So, racism (even when it's not really racism) = bad.Paul Anderson wrote: ↑Mon Dec 05, 2022 11:07 am My response would have been “WHEN are you really from?!” (you crazy old bat)
But, ageism = good.
It is hard to keep up.
Moderator: Jon O'Neill
So, racism (even when it's not really racism) = bad.Paul Anderson wrote: ↑Mon Dec 05, 2022 11:07 am My response would have been “WHEN are you really from?!” (you crazy old bat)
Mark Deeks wrote: Why are you always so weird about everything?
Mark Deeks wrote: Why are you always so weird about everything?
Mark Deeks wrote: Why are you always so weird about everything?
That may work in a limited manner but it is definitely oversimplistic.Jon O'Neill wrote: ↑Sun Jan 22, 2023 9:38 pm What someone thinks of the BBC is generally a good barometer for how nutty they are on either side of the political spectrum.
Well, the main story is Zahawi. But if Boris is getting a guarantor on a loan that then gets a high profile job, then that is a story.Rhys Benjamin wrote: ↑Sun Jan 22, 2023 10:09 pm Also, the BBC's reporting of this Boris Johnson "had a guarantor on a loan" is such a non-story compared to the Zahawi affair which is way more serious - it just shows they had an agenda against Boris, and still do.
You have no idea about the party. It's a twink fest.Mark James wrote: ↑Sun Jan 22, 2023 11:38 pmthe gay Conservative who will be first in the fire if his fascist party actually got to implement thier ultimate agenda.
It may be but do you think you are a twink? Keep dreaming. As I said, you'll be first in the fire. And the fact you can't see it is depressing. The way people vote against their interest is the most frustrating part of politics. I'm a hard core leftist in terms of rhetoric on here but brass tax, I'm just about generating the best outcomes for the vast majority. As I said, humans are fucking amazing. We've gone to the fucking moon for Christ's sake. All the best stuff we have is when people come together to make sure everyone else is looked after. Conservatism is a "me first" ideology and when taken to it's logical conclusion becomes fascism.Rhys Benjamin wrote: ↑Mon Jan 23, 2023 12:10 amYou have no idea about the party. It's a twink fest.Mark James wrote: ↑Sun Jan 22, 2023 11:38 pmthe gay Conservative who will be first in the fire if his fascist party actually got to implement thier ultimate agenda.
I don't know if it's a, good thing or not but you make more sense when you are drunkMark James wrote: ↑Mon Jan 23, 2023 12:40 amIt may be but do you think you are a twink? Keep dreaming. As I said, you'll be first in the fire. And the fact you can't see it is depressing. The way people vote against their interest is the most frustrating part of politics. I'm a hard core leftist in terms of rhetoric on here but brass tax, I'm just about generating the best outcomes for the vast majority. As I said, humans are fucking amazing. We've gone to the fucking moon for Christ's sake. All the best stuff we have is when people come together to make sure everyone else is looked after. Conservatism is a "me first" ideology and when taken to it's logical conclusion becomes fascism.Rhys Benjamin wrote: ↑Mon Jan 23, 2023 12:10 amYou have no idea about the party. It's a twink fest.Mark James wrote: ↑Sun Jan 22, 2023 11:38 pmthe gay Conservative who will be first in the fire if his fascist party actually got to implement thier ultimate agenda.
This wasn't a story in the first place, and now it's been proven untrue. Boris and Sharp didn't meet until 3 months after the loan; the story alleged it happened it before.Rhys Benjamin wrote: ↑Sun Jan 22, 2023 10:09 pm Also, the BBC's reporting of this Boris Johnson "had a guarantor on a loan" is such a non-story compared to the Zahawi affair which is way more serious - it just shows they had an agenda against Boris, and still do.
Mark James wrote: ↑Sun Jan 22, 2023 11:38 pm I'm currently drunk off my ass in lanzarote so should probably stay out of it but fuck me.
Mark James wrote: ↑Sun Jan 22, 2023 11:38 pmthe gay Conservative who will be first in the fire if his fascist party actually got to implement thier ultimate agenda.
Do you want to make a more sober rephrasing of this stuff? I know you're giving your opinion on the Conservatives rather than on Rhys, but it still looks like using someone's sexuality as something to attack them with. Language like "you'll be first in the fire" - even if it is only what you imagine a political party would do - doesn't help.
