‘Obamacare’ is in trouble – Obama is in trouble”

 

 

Curious that only a few weeks ago the BBC was pillorying the Republicans for trying to delay Obamacare for a year.

 From Mardell:

The Republicans have been accused of having Tea Party tantrums, they’ve been compared to people who want to burn the house down, suicide bombers, hostage takers and teenage drivers repeatedly taking a blind curve in the rain.

All these images of blackmail and mayhem come about because their strategy has brought the government to the brink of shutdown. What may happen at midnight on Monday is short of Armageddon, but it is not pretty.

Tea Party-backed members decided it would be a great idea to couple the vote to pay the government’s bills with one to gut President Obama’s healthcare legislation. Now it is linked to a similar idea that would delay “Obamacare” for a year.

They hoped that the Democrats would either blink or get the blame. It has never looked like a winning strategy.

 

Maybe they lost the battle…but could they win the war?

 

Now Mark Mardell tells us that:

‘Obamacare’ is in trouble – Obama is in trouble”

Mr Obama has been under fire in recent weeks as insurance companies cancelled millions of Americans’ medical insurance policies because they did not meet the stricter conditions of the healthcare overhaul.

That was despite the Democratic president’s promise that people would be able to keep their existing plans.

It has been a pretty dreadful week for President Barack Obama. Flapping around his head are a whole flock of chickens coming home to roost.

This is all about his greatest achievement – the law for which he will be remembered – the programme nicknamed for him, Obamacare.

Now his one historic achievement, the one big law he got through before he lost the House, is in grave danger. With it his whole reputation, his legacy.

Buy Buy Bye

 

The Telegraph investigates:

What Lonely Planet is the BBC on?

£100m loss on travel book deal as corporation’s executives ride the gravy train

 

And remember the BBC lost £100 million on its digital media intiative.

And remember it spent £1 billion moving house to Salford.

And remember that the running costs of Salford will be £120 million more than they would have been if they’d stayed put in London up until 2020 if I remember correctly.

 

Not  a bad use of Licence payer’s money…at least £300 million that could have been thrown away making interesting and entertaining programmes.

Speaking of which…..hasn’t been a thing on the BBC that has been worth watching for nearly a week….oh…except ancient repeats of Dad’s Army and the Likely Lads...which I can get on You Tube if I want them….and Top Gear’s getting long in the tooth…but I’ll give ’em Sherlock, that is good.

IPCC’s Scientific Integrity Under The Microscope

Bishop Hill tells us that:

Is that a shift in the climate change ground I feel? Japan has backed away from its renewables targets. Rich countries seem to be on the verge of reneging on their climate change promises to poor countries. The  Climate Change Committee is to undertake an inquiry into the scientific integrity of the Fifth Assessment Report. And they have invited Donna Laframboise (and to my certain knowledge some other sceptics) to give evidence.

 

It would be nice if the BBC had done their own examination of the science…instead of which we had Roger Harrabin and Co happily parroting the ‘science’ spoon fed to them by the IPCC as this post from October may remind you:

We Think, Therefore It Is

It is incredible to think that the only journalist with any integrity in the climate debate at the BBC is not Harrabin, Shukman or McGrath but Sheila Fogarty.

She has been the one asking the awkward questions about the much hyped ‘ocean warming’ explanation for the ‘pause’.

Harrabin et al should hang their heads in shame.

BBC’s Bogus Science

How the BBC turned a catastrophic crisis into a drama about global warming

  • Listeners given a bogus message on Radio 4’s Today programme

Listeners to Radio 4’s Today programme were given an unmistakable but totally bogus message last week: that catastrophic storms such as Typhoon Haiyan are linked to global warming – and are set to increase.

The same claim, which has no scientific basis, was echoed by David Cameron, who said there was ‘growing evidence’ that warming was responsible for storms.

Interviewing Jim Yong Kim, president of the World Bank, presenter Evan Davis announced that climate change has made the Philippine islands ‘one of the most fragile parts of the planet’ and asked what would the world do if more frequent storms forced its population to abandon them.

‘That’s a great question,’ Kim replied. In his view, rising seas caused by global warming would make not just islands but the Thai capital Bangkok uninhabitable ‘within the next 20 to 30 years’.

