were five Conservative voters for every five Labour, four Lib Dem, three Ukip, two SNP, two Green and one Plaid Cymru voter, the BBC said.
and then adds what seems like a mitigating factor:
An ITV spokesman said the audience for its seven-way debate reflected the same proportions.
Anyhow, even if there were 3 UKIP members of the audience for every 2 SNP supporters and 5 Conservatives for every 5 Labour supporters, the question still remains as to why the SNP supporters seemed to outnumber the UKIP ones and why those '58 right-wing people' (one-third of the partisan part of the audience) made little or no noise during the debate - in complete contrast to the '102 left-wing people' (two-thirds of the partisan part of the audience) who most assuredly did....assuming, of course, that ICM succeed in translating the above ratios into actual people who genuinely hold those views and really do support those parties.

The plot thickens.

Monday, 6 April 2015

Say what you see


(Our next PM, OMG!, taken from The Independent)

This morning's Today, much to my disappointment, didn't have a good chuckle about Ed 'the happy warrior' Miliband, following the falling of his prep notes (for last week's ITV leaders' debate) into The Sun on Sunday's fragrant hands:

me versus DC. decency, principle and values.

(Self-praise is no praise, Ed).

Still, as Alan at Biased BBC notes, they did have time for a David Had a Little Lamb feature.

This concerned indecent, unprincipled, value-free David Cameron and his photo-op with a cute lamb, about which John Humphrys was drolly sceptical.

[John Humphrys, however, also mentioned the 'bacon sandwich' scandal regarding Ed Miliband (see above) - the mere mention of which usually prompts the Labour wing of the ITA (International Twitter Army) to scream 'BBC bias!' at the top of their very busy fingertips.]

******

And Today most certainly had time to mention...and re-mention...and then re-mention once more...that infamous memo (obtained by the Telegraph) which so infuriated the SNP...

...so infuriated them, in fact, that I imagine them acting like those anti-obscenity protestors in that notorious episode of South Park, hurling themselves from giant catapults against BBC Scotland's Glasgow HQ, and splattering themselves, bloodily, in the process. I'm thus envisioning hordes of dying SNP supporters piling up outside Pacific Quay. 

OK though, back to that memo....

....the one where, at third-hand, an unnamed Scottish Office official (so it transpires, apparently) relates that someone told him that Nicola Sturgeon told someone else said she'd prefer DC to win and that Ed M wasn't up to being prime minister - even though the same official who wrote the memo also worries (privately - or so he {or she} apparently believed!) that such public forthrightness from the Scottish FM doesn't sound right and that something could have been "lost in translation". 

The SNP and the French (i.e. all of those present) strongly deny any such thing was ever said.

However, many canny observers suspect, at least in theory (and, probably, in practice), it could have been said, given that the SNP would surely relish having a hated Conservative UK government in power at Westminster (whether minority or majority) in order to absolutely clinch their case for leaving the UK.

Others also suspect that Nicola Sturgeon might well think that Ed Miliband isn't up to the job - given that most other people seem to think that too! - and that she could also have said it.

Speculation, speculation everywhere and not a fact to drink...a subject to which I'll return later!

******

(Nicola, Queen of Scots, looking more happie than krankie)

Is the BBC biased over the SNP though? And, if so, in which direction?

Alan at Biased BBC (no fan of the SNP) thinks the BBC's failure to report BBC reporter James Cook's comments about how senior SNP figures have told him that a Tory government would suit them better shows BBC pro-SNP bias. 

Countless furious cybernats, and former BBC presenter Derek Bateman (most definitely a fan of the SNP) would strongly (and probably abusively (though not Derek)), disagree about that and find little but BBC pro-establishment, anti-SNP bias here

In terms of numbers, the cybernats win - but does quantity of accusation also equal quality of accusation?

Honest answer = I don't know. Some BBC programmes/presenters seemed to be trying to rubbish the story while others seemed to be going full steam ahead with it (as noted in an earlier post).

Whether that means that the BBC (getting complaints from both sides) is getting it about right or getting it completely wrong in more than one direction is hard to say...

...though forcing myself off the fence, I'd say that this morning's Today and its continuing focus on a story that SNP supporters loathe hearing about ('UKIP scandal'-like) tends me (slightly) towards the Nats' position.

If the BBC was really pro-SNP they'd have buried this story by now.

Also inclining me towards that view is the way SNP MP Stewart Hosie's understandable reluctance - under sustained pressure - to say that Labour's Ed Miliband would make a splendid PM was then spun, in the following news bulletin, thanks to Norman Smith, into a headline story. (As I said before, who in God's name, actually does think he'll make a great PM?). Norm said the SNP were being "less forthright" about the matter.

******

(A Labour-biased pooch, plus the BBC's always-impartial Norm)

And talking of Norman Smith and speculation...

