Guest opinion By Christopher Monckton of Brenchley
One of the chief reasons why the governing class in Britain near-unanimously supports the climate alarmists is the unspeakable BBC, which, for decades now, has relentlessly endorsed every overblown, half-baked prediction by the profiteers of doom. If it has given coverage to skeptics at all, has done so sparingly and sneeringly.
Its charter and its agreement with the Secretary of State oblige it to be impartial, but it has decided not to be. The bad news, from the BBC’s point of view, is that John Whittingdale, the newly-appointed Cabinet Minister responsible for the BBC’s many sins, has little time for the organization, whose coverage of the recent UK general election was even more biased against the eventually successful Tories than usual.
The Cabinet are out for blood. Well, the best step they could take would be to abolish the BBC license fee of $250 a year (£145.50, to be exact) – not far short of a dollar a day – which everyone who watches any live program on television, whether or not the BBC broadcast it, is obliged by law, on pain of criminal conviction for a misdemeanor, to pay. Let the BBC live by attracting advertising, like everyone else.
I do not pay. I discovered some years ago, when we lived in a remote Highland glen where no television signal could penetrate, that one thinks more independently if one is not constantly exposed to the plethora of pusillanimous, politically-correct prejudices that our news channels provide. I have long given up watching live TV.
The BBC employs an army of “TV license inspectors” – known to the growing unlicensed community as “goons”. Each goon, tamquam leo rugiens, prowls about with a television detector van, quaerens quem devoret.
When the detector vans first came into use, the then Postmaster-General, Lord de la Warr, said he did not want to create an army of snoopers. The vans (see above) were accordingly made as obvious as possible. When I was a lad, we used to throw doubtful tomatoes at them as they passed, or put mouldy potatoes up their tailpipes: that works better than the banana that Axel Foley used in Beverly Hills Cop (which I didn’t watch on live TV, officer, honest I didn’t).
Some of the vans (see above) looked like clothes-horses. We often festooned them with pairs of knickers from people’s washing lines, so that they could have gone into the rag trade by the time they returned to base.
The point is that Britain does not like snoopers. An Englishman’s home is his castle – and, in a more real sense, a Scotsman’s home too. The goons, though, are actually very skilled at what they do. Astonishingly, one criminal conviction in every ten in Britain is for evading payment of the TV licence.
A government sufficiently angry with the BBC’s anti-capitalist, anti-enterprise, anti-Tory, anti-carbon, anti-fracking, anti-Britain, anti-freedom, anti-everything bias to take away the absurdly anachronistic licence fee would cut criminality in Britain by 10% at a stroke.
Indeed, it might well cut crime by a good bit more than that, because often it is petty offenses that lead people from the straight and narrow into a life of crime.
The detector vans now come in two kinds: the visible ones, intended to deter, and the unmarked ones, intended to deceive. Gone is Lord de la Warr’s pious intention not to create an army of snoopers. Most of the vans are now furtive: not such an obvious target for us street brats and our rotten fruit.
The goons write once a month to every one of the 6% of British households that does not have a TV licence. The best legal advice is never, ever to reply. If they turn up at the doorstep, never, ever let them in and never, ever answer any question they ask.
Make them go and get a warrant, but serve them with a schedule of your time-costs before they go. Then, if they return with a warrant, you can charge them whatever you want for having your time wasted. And always video everything they say and do. Half the time they’ll turn and flee as soon as they know they’re on camera.
The goons will often demand your name. Nothing in the law requires you to give it. You are obliged to render them all reasonable assistance in inspecting your equipment. And not a whit more.
On YouTube they have been caught out not only trying to entrap innocent citizens unlawfully but also plugging in unplugged TVs so that they can then say the equipment was capable of receiving a signal.
You can refuse to let them in unless the court confirms a warrant has indeed been issued. The goons can also be legitimately refused entry, even with a warrant, unless and until the BBC or the police have confirmed to you that their identity card is not a fake.
When the goons prove their warrant and their identity and come in, they are entitled to do only one thing: inspect your television, or any other equipment (such as a computer) that may be capable of receiving live TV.
