The Israel ReportBBC Admits Bias - Pro Islam, Pro Gay, Anti-Christian
Neil Cooper
Oct 22, 2006
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------Below is a report from the Londay Daily Mail. For those of you who do not live in Israel or Europe, you may not be aware of the constant anti-Israel, pro-Islam bias that spews forth daily from the BBC (CNN Europe is equally bad). What is remarkable is that they have actually come out and admited it. I send it on to you because it is likely a good picture of what infects nearly every Media company worldwide, whether it be television, newspapers, magazines, radio or internet, the news today is NOT unbiased reporting of events, it is an abused power base for people with humanist, anti-Christ agendas.
A Russian friend who is also a Jewish believer in Yeshua, told me one time "The problem with America is that when American's watch CNN they believe what they say. In Russia the Pravda was nothing but lies, but at least we knew it was all lies."
The western world has become the most highly propagandized people on the face of the earth. There is no greater tool in Satan's hands than the modern media. Of course it is not just the news, it is movies, TV shows, cartoons, video games, music, and every imaginable way that an u ntruth, a perversion, or an anti-Christian slant can be promoted.
We are in a war on every front of human existance, and I pray that we will wake up to the truth. That we take the blinders off and see things as they really are, and that we pray and pray, and pray some more...
FDR said that "Nothing happens in government that wasn't planned that way"
Think about it...
Neil Cooper
The Israel Report
http://theisraelreport.com--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Yes, we are biased on religion and politics, admit BBC executives
By PAUL REVOIR Last updated at 22:23pm on 22nd October 2006
BBC executives have been forced to admit what critics have known for years - that the corporation is institutionally biased. The revelation came af ter details of an 'impartiality' summit called by its chairman, Michael Grade, were leaked.
Senior figures admitted that the BBC is guilty of promoting Left-wing views and an anti-Christian sentiment.
They also said that as an organization it was disproportionately over-represented by gays and ethnic minorities.
It was also suggested that the Beeb is guilty of political correctness, the overt promotion of multiculturalism and of being anti-American and against the countryside.
During the meeting, hosted by Sue Lawley, executives admitted they would happily broadcast the image of a Bible being thrown away - but would not do the same for the Koran.
Muslim leaders later condemned this approach.
Ishmail Farhat of the Muslim Association of Britain said: "We don't support this kind of action or abuse. If they are respecting all religions - then they should treat all religions the same."
The BBC executives also agreed that the BBC should broadcast an interview with Osama Bin Laden, despite the offence it would cause. Even one of the BBC's most senior journalists, political pundit Andrew Marr admitted that the corporation was unrepresentative of British society. He said: "The BBC is not impartial or neutral. It's a publicly-funded, urban organization with an abnormally large number of young people, ethnic minorities and gay people.
"It has a liberal bias not so much a party-political bias. It is better expressed as a cultural liberal bias."
BBC 'diversity tsar' Mary Fitzpatrick claimed women newsreaders should be allowed to wear what they liked on air and went on to say this should include a Muslim veil. She spoke out after criticism was raised of TV newsreader Fiona Bruce wearing a necklace with a cross on it.
'We may have gone too far in the direction of political correctness'
The BBC's Washington correspondent Justin Webb also accused his own employers of being anti-American saying they treated it with scorn and derision and "no moral weight". He revealed that he had got deputy director general Mark Byford to secretly help him to "correct" it in his reports.
Business presenter Jeff Randall said he complained to a senior executive at the BBC about the corporation's pro-multiculturalism stance. He claimed he was told: "The BBC is not neutral in multiculturalism, it believes in it and it promotes it." He told how he once wore Union Jack cufflinks to work and was rebuked with: "You can't do that, that's like the National Front!"
One senior BBC executive admitted that the summit had opened people's eyes to how biased the BBC had become. He admitted: "There was a widespread acknow ledgement that we may have gone too far in the direction of political correctness. "Unfortunately, much of it is so deeply embedded in the BBC's culture, that it is very hard to change it."
The BBC is believed to be taking a more critical look at itself because it fears if it does not, its regulation could be removed from its board of governors and handed over to the independent regulator Ofcom.