The response of Davis – with the full weight and authority of the BBC’s morning news flagship behind him – was to muse: ‘If we don’t invest in the prevention of climate change, we’d better invest in border control.’

 

 

Just who has been feeding Evan Davis these lies, this bogus science?

Could it be English graduate and the BBC’s environmental analyst Roger Harrabin?

This year is likely to be among the top 10 warmest on record, according to the World Meteorological Organization.

It continues a pattern of high temperatures blamed directly on man-made climate change.

The president of the World Bank, Jim Yong Kim, told BBC News that warming could no longer be ignored.

He urged action to reduce emissions to minimise the likelihood of disasters like Typhoon Haiyan, which has claimed thousands of lives in the Philippines.

 

 

roger harrabin@RHarrabin 11 Nov

Rising sea levels and warmer seas will create conditions for ever-stronger tropical storms. #TyphoonHaiyan http://www.gfdl.noaa.gov/global-warming-and-hurricanes …

 

The BBC Invests Wisely

 

 

Should of course be a Pinnochio nose but a clown’s nose will have to do.

 

The BBC has spent a long time and invested much treasure in grooming Alistair Campbell and keeping him sweet.

As they say….keep your friends close and your enemies closer.

 

Such investment seems to have paid off with Campbell now back in the political game advising Miliband and saying things like this:

‘….whatever the criticisms of the BBC, it should be supported, remain central to our culture and having had the Murdochisation of the press we should resist the Foxisation of TV news…’

…as opposed to the Stalinisation of our TV news?

 

Nice to have ‘friends’ in high places who could potentially form part of the next government.

 

 

Campbell was speaking in his new role as visiting professor at Cambridge University (No really…that’s not a joke).

What is so funny is that he condemns the celebrity culture that has grown up in the Media…driven of course by the two spawn of the Devil…Murdoch and Dacre.

The funny bit is that he is only where he is now precisely because of his own ‘celebrity’…or notoriety….it can’t possibly be intellectual brilliance and original thought.

Read his speech and you will see it is the same old tired, cliched rhetoric about Murdoch and Co that tumbles forth off the pages of the Guardian day in day out.

The same type of unoriginal, unprovoking trite stuff that Russell Brand(one of the ‘key voices of our age’) and Owen Jones have picked up from the ‘Idiots Guide to Social Revolution’ and ‘The Bluffer’s Communist Manifesto’.

The only people who would applaud this stuff are his fellow travellers and then only out of politeness.

Here are some ‘highlights’ from his speech…

“The Murdoch-Dacre Generation Has Had Its Day”

I loved being a journalist, and it is partly the journalist in me that hates what the Murdoch-Dacre leadership has done to British journalism and its reputation.

Presumably Campbell doesn’t agree with this assessment of his own journalistic morals:

No political journalist in my lifetime has treated politicians with such utter, total and complete contempt as Alastair Campbell did during his career for the Daily Mirror and Today newspaper (and later as a government adviser inside Downing Street). His personal conduct was far, far worse and more demeaning than any Daily Mail journalist.”

“bullying and lying his way across our political life”.”

 
Back to Campbell’s own world view:
One of the most powerful critiques of modern journalism came from The Guardian’s Nick Davies. In his book Flat Earth News, he detailed specific acts of press distortion, manipulation and lying. But more, he made a convincing analysis that the corporatisation of the media is what has led to its decline in trust and accuracy. He calls it a cancer and argues it is beyond cure. I hope he is wrong, [but one thing is clear]…..Those who have created the cancer cannot cure it. The Murdoch-Dacre generation of owners and executives, let alone the so-called regulators at the PCC, have failed, cannot change their ways, have had their day.

Not the BBC ‘Corporation’ then that has led to a decline in trust and accuracy…and democracy?

