
Who if anyone does the BBC consider itself accountable to, or is it just a law unto itself these days?
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“Due impartiality” means one thing when it’s terrorists, and another when it’s critics of Net Zero, says Andrew Montford @ Net Zero Watch.
The BBC is currently taking a lot of flak for its refusal to refer to Hamas as “terrorists”. Its editorial guidelines, say that that journalists need to mindful of the need for “due accuracy and impartiality”, but say that the t-word is “a barrier to understanding”.
This is a strange position to take. As many people have observed, Hamas is, in law, a proscribed terrorist organisation, so one would have thought that any journalist who was interested in accuracy would need to refer to them as, well, terrorists.
So the ideal of accuracy therefore appears to have been abandoned in this instance. I think the underlying reason for this is found in that awkward word “due”. It certainly appears to be doing a great deal of work in the BBC guidelines.
The doleful influence of ‘due” becomes clearer when you see how it plays out when the BBC’s gaze falls on those who are critical of mainstream climate scientists or Net Zero policies.
I believe that “due” impartiality was a phrase dreamt up by the BBC as a way to deny the oxygen of publicity to just pesky voices. The term’s introduction led initially to people like myself being introduced on air as “deniers” (and one can assume that the BBC feels that the word “denier” creates “understanding” in a way that the word “terrorist” doesn’t, not even in the context of a proscribed organisation).
Ultimately though, it led to an outright ban on appearances on air by anyone questioning climate science or climate policy. Nobody from the Global Warming Policy Foundation or Net Zero Watch has appeared on the BBC for something like six years now, despite Net Zero having been a key public issue – and increasingly so – all that time.
So while “due” impartiality apparently involves making sure apologists for baby killers get their views aired, for global warming sceptics and Net Zero sceptics, it means being silenced.
You have to wonder why the corporation’s senior staff feel the wholesale slaughter of innocents deserves a public defence, but critiques of the biggest public spending programme in history do not.
. . .
“Due” impartiality seems then to look very much like outright bias, a way for the BBC to enforce a hard-left agenda, promoting and defending things its staff are in favour of, and denigrating and attacking things they oppose. It’s an ugly, ugly picture, and they can’t hide it any longer.
Full article here.






Those 3 letter media corporations all extend from the same root. Their only usefulness is to apprehend the state of political insanity being promoted. Last time I bothered to listen to their hype was their announcement of an instantaneous world-wide pandemic. (Oh great, they’re going for the mega-scourge. As successful as all the previously planned terrorisms with mega casualties. Since when did the masses get sick of the same thing at the same time around the world?) And that lasted for about 10 minutes as the delivery rate is so torpid.
D’you think they are the only ones ? https://content.govdelivery.com/accounts/UKONS/bulletins/37630b7
All in the name of YOU having a Hunger for compliance – if you want to get on / be left in peace, it seems. As for me? Fly under the radar!
Not at all. Didn’t want to get too morose today.
It IS debilitating to contemplate the extent.
the Beeb has been a cesspool of left-think and propaganda for at least a generation now.
The BBC has its own ivory tower mentality, and tries to inject it into anything and everything.
The BBC has completely mistaken its position on Gaza and Hamas. It was perfectly possible to be a Republican or Unionist in the context of Northern Ireland but call the IRA or UVF terrorists – because they were. The BBC assumes Hamas speaks for all Palestinians and its methods are approved of by all Palestinians, but that it not so.
I am REALLY fed up with all this mindless BBC knocking. They are human just the same as all other commentators – but some of the others are so hopelessly biased in other directions, why single out the Beeb? Because it is always fashionable.
As was said repeatedly in Parliament today, “no comment until we know the facts”. A rare comment in that chamber.
I think the Beeb painted the wall the wrong colour for “Any Questions” last week. There, I’ve done it too.
It does appear that you have not been paying attention for these last twenty years or so!
🤣🤣🤣🤣
But only the BBC have an official policy of refusing to discuss AGW altogether, mikewattam.
That’s not just biased!
And here’s the list of their climate “experts” that decided this ban.
