Mark Mardell Inadvertently Exposes Himself And His Colleagues

I apologize in advance for any unpleasant images that title may have evoked. As most people here will know, I’m wont to complain about how Mardell is little more than a British mouthpiece for the White House Press Office. I’ve written at length about how this or that report or blogpost from him is supporting the President’s cause, spouting White House talking points, etc.

This time, though, it’s Mardell himself explaining what the White House talking points are. And it doesn’t take much to see how he and his BBC colleagues are in lock-step with the White House propaganda machine.

Mitt v Isaac in Tampa

One has to feel a little sorry for the BBC’s US President, though. He was supposed to be wallowing in a political event, reporting on Romney accepting the nomination and whatever negative stuff he can imagine. But the Republican convention has been delayed because of the storm, so is stuck having to make something up instead. He’s got copy to file one way or the other, so I suppose the White House talking points have to get in there somehow. However, in casually laying these point out, Mardell inadvertently reveals himself and his colleagues for the White House shills that they are.

First, Mardell cleverly tries to use the storm as a metaphor for the impending doom he wants you think Romney’s campaign senses. They’ve been battered and put off message recently, he explains, and Romney is going to face a tough crowd. No, really.

The house band blast out a sound check, CNN’s Wolf Blitzer rehearses a walk and talk for his show. Everything in the vast auditorium is bathed in blue and red lights, atmospheric, but curiously reminiscent of emergency vehicles at a crash scene.

Yeah, it’s a bit ham-fisted, I know. But it’s not easy churning this stuff out on demand, you know. In any case, this is a not so subtle introduction to the White House talking points. In fact, it’s one of them: Romney is in trouble already.

Still, Republicans are crossing their fingers that there’ll be no accidents this week. They hope that Isaac will miss and Mitt will be a hit.

Who at this point – outside the Beltway and the HuffingtonPost, anyway – still thinks the Republican Party is going to turn on Romney and they won’t rally around him for the goal of unseating the President? This is a mentality from six months ago. Sure, Mardell was right all along that most of the Republican Party and sympathetic conservatives and independents wanted just about anyone but Romney. But that was then and this is now. There’s no way that lingering animosity towards him outweighs the desire to prevent the resurrection of The Obamessiah.

Now for the talking points. I’ll let the BBC’s US President editor explain:

He may not applaud all the statements coming from the floor when the convention does kick off. He has a tricky path to walk.

He might want to convince the conservative base that he really is one of them. But he doesn’t want to play into the hands of the Democrats who are determined to depict him as a scary reactionary in thrall to nutters and cranks.

Nobody is going to depict Romney as a reactionary. Mardell is straining here. But “nutters and cranks”? That’s pretty much how most Beeboids describe the Tea Party movement. But now that Mardell has laid it out there for you, pay attention from now on to how many of the usual BBC suspects start saying that on air.

President Obama, apparently determined to distract attention from the economy, said in an interview this weekend that Romney had “signed up for extreme positions”.

You mean like how BBC economics editor tweeted that Romney had gone “so extreme” by picking Paul Ryan as running mate?

The Obama campaign team pulled out all the stops to link Romney’s name to that of the once obscure congressman Todd Akin, who coined the ugly phrase “legitimate rape”.

You mean like how you and your colleagues pulled out all the stops to spread the story all over the place and link Romney inextricably with Akin? In a way, I should point out, that you don’t do with things that might make the President look bad.

By the time they were through, the uninformed might think Todd Akin was the third name on the ticket.

So would BBC audiences. He’s really writing my jokes for me.

The president’s campaign went into overdrive to highlight an awkward joke Mr Romney made about his birth certificate, suggesting he had strayed into “birther” territory.

You mean like how BBC Washington correspondent and anchor of BBC World News America tweeted that Romney’s joke was “dangerous”?

But they’ve already been buffeted off message in the last week by Mr Obama’s accusations.

Really? Is that why polls now have Romney as tied with or even slightly ahead of the President? So where is Mardell telling you that the President is equally in trouble, campaign on the back foot, after all the missteps like “You didn’t build that”, or the harshly criticized bogus ad accusing Romney of being responsible for a woman dying of cancer, or the Democrat mouthpiece who accused Romney of committing a felony – both of which the President Himself had to dance around deal with a question about it at His recent press conference? Don’t make me laugh. The BBC censored all news of it save for one brief mention by Mardell in a blog post. Which he, naturally, defended.

See, it’s not just me saying this or that is a White House talking point. This is the BBC’s top man in the US, a life-long political junkie, highly trained and an experienced journalist with close contacts in the White House, who regularly receives press releases and emails and all the relevant information, telling you that these are White House talking points. Which he and his colleagues then dutifully support.

Oh, and the whole idea that Romney is in trouble and needs to get his game going for this convention? Don’t take my word for it that it’s a White House talking point: read it on the White House website.

CORRIE STREET…

Those bad Jews.

An Israeli court has ruled that the state of Israel was not at fault for the death of US activist Rachel Corrie, who was killed in the Gaza Strip by an Israeli army bulldozer in 2003. Ms Corrie’s family had brought a civil claim for negligence against the Israeli ministry of defence. The judge said the 23-year-old’s death was a “regrettable accident” and that the state was not responsible. She had been trying to stop Palestinian homes being pulled down in Gaza.