 

When I was a trainee, if you had asked me my ambition, I would have said “editor of the Mirror“. Not now. I would struggle with the overwhelming celebritisation of tabloid life.
Today, broadsheets and broadcasters also fear that if they fail to run big celebrity stories, they will get their balance wrong. So Michael Jackson’s court case got 50 times more TV coverage than events in Sudan, including both Darfur, where as many as 400,000 people died between, and as the trial started, the fighting in Eastern Sudan.
As veteran BBC war correspondent then MP Martin Bell said in 2004, “the culture of celebrity, like an army of ants, has colonized the news pages, both tabloid and broadsheet”.

Power – that is another answer to the question “why journalism?” It is bad when press power is abused, as it has been. But the press as a check on power is not a bad thing per se. What is bad is when the power of the press is such that politicians feel reluctant to challenge it, when deep down they know they should.

The papers are generous to the point of ridiculous with their favourites, or where their own interests are concerned, vicious and disproportionate about hobby horses or people who cross them. The same approach is moving into TV. Fox News. Fair and balanced my backside, and a good reason why whatever the criticisms of the BBC, it should be supported, remain central to our culture and having had the Murdochisation of the press, we should resist the Foxisation of TV news, which this government almost allowed, and certainly wanted to.

And for me, the real evil of narrow concentration of press ownership by a clutch of wealthy right-wing men, most of whom do not pay taxes here, is that it leads to a narrow set of values and interests within the news agenda.
I welcome the impact of social media in breaking open the agenda setting of a self-serving political and economic elite.

David Dimbleby agrees…but not on who the ‘evil’ ones are:

I’ll tell you…there is an argument for funding things that are outside the BBC so it doesn’t have this all-powerful position.  I’m not sure democracy is served by having an organisation so huge and powerful.’

 

Campbell finishes off with a contradictory plea to allow partisan, or non-objective reporting:

Alongside the myth of non interference we have the myth of press objectivity. It is possible to strive to be fair, neutral, impartial. But in every striving there are enormous cultural and specific judgements being made, and many of them are necessarily subjective.

 

 

 

So it is the ‘evil’ Murdoch and Dacre who have done so much damage to British journalism and its reputation and brought Society down along with it?

So that’ll be The Times and the Financial Times…and Sky…and the Daily mail which millions read…good to know what Campbell thinks of those readers.

 

Has he never watched TV?  The BBC, Channel 4…those so called bastions of quality entertainment and taste (well, the BBC at least in theory)….they created the celebrity culture…they created the school kids who don’t want to work and dream of a get rich quick life of fame and glamour on the Telly but who ended up disgruntled and disaffected stacking shelves in Tescos or on the dole because of the cheap imported workers Labour flung open the borders for knowing the working class would be sidelined and forgotten.

 

I imagine Campbell doesn’t really want a chat about who really destroyed Britain….and he’s on safe ground with the BBC.

 

 

Here is Nick Cohen being rather less partisan:
It is too easy to dismiss the enormous audience for Brand by saying: “They’re just enjoying the show.” True, artists have always made a show of being drawn towards fanaticism. Extremism is more exciting and dramatic, more artistic perhaps, than the shabby compromises and small changes of democratic societies. You suspect that half the great writers of the 1920s and 1930s supported fascism or communism just for the thrill of it.

Television controllers manufacture celebrities like Volkswagen manufactures cars, and insert them into every niche in their schedules. When I have complained that the actor fronting a documentary knows nothing about African poverty, say, or the comedian on the political panel knows nothing about politics, they reply that the viewers want celebs. If they don’t put them in front of a camera, the viewers won’t watch. In a saturated media market the ambitious celebrity has to go further than the competition to stand out from the crowd.

 

Celebrity sells…cars, watches and  telly programmes about famine.

The TV execs know it and exploit it to the full.

Campbell loses any credibility by his unbalanced and partial exercise in bashing his political, and the BBC’s, enemies.

After all he was himself one of the ones who created and used celebrity culture to add a bit of glamour to the New Labour project:

Tony Blair and Cool Britannia

Mr Blair writes: ”To this day, I’m never sure of the effect the celebrity thing has. I don’t dismiss it, as some do.
”When you are trying to capture the mood – and this is more often so for a progressive party – celebs can reinforce, even boost the message.
”They add some glamour and excitement to what can often be a dreary business.
”What they can’t do, of course, is substitute for the politics. In fact, if they try to, they become immediately counterproductive.
”If they begin lecturing the people as to why or how they should vote, it’s nearly always a disaster.
”They clearly don’t determine the outcome, but properly used, they help. And frankly, given the difficulty in rousing the damn thing, we needed the help.”