You are allowed to watch recorded programs without a license, but – strange though this must seem to those born in freedom – you must not watch or record live programs without one.
You can watch catch-up TV without a licence. So, if you don’t mind waiting an hour or two or a day or two, you can lawfully watch just about any TV program.
On YouTube there are hundreds of videos of goons penetrating people’s homes, usually without a warrant. In some videos, when householders have refused to give their names, the goons have menaced them with the offense of failing to co-operate.
It is indeed an offense, more serious than that of not having a licence, to fail to assist the goons in inspecting your equipment if they ask, but it is not an offense to refuse to answer any questions other than questions about how your TV works. Specifically, the law does not oblige you to give your name, or to answer any questions about what you do or do not watch. So don’t.
Shortly after we set up house in Edinburgh, the goons parked a gray, unmarked van with blacked-out rear and side windows (above: the licence-plate is not genuine, for by convention we don’t picture real ones) at the front of the house.
They left the engine running for 45 minutes, which is actually illegal under anti-pollution laws: but in some of the vans that is the only way they can power their detectors.
Recently, having sent me a letter saying they would take no action till 14 May, on 12 May they parked not one but two unmarked detector vans with blacked-out windows (above, and note the perpetual sunshine that Scotland enjoys each May) outside my house. Entrapment may be unlawful in the U.S., but, shamefully, it is lawful here.
However, if They can detect us, we can detect Them. After I had gone out and ostentatiously photographed the vans from every angle, They drove off, mutteringly disappointed.
Next, They tried doing drive-by shootings, using the same vans. However, we again detected Them trying to detect us. Frankly, it wouldn’t have mattered what vans They’d used. We have the technology. We’re used to defending our property. Once our yacht – a magnificent Flying Fifteen was sent to the bottom of Loch Rannoch and stove in by two RAF Chinooks flying far too low one night and clouting the masthead.
We installed certain devices and, when the RAF police arrived to take our complaint, we showed them a picture of a Tornado fighter flying just 50 feet above our North Lawn. It had been taken from 3000 feet above the lawn. They went white. “How did you get that?” they asked. “We have the technology,” I replied, “but I’m not telling you how we did it.” They still don’t know.
The excessive low flying, which had been a pest for decades and had caused dreadful losses of livestock locally, as well as blowing slates off the roof of our steading and terrifying my late mother-in-law, who had survived the Blitz with equanimity, promptly ceased.
But I digress. I tell this tale of the license fee because, just about everywhere around the world, there is complete astonishment that we allow for a single instant this ridiculous pantomime of the licence fee and the humungous police-state snooping regime and the millions of otherwise blameless criminals it creates. And the staggering, entirely unjustifiable cost of the unspeakable, prejudiced, politically-correct BBC.
In the 21st century, in a free country, the State should not require us to subsidize its TV service to the tune of $4-5 billion a year, particularly when that TV service, in sullen and flagrant breach of its contract with the government and people, altogether refuses to provide balanced coverage of politics, and specifically of climate change.
Why should we have to pay for wall-to-wall Marxism when we can get it for free by listening to the ruling National Socialist Workers’ Party of Scotland, or the Royal Society in England?
At present, I am preparing a report to be sent to the BBC’s trust, a fumbling, toothless watchdog, demonstrating the extent of the corporation’s malevolent and systemic prejudice on the climate question, its wilful misrepresentations and its refusals to correct deliberate errors, and demanding that the trust should take certain specific steps to restore the impartiality that the law entitles the licence-fee payer to expect in return for his dollar a day.
If the trust fails to respond promptly and properly (on past form this is very likely, for the one-sidedness of the British establishment’s opinion on climate is impenetrable, and the trust are a bunch of blancmanges), we shall complain to the Secretary of State.
If Whitto does nothing, we are gathering our forces and our finances to mount a judicial review of his administrative decision not to act as a reasonable Secretary of State would have to act on being given masses of overwhelming evidence, quietly assembled over many years, of the BBC’s rank prejudice and flagrant, in-your-face bias on the climate question.