Erm NOT quite the full story, BBC. Ms Corrie was a terrorist enabler and grossly stupid.  The “Palestinian homes” she was so bravely trying to protect were being used by Palestinian terrorists to fire rockets into Israel and kill innocent Israelis. The truth is Corrie got what she deserved but the BBC plays along with the poor innocent Rachel “peace activist” meme.  Sickening bias and elevation of terrorist enabler Corrie.

My number one priority is to get the borrowing down

 

Labour’s Alistair Darling has surfaced again, possibly the Party leader they should have had(there’s still time)…I wonder if there is any coincidence in this.

‘The relationship between Labour’s two most senior figures has recently become strained amid disagreements over the party’s approach to the City and cuts in public spending. ‘

Oh…and…‘The party will meet for its annual conference next month and senior insiders warn that they are still not in a position to announce many policies.

Two years…and they still haven’t worked it out?

 

Whilst we keep hearing about Thatcher, and indeed hearing she is to blame for this recession, it might be good to have a reminder of what the BBC can’t bring themselves to drag out of the archives…Darling’s own words and policies: 

Alistair Darling warns of toughest spending cuts for 20 years

• Chancellor and Mandelson spell out election priorities
• PM’s core vote strategy rejected in policy shift

The chancellor, Alistair Darling, and the business secretary, Lord Mandelson, yesterday signalled a shift in government strategy when Darling warned that Britain faces the toughest spending round in 20 years if Labour is re-elected.

His remarks assert his authority over the schools secretary, Ed Balls, and, to a degree, the prime minister, who had tried to claim that the government could create an election dividing line based on Labour investment versus Tory cuts.

The chancellor told the Times that spending restraint was “non-negotiable” as he tries to bring down Britain’s £178bn budget deficit. He said: “The next spending review will be the toughest we have had for 20 years. To me, cutting the borrowing was never negotiable. Gordon accepts that, he knows that.”

We need to protect frontline services, but it’s essential we cut the public deficit.”

He added “many departments will have less money in the next few years”, a tougher stance than his previous position that spending would be “broadly flat” outside the protected areas of schools, police and hospitals.

He said: “I have always been clear that you have to level with people. We are talking about something like a £57bn reduction in expenditure through tax increases and spending cuts. It’s a change in direction.”Saturday 9 January 2010

  

Even The New Statesman has had a pop:

Shadow cabinet ministers and Labour-supporting bloggers alike have become excited by this quote [below] from the Tory minister Greg Barker, speaking in front of an American audience:

‘We are making cuts that Margaret Thatcher in the 1980s could only have dreamt of.’

He’s right. But the Labour response is, ahem, odd. Angela Eagle, the shadow chief secretary to the Treasury, says:

‘Greg Barker has let the cat out the bag about the ideological agenda behind this Tory-led government’s deep cuts to public services’

People in glass houses shouldn’t throw stones. The inconvenient truth is that Labour, in the so-called Darling plan for deficit reduction, had also planned to go beyond Thatcher, too — and were equally keen to “let the cat out of the bag”.

Here’s the relevant quote from the then chancellor, Alistair Darling, in an interview with the BBC’s Nick Robinson in March 2010:

Robinson: “The Treasury’s own figures suggest deeper, tougher than Thatcher’s — do you accept that?”

Darling: “They will be deeper and tougher — where we make the precise comparison, I think, is secondary to an acknowledgement that these reductions will be tough.”

The FT quite fairly analysed the figures: the difference between Labour and coalition deficit reduction plans is just £24bn by 2014. Ed Balls’s claim that cutting half as much is “a massive difference” is only true if he offers a route map to explain what tax rises and what growth formulae deliver the same deficit reduction as would Tory cuts. Both Eds sound uncomfortable because sticking to the Darling plan means more painful cuts than they can admit. The argument that they are not in power so don’t need a complete budget may be tactically correct, but it doesn’t work as a public statement. Labour can only take a commanding lead over the next austerity months by offering a more convincing economic alternative.

 

The Scots have a go:

Selective amnesia as Darling ignores his own role

Tue, 19/06/2012 – 14:43

Alistair Darling has been accused of utter hypocrisy after calling for greater capital investment, despite having personally cut Scotland’s capital budget by 36% when he was chancellor.

 

 

Here’s a few quotes from an FT interview:

Osborne is using the same plan as Darling for the ‘cuts’, so called, but has started a year earlier….remember also that Labour had plans to cut NHS spending by £20bn…something the BBC neglects to keep reminding us:

 

My number one priority is to get the borrowing down, to get the deficit down in the department.

The priority though must be to get our borrowing down, because to be borrowing £178 billion is something you need to get down, you need to reduce it and you need to be pretty single-minded about it.

If we’re going to get long-term growth, you’ve got to get borrowing down.

Yes, we have had to borrow a lot more, but then if you take the revenues from the financial services sectors, who are down by about a third, and that’s bound to have an effect on us.

 

The BBC thinks we should keep bashing the Bankers, should we?:

The financial services industry, which has obviously taken a knock, this is something that you may want to pursue further. It is a real asset to this country. It’s something that, properly supervised and regulated, will continue to be an asset to this country. The million jobs, it generates a lot of wealth in the country,

 

Flander’s thinks we can have too much employment and wonders where it all came from….but wasn’t asking the same question back in 2010 of Labour:

 

One of the reasons that we spent quite a lot of money on getting Jobcentre Plus, getting people back into work, is that what is really damaging to an economy is you start getting long term high levels of unemployment.