 

 

From Guido:

 

More Amnesia From Toxic Campbell

Campbell is attempting to rebrand as a do-gooder and saint…The new image is just not credible. Leaving aside David Kelly, lets just look at how he operated in his early days in Downing Street:

“Campbell has been on his high horse all week saying he never briefed against Tony Blair’s ministers – apart from the time he lost his temper with anti-Iraq leftie Clare Short and suggested Gordon Brown was “psychologically flawed”. Those of us with longer memories know this is spin. In May 1997 when he first arrived in Downing Street, Campbell shocked senior civil servants by telling them that two Cabinet ministers “couldn’t keep their trousers on”, that Derry Irvine, the Lord Chancellor, hated Donald Dewar, the Scottish Secretary. Smirking, he said “Nick Brown, was ever the bachelor” – before he was outed as gay. He went on to hint at the Foreign Secretary Robin Cook’s then adulterous affair with his secretary Gaynor Regan. All that was just in the first month he was in Downing Street and before he went on – as Michael Howard famously told him – “bullying and lying his way across our political life”.”

Today Peter Oborne has more:

“This protestation that he treated politicians with respect is so completely contemptuous of the truth that I feel a kind of moral obligation to correct it. No political journalist in my lifetime has treated politicians with such utter, total and complete contempt as Alastair Campbell did during his career for the Daily Mirror and Today newspaper (and later as a government adviser inside Downing Street). His personal conduct was far, far worse and more demeaning than any Daily Mail journalist.”

Mischief Making

 

 

David Dimbleby in the Sunday Times:

‘We’re coming up to the new BBC charter…that’s the big issue.’

What does he think about that?

‘I’ll tell you…there is an argument for funding things that are outside the BBC so it doesn’t have this all-powerful position.  I’m not sure democracy is served by having an organisation so huge and powerful.’

 

Perhaps he should swap notes with Alistair Campbell who claims(see next post):

And for me, the real evil of narrow concentration of press ownership by a clutch of wealthy right-wing men, most of whom do not pay taxes here, is that it leads to a narrow set of values and interests within the news agenda.

 

One less Christmas card for Patten’s secretary to send out…..maybe she can send it to likewise ‘under siege’ President Assad.

 

 

Israel Persecutes Christians says Sarah Montague…update

 

BBC Watch has an update on Sarah Montague’s claim on the Today programme that Israel persecutes Christians and this is a problem that the Israeli government could solve.

 

It includes a very rapid reply to a complaint about this interview which tries to whitewash the matter:

BBC R4′s ‘Today’ programme implies persecution of Christians in Israel

SM: “But are you saying – can I just ask – countries like Pakistan that you refer to, or perhaps Israel or even Iraq where there is a functioning government – is it just down to the politicians in those countries to speak out and this problem could be solved?” [emphasis added]

 

However, one listener at least received the following reply to a complaint made to the ‘Today’ programme:

“Thank you for your email. Sarah Montague cited Israel not as an example of a country which persecutes Christians but of a country where there is a functioning Government. She did this in the context of asking what responsibility politicians should bear for promoting harmony between those of different faiths.

There is evidence of an outflow of Christians from the Middle East caused in part by the unresolved dispute between Israel and the Palestinians but more widely by social, economic and political concerns. But Sarah’s question did not seek to apportion blame onto one single country or group of countries. It is clearly a more complicated issue than that.

I hope this helps answer your concerns.

Yours sincerely

Dominic Groves

Assistant Editor

’Today’ “

 

No she did not. Sarah Montague lumped Israel together with Pakistan and Iraq and asked “is it just down to the politicians in those countries to speak out and this problem could be solved?” – thus clearly implying to listeners that similar problems of persecution of Christians exist in all three of the countries she named.

 

 

The BBC refusing to take responsibility yet again ( £300,000 spent to hide Balen…and you wonder why?) for helping to spread anti-Semitism.