https://web.archive.org/web/20121114230012/http://omnologos.com/full-list-of-participants-to-the-bbc-cmep-seminar-on-26-january-2006/
January 26th 2006,
BBC Television Centre, London
Specialists:
Robert May, Oxford University and Imperial College London
Mike Hulme, Director, Tyndall Centre, UEA
Blake Lee-Harwood, Head of Campaigns, Greenpeace
Dorthe Dahl-Jensen, Niels Bohr Institute, Copenhagen
Michael Bravo, Scott Polar Research Institute, University of Cambridge
Andrew Dlugolecki, Insurance industry consultant
Trevor Evans, US Embassy
Colin Challen MP, Chair, All Party Group on Climate Change
Anuradha Vittachi, Director, Oneworld.net
Andrew Simms, Policy Director, New Economics Foundation
Claire Foster, Church of England
Saleemul Huq, IIED
Poshendra Satyal Pravat, Open University
Li Moxuan, Climate campaigner, Greenpeace China
Tadesse Dadi, Tearfund Ethiopia
Iain Wright, CO2 Project Manager, BP International
Ashok Sinha, Stop Climate Chaos
Andy Atkins, Advocacy Director, Tearfund
Matthew Farrow, CBI
Rafael Hidalgo, TV/multimedia producer
Cheryl Campbell, Executive Director, Television for the Environment
Kevin McCullough, Director, Npower Renewables
Richard D North, Institute of Economic Affairs
Steve Widdicombe, Plymouth Marine Labs
Joe Smith, The Open University
Mark Galloway, Director, IBT
Anita Neville, E3G
Eleni Andreadis, Harvard University
Jos Wheatley, Global Environment Assets Team, DFID
Tessa Tennant, Chair, AsRia
BBC attendees:
Jana Bennett, Director of Television
Sacha Baveystock, Executive Producer, Science
Helen Boaden, Director of News
Andrew Lane, Manager, Weather, TV News
Anne Gilchrist, Executive Editor Indies & Events, CBBC
Dominic Vallely, Executive Editor, Entertainment
Eleanor Moran, Development Executive, Drama Commissioning
Elizabeth McKay, Project Executive, Education
Emma Swain, Commissioning Editor, Specialist Factual
Fergal Keane, (Chair), Foreign Affairs Correspondent
Fran Unsworth, Head of Newsgathering
George Entwistle, Head of TV Current Affairs
Glenwyn Benson, Controller, Factual TV
John Lynch, Creative Director, Specialist Factual
Jon Plowman, Head of Comedy
Jon Williams, TV Editor Newsgathering
Karen O’Connor, Editor, This World, Current Affairs
Catriona McKenzie, Tightrope Pictures catriona@tightropepictures.com
BBC Television Centre, London (cont)
Liz Molyneux, Editorial Executive, Factual Commissioning
Matt Morris, Head of News, Radio Five Live
Neil Nightingale, Head of Natural History Unit
Paul Brannan, Deputy Head of News Interactive
Peter Horrocks, Head of Television News
Peter Rippon, Duty Editor, World at One/PM/The World this Weekend
Phil Harding, Director, English Networks & Nations
Steve Mitchell, Head Of Radio News
Sue Inglish, Head Of Political Programmes
Frances Weil, Editor of News Special Events
On the BBC attendee list: Jon Plowman, Head of Comedy
That figures.
Yes, so what is @mikewattam trying to tell us: that the BBC has NO experts? I mean, if I want Machinery or other product SERVICE from my dealer, I should ask the Butcher, the Baker or the Candlestick maker? No, I expect the Service point to have adequately / More than so, qualified personnel. The BBC, the Gov’t, others in the MSM definitely Non!
Drama & Entertainment but to name a couple … and if you support that …. I’m nae gonnae say fit a think aboot ‘im.
L@@K, we have this RED weather warning hanging over us: trains cancelled / stay home etc …. What have we got? Autumnal weather – SOME leaves blowing about, soil thankfully drying UP – means the Slow/ LATE/ LAZY (?) / whatever farmers can get around to harvest their crops [ Read into that : the young who thought they knew better than their Peers or Elders ]. A Baler just went past this now – Here? what to bale at this time of year that should have been done a LOoOoNG time ago when we had better weather? Maybe @mikewattam would like to tell the BBC news team that, so that they can fact check / verify Hah!
Plowman, Huh? He couldnae plou a straight furra wi’out a horsie, Widnae e’en ken fit a Feiring wis!
The BBC invited 28 environmental activists to pretend to be the BBC’s “best scientific experts”. But only three of the activists were scientists, and because of this seminar of activists pretending to be the best scientific experts, scientists who disagree with activists like Greta, are banned by the BBC. With Parkinson dead, the only interviewers interested in interviewing scientists seem to be Neil Oliver and Jan Jekielek. I don’t watch BBC News or buy mainstream rags anymore. But you can still read two newspapers. I buy the monthly “The Light” newspaper, and the weekly UK edition of “The Epoch Times”. On page A9 of today’s Epoch Times it mentions that Ned Nikolov was the guest editor of the special issue of the journal “Climate”. Gareth Jones of the Met Office insults Ned using the curious dogmatic term ‘denier’. He calls him someone who denies the existence of the Climate, using unscientific terms such as ‘climate denier’, ‘denier clown’ and ‘popular with the science denial community’. But at least Gavin Schmidt of NASA has some scientific curiosity. He wants to look at Ned’s emails.
Re. Ned Nikolov, you know you’re over the target when they don’t ignore you any more. Ad hominem nonsense only helps draw attention to Ned’s work.