 

Do you understand why the labour market here has performed seemingly a lot better than in the US, where they’ve had a disaster?

Alistair Darling: I think it’s a combination of things. We do have a flexible labour market here. I think that one of the things; I know it has happened here in the private sector, is there are many people who have taken pay cuts, as a trade off against keeping their jobs, which is… there are lots, especially in the SME sector, but also in the car industry, 12 months ago, they went through a lot of; they had to take a lot of difficult decisions.

Banker’s bonuses….Labour wants to tax them?

As far as the bank bonus tax is concerned, I said in December that it was a one off tax and it is a one off tax. We’re doing it this year, and that’s it, because it was designed to deal with a particular problem, and I said to banks that I thought they ought to be using their profits to rebuild their position, and therefore to show some restraint in relation to what they do, but I said they’ve got a choice, and if they insist on paying bonuses, then we will impose this one off charge, and it is a one off charge.

 

Gordon Brown was praised for making the bank of England independent…he did  didn’t he?

Financial Times: The Bank seem to take the view that the government decides fiscal policy and then the MPC sets the course for the economy with monetary policy.

Alistair Darling: Yes.

Financial Times: Do you think, with interest rates as low as they are, it’s a little bit more complicated than that and there has to be a little bit more give and take? I’m not saying that you tell them what to do, and they still take the decision, but there has to be a bit more discussion between the two?

Alistair Darling: Legally, of course there’s a demarcation, but one can’t move too far without the other, and although I don’t and I wouldn’t suggest to the MPC what it should do, the MPC doesn’t take its decisions in a vacuum. It can see what we’re doing, and as you know, before any fiscal event, budget or pre-budget report, we tell the MPC what we’re doing. The two work together. But I wouldn’t do anything to imperil the independence of the MPC, and that’s actually a cardinal feature of the system we’ve got here now, but I don’t have any problem with the Governor. In fact, it’s very difficult for the Governor to do his job without having a view of the economy generally.

 

 

The major problem with the BBC is that it isolates news stories as if they occur in a little bubble of their own….say the British economic woes are completely unaffected by the Euro crash….or Israel is a war monger…despite actually defending itself against 60 years of Muslim attacks.  The BBC found the time to list the Palestinian casualties from the 2009 Gaza conflict for over a year in just about every report from Israel, but can’t find time to report the Fogel family or any background to the 60 year war.

Not making comparisons allows the BBC to create the ‘baseline’, the benchmark from which say Coalition policies  are to be judged…if there is no reference to the previous Labour government or to any concrete proposals from Labour now anything the Coalition does can be made to look extreme or ill-judged.

We know full well that Labour were planning £20 billion worth of cuts in the NHS…but how often, if ever, do you hear any reference to that when we hear the ‘outrage’ at Coalition cuts?

That’s pretty much par for the course on any Coalition policy….whatever they do is twisted to make it look like a looming disaster.

THE THIRD RUNWAY!

Wonder if you caught this debate on the BBC this morning? It concerns the proposed third runway for Heathrow and the debate was between Tim Yeo (Dripping wet alleged Conservative) and Tom Brake (Dripped wet Liberal Democrat).  Remarkably Yeo is NOW in favour of this proposal- but only because of spurious new EU carbon guidelines. But Brake was given the lion’s share of the time to reel out his opposition to the development and Yeo had little to say (Not necessarily a bad thing but where is the balance?)

THE VIRGIN PR DEPARTMENT

Anyone else notice the rally of the BBC behind Sir Richard Branson’s (Labour backed) attempt to derail (sic) the decision of the Coalition to award the contract for West Coast mainline. Did you catch this pure PR that Branson got away with on Today this morning? Strikes me that the BBC are happy to use Branson in this way to advance a Labour meme whilst posing as defenders of the commuter.

NHS WORSHIP

The NHS worshipping BBC seem to have missed this great instance of how the NHS truly exports around the world;

An NHS doctor on leave from a London hospital was part of a heavily-armed extremist gang who took a British journalist hostage in war-torn Syria. The Kalashnikov-toting doctor – believed to be around 28 – told photographer John Cantlie he had taken a sabbatical from his medical work to come to Syria and fight a ‘holy war’. The bearded medic, who spoke with a south London accent and said he had a wife and a child back in the UK, told the captive photographer he intended to return to an NHS job in Britain after his time in Syria.

Am sure Today will cover it in detail tomorrow…

QUESTION TIME BIASED SHOCKER

I see that the BBC has admitted that QUESTION TIME is biased;

The political sway of the audience on Question Time is governed by the leanings of the area where the episode is filmed, the BBC has admitted. Director-general Mark Thompson has revealed that the audience is selected to reflect the voter make-up in the region from which each edition of the topical debate show is broadcast – rather than the political landscape of Britain as a whole.

I don’t accept that this “admission” is adequate. Sure, the composition of the audience may be skewed in the way Thompson says – so MANY Labour leaning cities and towns to visit that neatly explains the howling moon bats that constitute the core of so many of the weekly audiences – but that is only HALF the story. It is the bias that is manifest in the composition of the panel, in the selection of the questions, in the behaviour of the Chairman, that so offends. Yes the raving leftist audience is a concern but Thompson is fooling no one with this deflection. In my view/

Third Rock From The Sun

Antarctica warmth ‘unusual, but not unique’

‘The analysis revealed that 15,000-12,000 years ago, the Antarctic Peninsula experienced significant warming, becoming about 1C warmer than today.