They even lied when I took them to the High Court some years ago to make them halve the length of an objectionable 90-minute personal attack. The High Court judge said I’d substantially won the action – it’s in the transcript, and the program’s length was cut to 45 minutes and transferred to BBC 4, which no one watches – but they announced I’d lost.
The Secretary of State, on receiving our letter before action in judicial review, will require the trust to respond. If it does not respond properly to him, he will then be able to give it two choices: do its job or expect legislation to bring to an unlamented end the licence fee, the monstrous poll tax on the poor on which it lives a life of luxury and ease.
Monckton’s Test applies. The test of whether a piece of legislation has passed its smell-by date and ought to be repealed is whether anyone would dream of re-enacting it if it were done away with. No politician would dare to try to reintroduce the hated licence fee once it had been swept away. It has had its chips, as they say from the casinos of Vegas to the fish-shops of Yorkshire. Let it be abolished. Few but the BBC, the goons and the magistrates’ courts would mourn its passing.
You may ask why this has not been done long before now. Margaret Thatcher tried her best. She appointed a sound and saintly but other-worldly academic philosopher to review the licence fee, but he was so impressed by the independent TV companies saying how “special” the BBC was that he left the fee in place.
I saw him some years later and explained to him, as to a child – which he splendidly was in all matters of this world – that the independent companies were the indirect beneficiaries of the licence fee, for otherwise they would have the BBC competing with them for advertising. The licence fee thus subsidizes – and Leftizes – all TV stations in Britain. They didn’t want Auntie – as the BBC is known – sharing their cake.
He saw the point at once. But by then it was far too late. However, John Whittingdale will not bother to set up another enquiry. He is the sort to take swift, decisive and – to the BBC – deadly action. By this time you may be wondering whether he and I are in cahoots. You might think that. I couldn’t possibly comment.
Now that Auntie has parked her tanks on my lawn, I’m going to park mine on hers. Mine are bigger, and they serve the cause of truth, justice, and the British way. Perhaps, once the existing corrupt organization has been purged and the red-blooded Marxists replaced with blue-blooded capitalists, we can have Top Gear back.
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Heavens, M’Lud, is that your matt black BMW (M6?) Coupe parked outside your front door on Google Street View? If so, you have just been elevated in my estimation from your position as simple hero to the rarified atmosphere of superhero status 🙂
Not only do you encapsulate in the minds of many the essence of what a Lord should be – an eccentric statesman yet genuinely and lovingly concerned with the well-being of his subjects, etc. – but it looks like you may even be a petrolhead to boot! Can it get any better? And now I’m beginning to sound like a groupie, a Monckton fanboy. Oh well, so be it, maybe I am, and maybe I should be proud of it! After all, great men follow great men…
Mr Smit is as endearingly flattering as many who have commented here. And I am indeed a petrolhead: until a few years ago, when a very rare disease attacked my vitals and made driving impossible, I drove Ducati 996, Honda SP2, Suzuki GSXR1100 and Aprilia RSV1000 V-twin motorcycles, When we lived in Cyprus, I belonged to the Sunday at Seven sportbike brigade, which I led on mountain roads because the Ducati was better at going round the bends: I have the worn footpegs and knee-sliders to prove it.
Christopher,
I’m not into cars, and I don’t own a car, but I’m definitely a Top Gear fan. I’m sure you saw their Arctic special a year or so ago. Jeremy Clarkson’s commentary right at the end of the program contained a surprisingly sceptical comment for the BBC, in fact I’m surprised they let it through. I’ve little doubt that Clarkson has climate sceptical leanings.
Keep up the good work and good luck with your battle with the BBC!
Chris
My MP Andrew Selous has replied as follows :-
Dear Mr Mallett,
Thank you for your email and for raising with me your concerns about whether the BBC is violating the terms of its charter by refusing to give air time to global warming sceptics. The new Government will now deliver a comprehensive review of the BBC Royal Charter, ensuring it delivers value for money for the licence fee payer, while maintaining a world class service and supporting our creative industries.