Had to Google thatMark James wrote: ↑Wed Jan 25, 2023 11:44 am Not really. I'd equate it with the voting for the leopards who eat people's faces meme.
They'd have to build two!!Marc Meakin wrote: ↑Thu Jan 26, 2023 7:07 pm https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-64413242
Maybe they should build a prison for trans felons
I don't think this whole thing was really ever satisfactorily answered.Gavin Chipper wrote: ↑Sun May 22, 2022 5:46 pmThinking about this further, I'm not sure it would really work as a business model. If energy companies are just blindly buying and selling at the market rate, what happens if there is a fall in prices over any extended period of time? They just suck up the loss and sell to the public at the going rate?Gavin Chipper wrote: ↑Fri May 06, 2022 7:13 pmOK, thanks. I did wonder if it might be something like that. Still, the BBC article could have done a better job explaining it in the first place.Paul Worsley wrote: ↑Fri May 06, 2022 3:58 pm
As I understand it, oil prices, like all commodity prices, are determined by speculators and hedgers who are betting on price moves. OPEC can control the supply side of the supply/demand equation, but individual companies cannot. BP and Shell can't decide the spot price for oil anymore than Beaverbrooks can decide the spot price for gold.
Having said that, I do believe there is a case for a windfall tax on UK oil producing companies.
People/companies attempt to make money buying and selling shares etc. by e.g. trying to buy when prices are down and selling when they're up. So they can hold without selling for as long as they want. But companies sellings goods to the public are in a completely different position. People need these goods at a relatively constant rate so the companies can't just hold without selling, and companies in general set the prices accordingly. Obviously they can't just make anything up because other companies can sell at a lower price, but the point is that Tesco selling a pizza is not restricted by some market speculator sitting up all night at a computer in New York. So I'm not sure that a company would for energy prices either.
Anyway, James May questioned this on Have I Got News For You on Friday (well, not in that detail), but no answer came. It's just one of many things that the news assume everyone understands when almost no-one does.
Methinks you're suffering a bit with confirmation biasRhys Benjamin wrote: ↑Wed Feb 08, 2023 4:42 pm Had this been a Tory the word “Conservative” would have been in the headline or in the first paragraph at the very least.
I dare you to tell me the BBC aren’t biased.
https://t.co/iKXdZC9gOb
Agreed, either take offensive or hypocritical language out of the Bible or get marriage in a progressive tolerant religion, which probably don't exist anyway.*Gavin Chipper wrote: ↑Wed Feb 08, 2023 6:16 pm Also in the news, Sandi Toksvig complaining about the Church of England's marriage policy. But there's always a risk of encountering this sort of thing if you put any credence in an arbitrary branch of an arbitrary religion. The best solution is to not acknowledge the church. It's only relevant because people make it relevant.
Lol I thought yo was referring to meGavin Chipper wrote: ↑Thu Feb 09, 2023 8:43 am Is it really news that he praised Boris Johnson? Something to mention as an aside maybe but no big deal.
What story are you referring to?Marc Meakin wrote: ↑Fri Mar 03, 2023 3:31 pm Are the chickens coming home to roost?
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news
Indeed and now I can't find the page, maybe he's been exonerated already.Gavin Chipper wrote: ↑Mon Mar 06, 2023 1:05 pm I think it was about Boris Johnson misleading parliament. Meakin's poor linking skills!
Totally ridiculous
Nor did Gary Lineker. This is what he said, here and here:
Gary Lineker wrote: Good heavens, this is beyond awful.
He said the policy was "beyond awful" and "immeasurably cruel". He said it used "language that is not dissimilar" to 1930s Germany. It's his personal view expressed in strong terms, which claims the rhetoric surrounding the policy points in a dark direction. Is that the same thing as calling the government Nazis?Gary Lineker wrote: This is just an immeasurably cruel policy directed at the most vulnerable people in language that is not dissimilar to that used by Germany in the 30s, and I’m out of order?
Nor is Gary Lineker, any more than Andrew Neil is. He might publish his own views on politics on his own platforms, but has he ever given specific support to one party or another?
Does it matter which production company makes the programme? What is at issue, according to the BBC Editorial Guidelines, is whether "their public expressions of opinion have the potential to compromise the BBC’s impartiality".Rhys Benjamin wrote: ↑Sat Mar 11, 2023 12:08 pmand Alan Sugar isn’t a BBC employee (The Apprentice is an independent production).