The region then cooled markedly around 2,500 years ago, and temperatures remained relatively stable. This co-incided with the late-Holocene development of ice shelves near JRI.

Around 600 years ago, the peninsula started to warm once more – slowly at first, but then, from around 1920, much more rapidly.

Changes in the Earth’s orbit and tilt produce natural fluctuations in climate.’

  

And look at the BBC’s favourite scientist, Steve jones

‘Then, quite suddenly, less than 20,000 years ago, an interstadial began to run away with itself and, quite soon, the icy shroud was almost gone.

The collapse came when climate reached a tipping point

A slight increase in the Sun’s output was matched by the disruption of deep ocean currents caused by cold fresh water sinking from the melting floes above. As the glaciers began to dissolve, their waters roared towards the sea.

 

Climate Change advocates insist that the major cause of global warming is man made, probably CO2 they guess…still no proof!

They deride suggestions that the sun or other natural mechanism could produce the changes…and yet here they are admitting…the tilt and orbit of the earth, slight changes in the sun’s output have a major influence on climate.

The sun is around 93 million miles from the earth….a fair old distance…and yet step out into the sunlight from the shade and you instantly feel the difference….the tilt of the earth means that the poles are frozen because of reduced sunlight….and all from a warm body 93 million miles away.

Pretty powerful I’d say….and yet certain ideologues insist it can’t possibly have any effect..and they call themselves scientists.

I call them liars.

 

Mad, Bad and Dangerous To Know

There clearly needs to be a debate about immigration and Islam in a ‘secular’ Western democracy.  Is the BBC prepared to hold it?

No. 

‘The road to hell is paved with good intentions….Surely it is not an accident that many Liberals – avowed liberals and liberals who wear the mask of Marxism – wholeheartedly sympathize with terror and strive to foster the spirit of Islamic terrorism that is running so high at the present time.’

 

The outcome of the Breivik trial wasn’t really in any doubt but it has come as a severe blow to the Islamist supporting liberals of the BBC. The judgement they required was for Breivik to be declared insane…upon that happening the case could be rapidly closed down and the spotlight taken off Breivik’s reasons for doing what he did.

The BBC have absolutely no intention of allowing debate of Breivik’s reasons other than to state he was a far right extremist who was on a crusade against Muslims and immigration….and that anyone who is opposed to mass immigration is also a potential Breivik.

They will happily tell you Breivk conducted a ‘calculated, cold hearted murder’ but refuse to investigate what those calculations were…i.e. why he did what he did.

The BBC’s 5Live call-in was asking the question ‘What’s your reaction to Breivik’s 21 year sentence?’. Might it not have been more instructive to ask are Breivik’s views on immigration and Islam correct?

The BBC has had to rapidly adapt its stance now that Breivik has been declared sane. The new line is that although the court declared him sane the BBC will continue to insist and intimate he is insane. They will conflate his actions with his views…his extreme actions mean his views on immigration and Islam must also be ‘extreme’, and by association anyone else who expresses similar views must also be ‘extreme’ and potentially murderous.  No actual examination of his views will be aired. Which was the problem in the first place….Breivik, and anyone else concerned about immigration, was denied an opportunity to voice those concerns by the Norwegian Establishment and media. 

“I am not scared by the prospect of being in prison all my life. I was born in a prison where I could not express my beliefs,” Breivik told the court, adding: “This prison is called Norway.”

He therefore expressed himself in what he felt was the only way left to him…murderous violence against, not Muslims, but the Establishment that refused him a choice and denied him a voice.

The BBC condemn him but weren’t so judgemental when the Today programme brought on Bill Ayers, co-founder of the Weather Underground, a self-described communist revolutionary group that conducted a campaign of bombing public buildings during the 1960s and 1970s in response to U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War and who said ‘it is part of the democratic process to bomb, if democracy is not very robust’.

When BBC reporters say Breivik shows no regret remember this from Ayers: “I don’t regret setting bombs” and “I feel we didn’t do enough“, and, when asked if he would “do it all again,” as saying “I don’t want to discount the possibility.”

 

In Power (1938), Bertrand Russell noted that “One of the arguments against democracy is that a nation of united fanatics has more chance of success in war than a nation containing a large proportion of sane men.” The classic example he gives of power through fanaticism is the rise of Islam: “Mohammed added nothing to the knowledge or to the material resources of the Arabs, and yet, within a few years of his death, they had acquired a large empire by defeating their most powerful neighbors. Undoubtedly, the religion founded by the Prophet was an essential element in the success of his nation.”

 

“Muslims,” wrote the philosopher Ernest Renan, “are the first victims of Islam. Many times I have observed in my travels in the Orient that fanaticism comes from a small number of dangerous men who maintain the others in the practice of religion by terror. To liberate the Muslim from his religion is the best service that one can render him.”

 

 

Before going any further have a read of a small part of Breivik’s manifesto and see if it is the ravings of a madman…..