Given your specific concerns I have written on your behalf to the Director General of the BBC, Lord Tony Hall, to raise on your behalf concerns about the BBC refusing to give air time to global warming sceptics. Please be assured that I will be back in touch with you as soon as I receive a reply to my letter to the BBC.
With very best wishes,
Andrew Selous
Member of Parliament for SW Bedfordshire
& Parliamentary Under Secretary of State for Justice
http://www.andrewselous.org.uk
This whole thing reminds me of the poll tax, introduced during the Thatcher years in the UK. I had payment options, cash (Yeah right. Didn’t have much cash after tax thanks Mags), direct debit (DD) or standing order (SO). So, wanting control over my bank account and finaces, and not letting some two bit local council, direct access to that account via DD I went down the SO path. Month after month I used to get letters saying I had not paid my tax, when in fact I had. The issue was the time it took for the transaction to be paid by my bank, funds leaving my account and then accepeted by bank the council used. I was sent letter after letter stating that I had not paid my tax and would be called to court to answer, even put in prison FFS! I replied, once and once only, for the council to do exactly that. I never heard from them again. Fortunately, a few years later I migrated away from what is the UK copy of the USSR/North Korea etc. A once great nation, now simply a source of funds for the EU tax teat suckers. But I have a similar problem here in Aus and, having worked in the banking IT industry for 20 years, there is absolutely NO excuse for delay or fees for fund transfers. None what so ever!
It is strange that, when the poll tax was £300, there was rioting in the streets. Now that the council tax is £1600 (and rising, despite claims by the government that it is frozen) nobody seems to mind.
But the poll tax was a Tory tax, and the council tax is a Socialist tax. It is extremely rare to find a British rioter who votes Tory or UKIP. It is the Left who, when – as they always do, they lose the argument – resort to violence.
And, of course, the Tories are quite happy to keep the Socialist council tax going, at ever increasing levels.
“Richard Mallett
May 19, 2015 at 7:33 am”
The council tax is a local Govn’t tax, a, as stated council tax. Were “rates” not a council tax? It’s nothing like income tax or VAT. I can assume you know nothing of tax in the UK as it seems you have not had a “visit” from the VAT man.
No, I have never been registered for VAT.
Oh my, it does get better! You reside next door to the Scottish Malt Whisky Society, when you’re in town, of course. How convenient…
But the whisky is better and the company even more congenial at my club on Princes’ Street, with a fine view from the members’ drawing room to the Castle. For a good budget whisky, I recommend 14-year Oban single malt, which nicely combines the smoky peatiness of the island malts with the smooth mellowness of the Highland malts.
Hahaha! Thanks for the advice, your Lordship. Yes, I too am very partial to the Island malts, and Oban is a very fine drink indeed. And kudos for your biking adventures! I have a 1979 Kawsaki Z750 upright twin, so am very familiar with the that fabulous feeling of freedom afforded by sitting astride a large and powerful engine on two wheels 🙂
I suppose these points have been substantially covered already, but;
a) The UK’s Television License fee is compulsory; it is exacted on all who have a TV with the full force of the State, under the threat of loss of liberty.
b) All of the License income is hypothecated to the BBC. It follows that all who work and/or present there, such as Dimbleby, Paxmey wan, etc., are existentially reliant on at least one person per week (mainly a wretchedly poor woman ) being sent to prison.
c) A quite subtle point is that the economic effect is the wasteful over-production of TV entertainment in the UK. For example, to watch a subscription channel, the BBC fee must be paid, as well as the subscription fee. The effect is that every programme that the subscription channel makes, the BBC makes a programme that is not actually needed.Thus, the UK produces twice as many telly-programmes than are needed; and the populace pays twice as much for their Television programmes.
d)The BBC alone, are the sole arbiters on what they will, and will not show. The BBC Management’s choices are not moderated by external considerations other than the opinions of their socio-economic peer-groups … mainly circles of Oxbridge Graduates operating in the Media and Politics, within the Metropolis
.
e) An example of the priorities of this elite. BBC 20,000 staff: Royal Navy 35,000
In response to TonyN, They can’t take away your liberty for not holding a TV licence: only for contempt of court where the magistrates have ordered you to pay. If you’re poor, they’ll make arrangements for you to pay over time – an arrangement that the BBC also offers, though you pay extra for it.