Which is what they are in effect doing….‘Look everyone…the Jews are persecuting Christians’

Sounds a bit like the old anti-Semitic trope….‘The Jews killed Christ’ doesn’t it?

Even the reply denying Montague meant Israelis persecuted Christians  just reinforces her comment with another blaming Israel again ….It’s the creation of Israel that is helping to drive the persecution of Christians.

 

 

 

First The Saturday people, Then The Sunday People

‘First The Saturday people, Then The Sunday People’

Graffitti on a wall in Bethlehem where Christians are being driven out…and not by Israelis.

 

The Jews have pretty much been driven out of all their old communities in the Middle East….and now a drive to eliminate the Christians is under way…and not just in the Middle East.

 

Thanks to Downboy for highlighting this interview:

Baroness Warsi was in the Today studio being interviewed by Sarah Montague (53:30) about her claims that Christians were being persecuted.

Sarah Montague has an unusual take on who is doing the persecuting…..asking is it in countries like Pakistan, Iraq…and Israel, that politicians must speak out and then this problem could be solved?

Israel?  Israel is persecuting Christians?  Really?  Of course the truth is that she is insinuating that Israel is persecuting and oppressing Palestinians.

Christians have always been a minority in Israel, but it is the only Middle East nation where the Christian population has grown in the last half century (from 34,000 in 1948 to 140,000 today), in large measure because of the freedom to practice their religion.

 

The BBC is all too ready to make baseless accusations about Israel and include it in a discussion in which it has no part to play but is very reluctant to give it any credit for what it does do…..

Which country is absent from the BBC’s list of international aid efforts in the Philippines?

On November 10th a lead team of experts in search & rescue and medicine from the IDF’s Home Front Command left Israel and travelled the 6,000 miles to the typhoon-stricken Philippines in order to assess the needs of the local population.

On the basis of that lead team’s assessments, a delegation set out for the Philippines on the morning of November 13th. In addition to around 100 tons of humanitarian aid and medical supplies, the mission includes 150 team members from the IDF Home Front Command’s Search & Rescue Unit and from the IDF Medical Corps. A field hospital is being set up and live updates are available here and here.

http://bbcwatchdot.files.wordpress.com/2013/11/aid-from-around-the-world.png

 

 

It looks like the BBC has form on this:

 No BBC reports on Israeli medical aid for wounded Syrians

The IDF has now set up a field hospital in the north of the Golan Heights in order to provide medical care for the increasing numbers of Syrians seeking Israeli help.

So far, the BBC has shown no interest in reporting this story.

 

 

And again:

Israel builds a field hospital in Haiti. Anti-Zionists not fooled!

Clever people the Jews… oops, I mean the Israelis. Look at the lengths to which they have gone to distract the world from their daily ethnic cleansing of Palestinians. The latest trick is an Israeli field hospital, rushed into Haiti last Friday and erected in a soccer field.

Information from Israeli government sources should, of course, be taken with a grain of salt, but footage of this tent-city/hospital has now been seen on SKY, Fox and CNN, ABC and CBS and the video seems to confirm (Mossad video fabricators are tricky) at least that the facility is large, clean, and full of modern equipment. CBS’s piece called the hospital the “Rolls Royce of medicine in Haiti”.

Thankfully, the BBC has kept its head and is not colluding with the Israeli government’s attempt to make the world forget its sins.

 

 

All just a coincidence that little old Israel gets forgotten by the BBC.

 

 

 

 

Bit Of A Quandary

 

 

 

One of the BBC’s favourite radicals has spilt the beans about Labour’s bean counting cock ups when in power.

Just how will the BBC report this?  They love Ken but hate the message which is one they have been ignoring for 3 years….Labour smashed the economy:

 

Labour are cowards for racking up billions in debt, says Ken Livingstone

The former Mayor of London criticises Labour for spending billions to avoid tax and spending cuts in the ‘boom years’

Ken Livingstone, the former Mayor of London, has accused the Labour party of “cowardice” for building up billions in debts rather than taking difficult decisions on tax cuts and spending.

In a speech to a campaigning group on Saturday Mr Livingstone accused Gordon Brown of borrowing too much in the boom years.