‘Naturally, terrorists can wrap themselves around any religious ideology and twist it to suit their purposes. Islamism, certainly in the west, is not the predominant interpretation of the faith because many believe it involves a distortion of Islam’s true message. Nor does Islam have any monopoly on religious violence or fundamentalist intolerance.

Killing in the name of God has been going on for centuries, and within a multiplicity of faiths.

But Islamist terrorists are more than just disturbed freaks with an opportunist attachment to their religion. They are part of a global movement arising within Islamic civilisation, which is thoroughly embedded in the tenets and concepts of the faith.

Its followers, spurred on by imams, scholars and ayatollahs, are taught that Islam mandates them to kill and subjugate ‘infidels’ as part of a grand scheme for bringing about a renewed caliphate. They attend summer schools, training camps, mosques and madrassas in which jihad is the order of the day. And they imbibe the totalitarian ideas of Islamism day in, day out.

In Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Pakistan and a host of other countries, millions of Muslims are fired up by a venomous hatred of progressive values, much of which is then exported to the west. Their attitudes towards democracy, Jews, gay rights and women’s equality are medieval and create the space in which jihadism flourishes.

Today’s terrorists are therefore fuelled as much by religious ideology as they are by personal rage.’

 

One psychiatrist brought on by the BBC told us he had read all the manifesto and found it ‘clear, logical and sensible’….if you held the views Breivik did.  Remember one of the survivors of the shooting also stated that what Breivik did was the logical outcome of his views and how Norwegian society treated him and those views.

The BBC’s label for his views….‘extreme right wing ideology’‘extreme political views’….are they extreme…or mainstream? I would guess that the majority of British people hold similar views on immigration and Islam.

The BBC started off as they meant to go on…by fixing the debate and setting the parameters of what and how things will be discussed.

Chomsky would recognise such manoeuvres:

‘The aura of alleged expertise provides a way for the media to indoctrinate the public by using the experts to provide the perspective that is required by the medias own beliefs and concerns, lending the prestige of scholarship to the narrow range of opinion permitted broad expression on the media….providing the approved opinions that the media cannot express directly without abandoning the pretence of objectivity that serves to legitimate their propaganda functions.’

 

 

On Today they wheeled in Kjell Magne Bondevik  (8:16) who was prime minister of Norway for eight years – his period in office ended in 2005…..who claimed that Breivik’s actions had made Norwegians more welcoming to immigrants, more accepting of multi-culturalism and more Liberal….it had also made Muslims more proud to be Norwegian. Evan Davis lapped that up and didn’t object at all…it’s all a perfect fit with the BBC narrative….however reality is somewhat different in Norway. They also dragged in Jonathan Freedland who upset the applecart by saying we must assert a more positive Britishness as well as ethnic culture….there is a need to take anti-Islamic views more seriously and talk about them. Don’t hold your breath. This is a change for Freedland who after the shootings happily denounced any ‘right winger’ who spoke of limiting immigration or the spread of Islam as extremist.

 

From then on throughout the day it was all down hill with the BBC seemingly intent on proving Breivik insane, his views extremist and racist, and anyone else who held such views potential terrorists.

Although declared sane the BBC unilaterally decided to ignore that judgement and pronounce him insane and wheeled in a variety of ‘experts’ to buttress their narrative.

A moderate assessment was that he was a ‘highly unusual character…but many people hold his views, though they won’t act as he did’…but it is ‘worrying that a lot of people share his views’…. presumably those holding his views are now also ‘highly unusual’ for the BBC.

On hearing Breivik is not insane the BBC’s first question was ‘Is he a psychopath?’…our guest psychologist says Breivik shows no remorse….but why would he? He clearly fully intended the outcome of his actions. Breivik shows no empathy….to which the BBC states ..‘A lot of mass killers have no empathy…which part of the brain effects that?’….clearly attempting to label Breivik brain damaged in some way.

The psychologist goes on to say he is a classic ‘controlling character’ attempting to control the court judgement …how?…by saying he would appeal if found insane. Highly unusual intention…no? Must be a psychopath wanting to appeal an unwanted result! Apparently such actions are typical of psychopaths!

So not insane…but is a psychopath.

Whilst the BBC are reluctant to discuss Breivik’s views at the same time they are keen to create the impression that those views are extremist, dangerous, racist ideas and that anyone else who holds them is either someone who has created the atmosphere that encouraged Breivik or are themselves potential Breiviks.

At one point one of the many psychiatrists the BBC dragged in claimed that Breivik had a ‘community of support’ which also backed his ‘apocalyptic, dangerous rhetoric’ but hadn’t taken that last step into violence. (The BBC of course deny that any such ‘community of support’ is behind Islamist terrorists)

The BBC jump in and ask ‘Is there any clue as to the prevalence of these views (on immigration and Islam)?’. Such an approach tells you a lot about the BBC mindset…first that they believe these views are somehow unusual if not abhorrent and that secondly they have absolutely no idea as to the reasoning behind such views and why people become angry when their voices are ignored by government.

They ask ‘What does it take to take that extra step into violence?’…the answer….a difference in the brain apparently….so the BBC get what they want….Breivik might not be ‘normal’ whatever the court says.

In fact they got an even better result for the psychiatrist went on to say that in order to combat the likes of Breivik we must take a ‘societal approach and look at all people who are talking about limiting immigration and Islam and treat them all as likely suspects.