All of TonyN’s other points are horrifyingly true. We need to spend a lot more on the armed forces, and nothing at all on the unspeakable BBC.
It seems to me that the only reason to spend a lot more on the armed forces is if we want to continue to be the world’s policeman. I would argue that the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan left the state of those countries (and the threat from them) worse than before.
AFAIK we are still spending millions per head of population on the Falkland Islands.
Why on Earth would you pay a license fee for a public broadcast? Isn’t that what taxes are for? I think everybody is confused by historic “wings”. We have one system and it is owned, lock stock and barrel by central banks. Forget the left and right, we have something far worse, global fascism comes close but is still not a perfect description. Running the world’s wars statistically, since at least*, the decoding of the enigma machine has created our reality. We live in a model, a creation of old world economists! Have a nice day 😉
* It goes much further back, a history of war is a history of the bond market.
Mr Mallett is not happy at defense spending in the UK. But one unquestionable benefit of that spending was that, as a result of the defeat of a hideous and murderous regime in Argentina following the failure of its invasion of British sovereign territory in the Falkland Islands, that nation was set free.
It is a shame that, with Margaret Thatcher and her more than usually competent government no longer in charge, the subsequent adventures of Britain’s armed forces in Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya etc. have been far costlier and fare less beneficial to the nations on whose soil they were fought.
Exactly. If we were to examine the cost / benefit ratio for the armed forces, it would not look good.
I’ve learned quite a lot more about the BBC and UK laws and heavy handed methods of thought control from this post than I expected. This follows my “education” on the state-structured tax cheats in Switzerland and the wealth they generated during WW2 and into current times. Then there are the French. I would retreat to some remote comfort in the wilder places in the U.S. except that the new normal of state-sponsored over reach has spread across the land like some passage from Lord of the Rings.
Two vans eh, that sounds like possible political targeting to me. Was one of the van drivers named Lois Lerner? Has anyone investigated payola connections between BBC execs and harassment of political targets by these contractors?
But, but, but….think about how long it might take us to get the Chilton Report if not for the BBC’s tireless, relentless, indeed indefatigable efforts to get the tardy report released. You Brits should be very thankful for reporting like that, and gladly cough up this mere pittance for the valiant nay intrepid job the BBC does to keep its subjects informed.
Meanwhile, over on the Left Coast of the colonies, I can pick up about 40 channels with my latter-day rabbit ears – most in HD – but only 30 minutes daily of BBC World now since KCET discontinued carrying MHZ worldview, which offered 2 hour segments of newscasts from around the world, including BBC, NHK, DW, France 24, Euromax, CCTV, CNC, and RT.
MHZ was dropped about the time of the MH17 affair, when the western media was in a full-court press accusing Russia of the shoot-down. No fair letting RT tell the Russian side of the story, I guess.
KCET still carries NHK full-time, and global warming is a common theme in some of their programming. I can also pick up CCTV out of 29 Palms, which community relays and/or rebroadcasts several Chinese TV channels for the entertainment and edification, one must assume, of the marines stationed nearby.
You’d be surprised how easy it is to make TV enjoyable simply by turning the volume to 0. If you really must know what they are saying, there’s always the closed captions option.
<strike<ChiltonChilcot Report
(Chilton repair manual search open in other tab, and still working on first cup of coffee are my paltry excuses for this unpardonable flub)
By way of atonement I offer this visit from Central Services:
from the Terry Gilliam’s movie Brazil
It’s the Chilcot Report.
When did the license fee originate? During WWII (for radio, of course)? Back then I would assume there was sufficient unanimity among the British public that a promise of political ‘neutrality’ was plausible. Today I expect not. Too many of one side or another (and there are more than two sides) would find some position to complain about. Given this reality, it is clearly time to stop pretending and abolish the fee.
