SANDBAGGED BY THE BBC

“Genesis 12:10 And there was a famine in the land: and Abram went down into Egypt to sojourn there; for the famine was grievous in the land.”  Biased BBC contributor Alan notes how  the BBC rewrites history to produce a new narrative of Egypt and twists the facts so that a Muslim scholar can claim the credit and not the ‘White Europeans or Americans’ ….they then rewrite it all again 10 years later to surreptitiously feed us yet more climate change propaganda attempting to terrify and trick us into submissive acceptance of the new climate orthodoxy.

Here’s a little riddle.

In 2001 the BBC produced a programme, ‘Ancient Apocalypse ‘, about the end of the Egyptian ‘Old Kingdom.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/1458327.stm
In 2011 the BBC published a report on the same by the archaeologist who presented the 2001 film Professor Fekri Hassan http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/ancient/egyptians/apocalypse_egypt_01.shtml
In 2012 the BBC produce another film….’Ancient Apocalypse\’ this time again with Fekri Hassan…only older.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b0074m5l/Ancient_Apocalypse_Death_on_the_Nile/
The riddle is ….has the BBC been deceived and is the BBC using the programme for propaganda about climate change?

‘Ancient Apocalypse’ describes the end of the Egyptian Old Kingdom….and tells us of new archaeological discoveries of unimaginable horror from a time when government power crumbles, an advanced civilisation falls apart and Egypt is plunged into a Dark Age…the causes of which have mystified Egyptologists until now. That answer is drought….or as the BBC call it ‘catastrophic climate change’.

You begin to get an idea where this is going.

The BBC’s frontman is Professor Fekri Hassan whom the BBC claim has for 30 years looked for his own explanation for the collapse of the Old Kingdom. He has “always challenged orthodoxy…..The conventional wisdom is that the Kingdom fell after the death of the Pharoah leading to major political conflict for the succession’

The BBC tells us that the first evidence of something far more devastating than political unrest came in 1971 when Hassan himself found an inscription in a little known tomb that described famine and anarchy:

‘All of Upper Egypt was dying of hunger, to such a degree that everyone had come to eating his children. . . .The entire country had become like a starved (?) grasshopper, with people going to the north and to the south (in search of grain) .’

However in 1971 scientist Barbara Bell published this:
http://www.gizapyramids.org/pdf%20library/bell_aja_75_1971.pdf
The Dark Ages in Ancient History
1. The First Dark Age in Egypt!

In this publication she referenced numerous texts as evidence for her own theories about the Old Kingdom, one text which she described here….

‘Turning now to the written evidence itself, we may first consider ANKHTIFI, who is
known from the inscriptions in his tomb at Mo\’alla, some 20 miles south of Luxor. This tomb has beenthoroug hly studied by Vandier (1950) who is the source for the quotations3 which follow.’

Note the date of the source…1950….not 1971….and not from Hassan.

What was the quote from the inscription?

‘All of Upper Egypt was dying of hunger, to such a degree that everyone had come to eating his children. . . .The entire country had become like a starved (?) grasshopper, with people going to the north and to the south (in search of grain) .’

This is the exact quote that the BBC gives us and claims was found by Hassan.

Clearly it was not.

Clearly the ‘orthodoxy’ is not so certain at all….there is a vast amount of evidence and scientific reports detailing how Egypt suffered from climate driven disasters…the Bible itself indicates that this happened….and although obviously not scientific are almost certainly based on true events however altered in the telling over the years.

Here Bell peppers her text with references to other sources from years past:
‘The cause I postulate as “historical reality” is drought-widespread, severe, and prolonged lasting for several decades and occurring more or less simultaneously over the entire eastern Mediterranean and adjacent lands. This is not to deny the significance of contemporary political and social factors; it is, however, to assert that a climatic economic deterioration of sufficient magnitude can set in motion forces beyond the strength of any society to withstand. Such an hypothesis has indeed already been advanced by Rhys Carpenter (1966) for the Second Dark Age, c. 1200-900 B.C.; Even a moderate drought can bring famine to the marginally productive lands on the edges of the deserts and can thereby motivate tribal migrations and invasions of the better-watered river valleys, a phenomenon discussed by numerous scholars (e.g. Brooks 1949). ‘

She also reveals the widespread climate change in the late 19th century and early 20th century leading to drought and dustbowls across the world.

Long before even the discovery of the Ankhtifi inscription was this….
In 1890, Charles Wilbour discovered a stela on the island of Sahal that described a seven-year drought and famine that occurred during the reign of Pharaoh Djoser, said to have reigned during the classical Third Dynasty (the Old Kingdom)….. it tells a story of anarchy and mutual robbery.
http://conservapedia.com/Famine_in_Egypt

 So Hassan neither discovered the inscription nor was he the first to discover or suggest that climate could effect agriculture and therefore produce famine which then created political instability.

Genesis 47:13 And there was no bread in all the land; for the famine was very sore, so that the land of Egypt and all the land of Canaan fainted by reason of the famine.

What does this suggest?

Firstly that perhaps the BBC has been conned…..perhaps ‘willingly’ so……into producing a programme in which one man, Fekri Hassan, is the’hero’….or ‘local hero’…..nothing like giving the credit to a non-white person to bolster an Empire guilt ridden BBCer’s self worth.

The failure to mention Bell or her predecessors can only have come as the result of a deliberate decision. There is plenty of readily available evidence to reveal their part in the theory of drought driven famine and subsequent disaster in Egypt.

Secondly why has the BBC recycled this 10 year old programme and gone to the trouble of updating it?

The only answer can be that the magic words ‘catastrophic climate change’ caught their eyes and they knew they could use this to keep on pushing their own climate change narrative, keeping it in the public eye and keeping associating it with disasters, collapse of even advanced civilisations and associated ‘unimaginable horrors’.

Naturally they forget to tell us what sort of cars the Egyptians were driving in 2200BC and strangely failed to mention that the drought and famine only ended when the wind turbines were mounted on large pyramid shaped constructions to catch the desert winds to produce the newly discovered electricity.

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7 Responses to SANDBAGGED BY THE BBC

  1. lojolondon says:

    BBC ignore the logic – if there was ‘climate change’ before we had cars and planes and heated buildings and wide-screen TV’s then surely the whole theory falls over??

       16 likes

    • More upset than they were supposed to be… says:

      Exactly, with them treating AGW as the newest and greatest dogma since Islam, and most of their pension money wrapped up in green investments, it it’s not like the BBC are going to let the facts get in the way of a good narrative.

         11 likes

  2. Roland Deschain says:

    All that pyramid building. It must have diverted the winds that carried the rain and thus caused this catastrophic climate change.

       6 likes

  3. David Preiser (USA) says:

    Nice one, Alan. I know the old saying is that history is written by the victors, but sometimes it’s re-written so other ideologies can triumph.

       5 likes

  4. Span Ows says:

    Have you been to Egypt? It’s a sand pit. You have to get within a few feet of the Nile or the sea to be able to see anything BUT sand; not hard to imagine in times of less efficient farming it would be curtains for anyone not rich or able to import.

       3 likes

  5. johnnythefish says:

    ‘Catastrophic climate change’? What, without man-made CO2? Or perhaps that’s for a later programme (lots of tree felling/wood-burning and stuff) – you bet someone, somewhere is working to find the evidence to fit the narrative.

       6 likes

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       0 likes