In other words anyone who spoke against immigration or Islam could be classified as an extremist and ‘dealt with’….because there is a danger of his racial and religious intolerance ‘going mainstream’….‘Twisted and warped individuals see him as an ideological leader for his views.’   If you don’t want mass immigration or believe Islam is a dangerous ideology…you are twisted and warped! Insane!

The next BBC claim was that Breivik may be putting on a front….a veneer of sanity that will crumble once he is jailed…he’s insane really, just hides it well.

And yet more talk of madness….his views are evidence of ‘political insanity…the ability of political ideologists to drive extremism.’…….he may be sane but he is ‘morally insane’…knowing what he did was wrong but not caring.

When one psychologist stated that Breivik was sane the BBC leapt in and questioned that….‘Does he not have to have a mental illness to do what he has and still convince himself that he is sane?

 

Finally we have the BBC’s last word…‘Obviously you need some level of madness to do what he did!’

 

So that’s clear then….he might be sane but for the BBC anyone holding his views is clearly insane….even if he hadn’t killed anyone….and all despite one ‘survivor’ stating that Breivik’s action was a ‘Political act made by a responsible (logical and coherent) person acting on his beliefs.’

 

The BBC are clearly trying to silence critics of Islam and those who want to limit immigration by scaring them into silence with the threat that they will be denounced as racists and extremists.

What did a Labour MP say after the killings?

Labour MP Tom Harris. Writing just three days after the killing spree took place, he said: “Here, thank God, was a terrorist we (Liberals) can all hate without equivocation: white, Christian and far right-wing.”

White, christian and right-wing: a terrorist liberals can hate with impunity.

Since 9/11 the left has been wrestling with its liberal conscience. This “new” terrorist threat (which wasn’t new at all, even then) came from people with a different colour of skin and different religion to us. Weren’t we being racist in condemning them?

Such was the desperate desire to salve our liberal consciences that we turned intellectual cartwheels in our attempts to convince ourselves that militant islamism is no more a threat than radical christianity. Some have even tried to invent a new word: “christianicism”.

But even after Norway, the threat from militant islamism is present, it is real, and it is appallingly dangerous.

If the left continues an ever-present liberal fretting about tarnishing ordinary, law-abiding muslim citizens with the stain of jihadism, which prevents it from articulating the awful threat we face, then the public – who do understand the threat and who need our support and protection – will turn instead to the right. And who could blame them?’

 

Fairly clear…there is a threat, a highly dangerous one coming from Islamically inspired terrorism.

Does that make Tom Harris a ‘far right extremist’?

Let’s just have some frame of reference…let’s hear what a Muslim has to say:

‘It must now be obvious that the objective of the Islamic jihad is to eliminate the rule of an un-Islamic system, and establish in its place an Islamic system of state rule. Islam does not intend to confine his rule to a single state or a hand full of countries. The aim of Islam is to bring about a universal revolution. Although in the initial stages, it is incumbent upon members of the party of Islam to carry out a revolution in the state system of the countries to which they belong; their ultimate objective is none other than world revolution.’
(Jihad Fi Sabillilah: Jihad in Islam by Sayyid Abul Ala Mawdudi “– Chapter 3, Pg 10)

 

The BBC is not keen on hearing the views of people like Breivik but are very keen to hear that of ‘moderate’ Muslims and to promote them as such:

Shoddy work by the BBC

Edmund Standing, August 13th 2011, 10:55 am

‘Last Thursday, I appeared as one of a number of guests on a BBC Radio 4 programme looking at extremism in the UK [MP3] and the section of their interview with me that aired was on my research into neo-Nazi networks in the UK.

The programme sought largely to examine the question of ‘Islamisation’ and the EDL and did so by using the recent outrageous ‘Shariah Controlled Zone’ sticker campaign of fringe group al-Muhajiroun as a key example of what leads some to fear the ‘Islamisation’ of Britain is under way.

We didn’t hear of this, nor did we hear from any of the Muslim moderates who are campaigning against this sort of thing.

Indeed, instead of hearing from moderates, Lutfur Rahman – yes, Lutfur Rahman! – was wheeled out to represent the voice of ‘moderation’. Naturally, we had the usual condemnation of ‘extremists’ and Rahman came across as quite a reasonable sort of bloke, but anyone who then chose to Google Rahman’s name after the programme could immediately find numerous examples of his own Islamist connections, documented many times by this very website.

Anyone looking for proof that Britain is being ‘Islamised’ and that we’re all doomed need frankly look no further than the murky world of Tower Hamlets politics of which Rahman is the central figure. Yet the BBC presented Rahman as the voice of moderation.

This is really poor on the part of the BBC. I have to admit to being frankly embarrassed to have been part of the programme.

 

And this from the Commentator:

‘To assist them in the momentous task of analysing the life of such an important historical figure the BBC called upon the services of one “Abdur Raheem Green”.

Abdur Raheem Green throughout his career as a preacher has launched attacks on many of the prized values of liberal society. He has lambasted the idea of sexual equality stating that society “pressures our daughters to get degrees, to be doctors or engineers” describing this as “sick”.

Green also states that both homosexuality and adultery are “crimes” which should be dealt with “by a slow and painful death from stoning”. Most shockingly Green appears to sing the praises of violent jihad opining that “dying while fighting Jihad is one of the surest ways to paradise and Allah’s good pleasure”…..When institutions which have such a large influence on our society find no issue with these individuals they fail in their societal duty to challenge them.