Here (in America) I would join the ranks of those ‘cutting the cord’ of cable TV, but for the excellent Special Report (on Fox News, with Brett Baier), and the possibility of watching Red Sox games (though I rarely find the time). Otherwise, we watch a Saturday-evening DVD or stream from Netflix, via the Internet. Some of those, like old ‘Inspector Morse’ shows, and the wonderful ‘Foyle’s War’ series, I think were produced by the BBC, so I would hope they would survive in some form even absent the absurd license fee.
/Mr Lynn
Both Foyle’s war and Inspector Morse are ITV creations. The BBC had nothing at all to do with either series.
My mistake. Even more reason to take them down a peg or two.
Another point that may be of interest, is that it is a creature of technology. At the start of radio broadcasting, there was really only enough bandwidth for one station to transmit, to avoid interference. The USA got over the problem by having lots of low-power stations to cover their large country.By contrast the UK is a small area, and only one station could be supported. This meant that an unavoidable monopoly was necessary to run this station. The original director Lord Reith disapproved of monopoly per-se, but was stuck with the problem of how to manage it until enough bqndwidth became available. He thought it best to steer the British Broadcasting Corporation between the rock of Government control and hence propaganda, and the whirlpool of commercial monopoly and hence corruption. He chose Quality as the way forward, where only the highest standards were acceptable. Sadly, WWII and then a repeat of the bandwidth crisis with the introduction of TV, and later Colour TV, has led to Reith’s Quality path becoming overgrown.
As with all institutions who live for too long, the BBC has now become comprehensively corrupted, and is a creature of rent-seekers and social, cultural and political hegemonists of all kinds. I give one example, where a BBC presenter can claim that the purpose of the BBC is to hold the government to account. In other words, those in the BBC think they have a right to act as Her Majesty’s loyal Opposition yet without being voted in to perform that task, or having to swear an oath of allegiance to the Crown ( aka all of the citizens) .
Now that each of us has more bandwidth in our mobile phones than the BBC started with, there is no technical need for an ‘arms-length’ supposedly independent monopoly broadcaster any more.
It really is time for Parliament to recognise that, as a temporary expedient, the BBC has done well but now there is no shortage of bandwidth, it is time to call it a day. As a nation, we are at great risk of disintegration via the antics of the quidnuncs who have taken over the BBC.
Your Lordship:
Hear HEAR!
– a Yank fan (of both you and Top Gear)
hmmmm…a tea party comes to mind. The Port of London perhaps? You could dump your remotes there.
Hmmm. I wonder what the other residents of Queen Street make of His Lordship claiming their communal gardens as ‘his’ ?
‘Goons,’ are not government employees, they work for Capita, a private company.
Capita work for tv licensing a bbc company.
I’m sorry to be so lighthearted, but the idea of mobile “television detectors” soundMonty Python sounds like something out of a Monty Python sketch.
^^ sorry about the garbling — damn computer isn’t licensed ^^
It is unlikely the BBC will lose the license fee. The TV broadcast situation in America is a real object lesson to anyone over here. Not only is USA TV deluged with twice as much advertising, but there is no legal requirement on TV stations (such as Fox News) to even attempt to present objective news coverage. That is why Fox News in the USA is so much worse than Sky News in the UK and generally gets a number of “pants on fire” categorisations for lies from organisations such as Politifact (who incidentally have a go at Obama too, just in case you are going to claim they are biased). But let’s be fair, Fox News sometimes does tell the truth too.
Monckton does not like the BBC coverage of climate change purely because it IS forced to be objective. The fact is that at least three different surveys (using at least two different methods) of climate scientists who have published in peer-reviewed journals (the gold standard) conclude that 97% (or 98% in one survey) have found AGW to be real.
The dissenters from this viewpoint are generally of a conservative bias with hierarchichal / individualist character traits, which says that arguing with the conclusions of mainstream climate science is a political act, rather than anything to do with science. And the post from Monckton and similar comments posted here containing the phrase”wall-to-wall Marxism” also places him and various comment authors firmly in the same camp.
Since AGW is consensus mainstream science, backed by a variety of analysis methods and agreed by climate scientists of all political persuasions, why should those seeking to question it on political grounds be given an equivalent air time? They should not. The science is clear, and the ideology of those opposing the science is clear too.