When you say "the Beeb clearly agree with him", do you actually mean the editorial line of the BBC, or the personal views of other BBC contributors such as Alan Shearer and Ian Wright? If you mean the people at the top, then, well, I'd have a hard time believing that the BBC Chairman who has donated over £400k to the Tories and the Director General who once stood as a local Conservative Party candidate would naturally be aligned with Lineker's view.Rhys Benjamin wrote: ↑Sat Mar 11, 2023 12:08 pmWhat is ridiculous is the fact the Beeb clearly agree with him.
I haven't watched that episode, but QT usually has at least one Labour and one Conservative representative on the panel. Did they not on this occasion? And if they did, why could the Conservative not challenge it themselves? If you're asking why Fiona Bruce didn't challenge it, a statement like that is obviously opinion rather than something presented as fact. Was it really necessary for her to interject "in the interest of balance, in case any of our viewers think there has been some kind of horrific necromancy experiment, we must point out that the prime minister is not Hitler"?Rhys Benjamin wrote: ↑Sat Mar 11, 2023 12:08 pm the Biased Bolshevik Corporation literally had an audience member say Sunak is Hitler on Question Time and it went unchallenged
Why did Clarkson have no obligation to be impartial? When he presented Top Gear, did he not have a similar relationship with the BBC as Lineker?Rhys Benjamin wrote: ↑Sat Mar 11, 2023 12:08 pm they’ve all gone on strike about this; and much of the same people defending Lineker called for Clarkson to be fired even though he had no obligation to be impartial unlike Lineker. It’s “free speech if I agree”.
In my opinion he has nothing to apologise for.
I'm going to link to the BBC Editorial Guidelines again, specifically this bit (my emphasis):Rhys Benjamin wrote: ↑Sat Mar 11, 2023 12:08 pm If Lineker worked for BT and/or Walkers alone this wouldn’t be a problem, it’s the fact we all pay his extortionate tax-avoided wage and he has a legal obligation to be impartial.
BBC Editorial Guidelines, section 15.3.13 wrote: The risk is greater where the public expressions of opinion overlap with the area of the individual’s work. The risk is lower where an individual is expressing views publicly on an unrelated area, for example, a sports or science presenter expressing views on politics or the arts.
He did? Sack him then. Comparing him to Osama Bin Laden...Mark James wrote: ↑Sat Mar 11, 2023 4:02 pm So when Gary Lineker tweeted "Bin Corbyn", that wasn't an impartial political tweet that demanded censure?
I don't think Lineker called the government Nazis but if the jack boots fits......Rhys Benjamin wrote: ↑Sat Mar 11, 2023 12:08 pm Andrew Neil never called the Government Nazis, nor was he ever party political, and Alan Sugar isn’t a BBC employee (The Apprentice is an independent production). They made Clarkson apologise in 2011 for joking - joking! - about shooting strikers.
What is ridiculous is the fact the Beeb clearly agree with him. Lineker has been rapped for his partiality before and ignored it and they said on Friday they weren’t going to take any action; the Biased Bolshevik Corporation literally had an audience member say Sunak is Hitler on Question Time and it went unchallenged; they’ve all gone on strike about this; and much of the same people defending Lineker called for Clarkson to be fired even though he had no obligation to be impartial unlike Lineker. It’s “free speech if I agree”.
Lineker has still not apologised.
If Lineker worked for BT and/or Walkers alone this wouldn’t be a problem, it’s the fact we all pay his extortionate tax-avoided wage and he has a legal obligation to be impartial.
I saw one of them about Andrew Neil.Marc Meakin wrote: ↑Sat Mar 11, 2023 8:08 pm https://photos.app.goo.gl/Wtw6eq1nApykV3HY6
Incinsistant BBC
Pretty sure Lineker is freelance
I think he wants HMRC to think so.
A more cynical person would think this got buried under all the Lineker MOTD bullshit.Gavin Chipper wrote: ↑Mon Mar 13, 2023 10:09 am Seems Lineker is coming back.
I don't think we've discussed the alleged shelving of David Attenborough's programme, to be shown only on the iPlayer because of the fear of "right wing backlash". Apparently it was never meant for broadcast, but what does everyone think?