On the same programme the BBC also give a platform to the likes of Tariq Ramadan (‘one of the most influential voices on young Muslims’) the slippery Islamist…the one who claimed it was justifiable to kill Jewish children in a ‘war’, and Ikrima Sabri who just loves Jews and the West…and is happy, like Ramadan to send children to be Martyrs for Islam…the man who wants to wipe out Israel…and the BBC think both he and Ramadan are suitable as respected commentators on the life of Muhammed…never mind the ever present Mehdi Hasan. 

If an all too powerful and influential media organisation such as the BBC is promoting extremists as ‘moderates’ (whatever moderate Islam is) the future is very bleak indeed.’ 

 

The BBC find it very easy to denounce all those who criticise immigration, Islam or Multi-culturalism as far right extremists who create an atmosphere that incites violence….does that include these eminent folk?:

Angela Merkel:

‘Germany’s attempt to create a multicultural society has “utterly failed,” Chancellor Angela Merkel said on Saturday, adding fuel to a debate over immigration and Islam polarising her conservative camp.

Speaking to a meeting of young members of her Christian Democrats (CDU), Merkel said allowing people of different cultural backgrounds to live side by side without integrating had not worked in a country that is home to some four million Muslims.

“This (multicultural) approach has failed, utterly failed,” Merkel told the meeting in Potsdam, south of Berlin.

She said too little had been required of immigrants in the past and repeated her usual line that they should learn German in order to get by in school and have opportunities on the labour market.’

 

Or Nicolas Sarkozy?:

‘Nicolas Sarkozy joins David Cameron and Angela Merkel view that multiculturalism has failed.
French president Nicolas Sarkozy has joined David Cameron in condemning multiculturalism as a failure.

Cameron launched a scathing attack earlier this months on 30 years of multiculturalism in Britain warning that it fostered extremism.

His damning verdict came just months after German Chancellor Angela Merkel said that multiculturalism in Germany had failed.

Now Sarkozy has joined the growing number of European leaders who have adopted identical views on multiculturalism.

He told the French people: ‘We have been too concerned about the identity of the person who was arriving and not enough about the identity of the country that was receiving him.’

‘My answer is clearly yes, it is a failure.

‘Of course we must all respect differences, but we do not want a society where communities coexist side by side.

‘Our Muslim compatriots must be able to practise their religion, as any citizen can, but we in France do not want people to pray in an ostentatious way in the street.

‘If you come to France, you accept to melt into a single community, which is the national community, and if you do not want to accept that, you cannot be welcome in France.

‘The French national community cannot accept a change in its lifestyle, equality between men and women and freedom for little girls to go to school.’

Sarkozy’s statement comes after Prime Minister Mr Cameron said last week that public money should not be handed to ethnic groups who did not share British values.

He called for an end to the ‘passive tolerance’ of divided communities and said members of all faiths must integrate into wider society and accept core values.

 

 

Or David Cameron?:
‘David Cameron launched a devastating attack today on 30 years of multiculturalism in Britain, warning it is fostering extremist ideology and directly contributing to home-grown Islamic terrorism.

Signalling a radical departure from the strategies of previous governments, Mr Cameron said that Britain must adopt a policy of “muscular liberalism” to enforce the values of equality, law and freedom of speech across all parts of society.

Mr Cameron blamed a doctrine of “state multiculturalism” which encourages different cultures to live separate lives. This, he says, has led to the “failure of some to confront the horrors of forced marriage”. But he added it is also the root cause of radicalisation which can lead to terrorism.

“As evidence emerges about the backgrounds of those convicted of terrorist offences, it is clear that many of them were initially influenced by what some have called ‘non-violent extremists’ and then took those radical beliefs to the next level by embracing violence. This is an indictment of our approach to these issues in the past. And if we are to defeat this threat, I believe it’s time to turn the page on the failed policies of the past.’

 

 

or Trevor Phillips who backed Cameron’s speech on multi-culturalism and also said this:

‘Christians must choose between religion and obeying law, says equalities chief Trevor Phillips

He declared that Christians who want to be exempt from equality legislation are like Muslims trying to impose sharia.

Religious rules should end “at the door of the temple” and give way to the “public law” laid down by Parliament, the chairman of the Equality and Human Rights Commission said.

You can’t say that because we decide we’re different we have a different set of laws. That, by the way, er, to me there’s nothing different in principle between a Catholic adoption agency saying “the rules in our community are different and therefore the law shouldn’t apply to us”, why not then say, “Okay, then Sharia law should apply in certain parts of the country.” It doesn’t work.’

and this:
‘When I remarked last month that it was time for Britain to move on from divisive, 80s-style “multiculturalist” policies, I thought it might cause a mild stir among Britain’s diversity professionals and activists. In fact, it unleashed a passionate argument both at home and abroad. I have even, as one friend grumpily complained, ruined a couple of dinner parties where the “Britishness” debate got ugly.

This was a debate waiting to happen.

I disagree with those who say that integration and Britishness are irrelevant to the struggle against racism. There can be no true integration without true equality. But the reverse is also true. The equality of the ghetto is no equality at all.’

or this:

‘We cannot allow discussion of race and immigration forever to be seen as playing into the hands of extremists. The forty-year old shockwave of fear has gagged us all for too long.