A further interesting correlation is with education level. Conservatives with a higher level of education tend more to oppose AGW, with the exception that if the education is in climate science then they support AGW.
The weather forecasters are a good case in point. Going back 10 years when weather forecasts were only good for a few days, meteorologists were split around 50:50 on AGW. However, with the advent of more accurate forecasts based on ensembles of supercomputer weather runs, these guys had to learn to look ahead a few more days, which meant they had to look at some physical effects they could previously ignore. As a result of the necessary relearning now 90% of weather forecasters will confirm AGW is real.
So with expert opinion swinging in favour of AGW, and religious leaders telling everyone it is immoral not to address climate changes, why should be BBC not present these facts?
Pete, why are you pontificating about others saying AGW is real? Why don’t you show the data they, and presumably you, have for AGW being real ?
Most readers here, many of who are scientists and engineers, don’t give a sh!t about endless appeals to authority.
…. and, failing that, which is inevitable, could you please provide data showing that 10 years ago, meteorologists were split 50:50 on AGW and that now 90% of weather forecasters will confirm that AGW is real.
Climate Pete
You assert
Say what!? “BBC coverage of climate change” IS “objective”?
On which planet is that true?
Clearly, you have not read this thread. I refer you to my above post here and the subsequent posts in this thread.
That post pertains to my complaint to the BBC which can be read here and is that
The BBC has failed to answer the complaint.
Please explain any errors you think exist in the clear evidence and argument presented in the complaint or admit that the BBC provides “blatantly biased and factually inaccurate political propaganda” on climate change.
Richard
Just read your words. Someone … please pass me the bucket !
Well, let’s wait and see if ‘Climate Pete’ can verify his claims, as requested by ‘philincalifornia’ – might be fun 🙂
Yep, educated, strident, pompous, clueless = State-registered Useful Idiot.
As I said in my letter to my MP Andrew Selous :-
Since http://www.populartechnology.net/2009/10/peer-reviewed-papers-supporting.html
lists over 1350 peer reviewed papers supporting sceptic arguments, and http://www.co2science.org/ regularly publishes links to new papers, it is not true to say that ‘the science is settled’ as some have claimed in the past.
I have notified Mark Garnier MP (Wyre Forest/Worcs) about this BBC and the Anglia Uni problem.
And 15 mins later I get a return email:
Hi Colin
Thanks for your email – given the topic, I have asked our HoC Office to respond directly to you.
Tracey XXXXXX
Parliamentary Caseworker
Mark Garnier MP’s Office
9a Lower Mill Street
Kidderminster
Worcs
DY11 6UU
Tel: XXXXXXX
my XXXXX’s to protect the innocent?!
Last night on BBC World Service (the worlds radio programme….yeah right!)
After a few hours of yadder up pops a female presenter: (as I remember and not)
“A business person (forgot name) has sponsored a bunch of people (scientists?) to journey round the world collecting DNA. Collected a huge amount of tiny creature DNA. On evaluation of the DNA the scientists(?) realised that it was all so sensitive to temperature. So we should be very aware of……. climate change”.
So really the DNA collected is nothing to do with murderers, rapist etc…just tiny things. I think for the most of us its irrelevant and thankfully did not take tax dollars perhaps? It was just a piece to further punch out the AGW threat as the BBC WS does on many occasions each night in UK.
I want you
http://www.classicmarvelforever.com/images/captain_britain2.gif
to stop low flight disturbance of cattle, small yachts and BBC non-subscribers NOW.
Entertaining and I agree wholeheartedly. But really just tilting at windmills.
The BBC are just the stooges. And the ABC in Australia. You really need to kill the corruption at it’s source. That’s the political activists masquerading as climate scientists.
As I said in my email to my MP :-
“Since
http://www.populartechnology.net/2009/10/peer-reviewed-paperssupporting.html
lists over 1350 peer reviewed papers supporting sceptic arguments, and http://www.co2science.org/ regularly publishes links to new papers, it is not true to say that ‘the science is settled’ as some have claimed in the past. “