Mr Livingstone said: “Gordon Brown was borrowing £20 billion a year at the height of the boom in the first decade of this century in order to avoid having to increase taxes, because he wanted to increase public spending.”

The former Mayor described the racking up of debts as “an act of cowardice” on the part of the Labour party.

Twitter Ye Not….Good Advice For Some

 

roger harrabin@RHarrabin 11 Nov @billyblofeld @latimeralder @aDissentient This is wrong. BBC does NOT have an agreed approach to #climatechange which is why sceptics abound

 

Shame Harrabin once said this:

I have spent much of the last two decades of my journalistic life warning about the potential dangers of climate change

 

And he famously engineered the adoption of the ‘scientific consensus’ within the BBC.

 

And I can only assume from the tone that freerange sceptics ‘abounding’ is something not very welcome in the Harrabin brave new world.

 

A reminder of one of Harrabin’s Tweets from a while back…..

roger harrabin ?@RogerHarrabin  @aniolesteban Earthquakes and volcanoes also boost economic growth. The Philippines mud slide was good for builders and undertakers.

 

Very caring from our Roger.

 

And then there was this:

roger harrabin ?@RogerHarrabin
Asking if climate change caused Sandy is like asking if gravity caused an old house to collapse when it did.

So a very definite link between climate change and storms…isn’t there?

 

In this recent report  he claimed that:

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) says the jury is out on whether the frequency of tropical cyclones will increase, but Michel Jarraud said it was expected that the impact of storms would be more intense.

 

The Telegraph says the IPCC said something else:

Here’s what it says in its new report: 

Current datasets indicate no significant observed trends in global tropical cyclone frequency over the past century … No robust trends in annual numbers of tropical storms, hurricanes and major hurricanes counts have been identified over the past 100 years in the North Atlantic basin… In summary, confidence in large scale changes in the intensity of extreme extratropical cyclones since 1900 is low.

What’s interesting when you read their [Those who say climate change produces more extreme weather] claims is that none of them is capable of producing any credible scientific evidence that “climate change” has anything whatsoever to do with Typhoon Haiyan.  That’ll be because – as Benny Peiser notes in the Spectator – the science says no such thing.

 

 

A more recent Tweet from Roger:

roger harrabin@RHarrabin 13 Nov @BarryJWoods @etzpcm

Look at it decadally, Barry. Year by year is weather not climate.

 

Which is why of course he has headlines like this:

2013 ‘one of warmest’ on record

 

 

Apparently it is a ‘wake up call’ for us….

roger harrabin@RHarrabin 13 Nov @etzpcm There’s nothing incoherent about wake-up calls unless you are deaf. The piece was written in 30 mins on deadline. Not great but OK

 

Nice to see quality journalism counts at the BBC…any old rubbish as long as it’s on time.

 

And still peddling that theory of the oceans absorbing all that heat…which is why we have a pause in global warming…so they claim…without proof:

roger harrabin@RHarrabin 12 Nov @conservatarist @BarryJWoods @tan123 Higher sea levels = higher storm surges, warmer ocean has more energy. Creates greater storm potential.

 

A theory they now use  to tell us that though hurricanes and extreme weather may not be more frequent they will have worse effects because of higher sea levels etc.

If there is no ocean warming…then that’s another theory out the window.

 

He also Tweeted this:

roger harrabin@RHarrabin 11 Nov

Rising sea levels and warmer seas will create conditions for ever-stronger tropical storms.

 

Tom Nelson@tan123 11 Nov .@RHarrabin So why aren’t tropical storms getting ever stronger?

 

Harrabin backtracks:

roger harrabin@RHarrabin 12 Nov @tan123 There are many conditions for storms. But rising sea level and hotter oceans create conditions for more damaging storms.

 

Getting grumpy…

roger harrabin@RHarrabin  @BarryJWoods @conservatarist @tan123 Don’t misquote me. More heat = more energy. higher sea = higher surges,

 

Trouble is they weren’t misquoting him……Harrabin said ‘ever stronger tropical storms’.

 

Quality stuff from our campaigning friend of the earth.

 

Don’t misquote me…I didn’t say highly misleading twaddle.