Our aim is the integrated society – one built on fairness, respect and dignity, confident in all aspects of its diversity.

We need to start a new conversation about how we get there, a dialogue has to be guided not by fear, but by hope.’

 

or Boris Johnson:

‘To any non-Muslim reader of the Koran, Islamophobia — fear of Islam — seems a natural reaction, and, indeed, exactly what that text is intended to provoke. Judged purely on its scripture — to say nothing of what is preached in the mosques — it is the most viciously sectarian of all religions in its heartlessness towards unbelievers.

The trouble with this disgusting arrogance and condescension is that it is widely supported in Koranic texts, and we look in vain for the enlightened Islamic teachers and preachers who will begin the process of reform. What is going on in these mosques and madrasas? When is someone going to get 18th century on Islam’s mediaeval ass?’

 

or how about these Muslims?

Maryam Namazie:

‘ There are a lot of Muslims, ex-Muslims and atheists even who don’t speak a word of Arabic or who do. Obviously that is not a criterion for understanding, accepting, or as in my case rejecting Islam and religion.

Moreover, we aren’t talking about something centuries past or taking place on some other planet. Every day, all day, we live through and can see the misery, barbarity and cruelty that Sharia and political Islam are unleashing across the world. Not a day goes by without this movement hanging the likes of sweet 16 year old Atefeh Rajabi for ‘acts incompatible with chastity,’ stoning men and women to death for adultery, executing apostates like Ehsan Fattahian, throwing acid in the faces of girls who dare to go to school, imposing sexual apartheid and misogyny, and murdering our beloved Nedas in broad daylight.

Our opposition to Sharia is not about solving your problems (which seem far too great for that) but about standing up for humanity vis-à-vis this onslaught.

And by the way, people’s destiny is what they make of it and we are making ours.

And unlike Sharia and Islamism, it has nothing to do with hate.’

 

Gina Khan is a British Muslim woman who lives in Birmingham and campaigns against extremism. She has blogged at Butterflies and Wheels.)

Ayaan understands what has gone wrong with the policies of multiculturalism. As a young child and teenager I grew up in an area where the majority was English but there were also Greeks, Chinese, Jamaicans and Indians living in the same community. Everybody got on and respected each other. My parents ran supermarkets, so we were integrated, if not allowed to assimilate as females because
of the religion. And now the white people are leaving, the area has disintegrated, and it breaks my heart. Most members of my family have moved out.

The area has been Islamised. Mosques, mini-mosques and madrasas rise up on almost every street corner, but there is nothing for the youth. Drugs and crime has made the area unsafe for young girls. Social services and the police know what is going on.

I have witnessed anti-west and anti-Jew posters and leaflets appear in shops run by young bearded Muslims. I watched the Islamists mobilise the Muslim community right under my nose. Before 9/11 the time I could not name it, but I knew something was not right, but it was being done in the name of Islam.’

 

And these Muslim voices:

The Victimisation of Moderate Muslims

‘When I married V.S. Naipaul and moved to England in 1996, I thought I had left the horror behind.

Yasmin Alibhai-Brown: Who’d be female under Islamic law?  In Muslim states, violence against women is validated. A dark age is upon us.

The Talibanisation of British childhood by hardline parents  ‘I have met Muslim lawyers and academics who have turned to Taliban-style beliefs’

  

When will the BBC talk about this?:

“It’s true. Jews cannot walk the streets of Malmö and show that they’re Jews,” said Lars Hedegaard.

‘Hedegaard lives across the water from Malmö in Copenhagen, Denmark, where he was a columnist for one of Denmark’s largest newspapers. And like all over the Western world, some on the Left, along with Arabs and Muslims and anarchists, have formed a political alliance against Israel and Jews. They demonstrate together, and in Sweden, they vote together. Muslims are a core constituency of the Left.

The immigrant issue a big reason the right-wing Swedish Democrats are the fastest growing political party in the country.

 

and this:

‘In 2009, a chapel serving the city’s 700-strong Jewish community was set ablaze. Jewish cemeteries were repeatedly desecrated, worshippers were abused on their way home from prayer, and “Hitler” was mockingly chanted in the streets by masked men.

“I never thought I would see this hatred again in my lifetime, not in Sweden anyway,” Mrs Popinski told The Sunday Telegraph.

“This new hatred comes from Muslim immigrants. The Jewish people are afraid now.”

“Some Swedish politicians are letting them do it, including the mayor. Of course the Muslims have more votes than the Jews.”

 

A final word for Jonathan Freedland who tells us that critics of Israel are not ‘racist or engendering violence’ which must also surely apply to critics of Islam…(exept of course Israel stands for democracy and progress whilst islam stans for oppression and a return to the Dark Ages):

‘I have multiple criticisms of IJV, most of them amply aired already on these pages. But even their most trenchant opponents must surely blanch at the notion that these critics of Israel and of Anglo-Jewish officialdom are somehow in favour of genocide literally, eager to see the murder and eradication of the Jewish people. I understand Melanie’s apparent logic that by criticising Israel, IJV align themselves with a radical Islamism that wants Israel wiped off the map, ergo IJV are pro-genocide but it is an absurdity, one that drains the word genocide of any meaning. For if Mike Leigh and Stephen Fry are for genocide, what word is left to describe, say, the Sudanese regime and their murderous assault on the people of Darfur?’