...here's Norman's take on this in the final hour of this morning's Today:
It matters very obviously because any suggestion that privately, secretly, Nicola Sturgeon favours David Cameron would be devastating to the SNP's campaign in Scotland where they're desperately trying to win over Labour voters...
["devasting", "desparately" - Good old Norm and his hyperbole, and not exactly SNP-friendly. The SNP, as per the polls, don't seem to be "desperately" trying to win over Labour votes at all. They seem, simply, to be winning them over - though time, and the actual results, will tell. One for those who claim the BBC is anti-SNP, I think.] 
...but I think Sarah's interview may have, actually, provided us with half an answer to how this memo potentially came about because Ms Sturgeon, the French ambassador, the French Consul General have all vehemently, categorically, 100% denied that Scotland's First Minister said she would like David Cameron to remain in Downing Street.
However...
...where they've been much more reticent is whether she expressed any sceptical views about Ed Miliband's leadership abilities and we could hear it quite clearly there from Stewart Hosie that they are not terribly enthused about the prospect of Ed Miliband as a potential prime minister and it seems to me, therefore, that, perhaps, Ms Sturgeon did venture some doubts about Mr Miliband's leadership qualities. That was then reported to the Scotland Office and there, maybe, that was overwritten, over-interpreted as reservations about Ed Milibands equals preference for David Cameron.
Now, that might explain why then that memo was written suggesting that somehow she favoured the Conservatives remaining in government when, in fact, what she might have simply stressed was her doubts about Ed Miliband as a prime minister.
I'm speculating slightly but I think that could explain how it is that everyone has been able to 100%, categorically deny that she wants David Cameron to remain prime minister while being much less forthcoming about what she might have said about Ed Miliband.
[Well, yes, Norman, you are speculating here - but far, far more than just "slightly" though. You're actually massively speculating. Put mathematically: No facts + pure speculation = "I'm actually speculating exponentially."] 

~~~~~
It matters because she wants to say to Labour voters in Scotland, "Relax, you don't have to vote Labour to kick the Tories out. You can vote SNP and you can be absolutely sure I am more hostile, more anti-Tory, than any Labour voter. I would, in fact, vote down the Tories even if they were the largest party."
If there is the least scintilla of doubt that she is being slightly economical with the truth and that undermines that whole pitch to voters.
[Does it really "undermine" her "whole pitch to voters"? Labour might like to argue it does, but would it really? Wouldn't most Scottish voters realise (as most English voters would probably realise too), if they thought the SNP - for 'realist'/'Machiavellian' reasons - wanted the hated Tories to rule over Scotland from London - that the SNP would only be using the Tories to get rid of the Tories - they'd hope - forever?]
Added to which, I suspect there is a sort of hard-headed view among some people that actually, well, it would be rather good for the SNP if David Cameron remained in Downing Street because it enables them to highlight the differences between England and Scotland, because Scotland, presumably, won't have many Tory MPs. But, more than that, if David Cameron goes for an EU referendum and Sturgeon has already said, that that could provide a potential trigger for yet another independence referendum if England was to vote to leave the EU and Scots were to vote to remain to stay in.
[Just the line James Cook was advancing on Twitter. So at least there's some BBC consistency there.] 
So you can see, in a very hard-headed way, although it's been utterly denied, why the SNP might, actually, benefit from a David Cameron government.
[Email to Norman Smith from Labour HQ: "Thank you Norman" - and much of the praise he got for this piece came, at least on Twitter, from Labour Party supporters.]


******

(Somewhere Scots Nats regard as Propaganda Central)

Now, personally, I'm a unionist. I'm part-Scottish, but mostly English (extremely Northern English to be precise). I want the two parts of my self to stay whole by means of the UK staying whole. And, therefore, I find myself in the (very) peculiar position (for me) of hoping that Labour won't do as badly as the polls predict and that the SNP will feel let down on polling day...

...but, as a dogged and, hopefully, honest watcher of the BBC over the past seven years, including monitoring some of BBC Scotland's output (on my old blog), I really don't think the BBC is 'institutionally' pro-SNP.

Yes, the cybernats can be hysterical, and the BBC can - from what I've seen - swing both ways and, moreover, some BBC reporters/presenters clearly try to be fair, but overall (as I see it) the corporation seems to swing (somewhat) against the SNP.

Maybe that's my own anti-Labour bias coming out, but I remember what I monitored in the run-up to the 2010 election and what I've monitored, on and off,  here at ITBB (and there are two links included there, so please keep clicking!) and I've not found the BBC to be, by and large, in any way sympathetic to the SNP or Scottish independence. Quite the reverse.

It's a rowdily controversial subject area, of course, but all a blogger can do is say what they see.