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BBC reputation deservedly in freefall

The Light

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Issue 43 - March 2024

Media smear merchants fail to extinguish The Light

- RICHARD HOUSE

BBC reputation deservedly in freefall

I GREW up in a household that seemed to have no doubts about the veracity and quality of BBC journalism.

BBC radio news and the the Home Service (that became Radio 4 in 1967, when I was 12) were on in our home all the time.

And woe betide my brother or me uttering a single word while the 6 o'clock news was on the radio; and my dad, after a hard day's manual work, was glued to it as we ate our evening meal together in dutiful silence.

It's hard to pinpoint exactly when the naive scales fell from my eyes about the BBC. One early recollection I have is when one of my great heroes, Tony Benn, used to brilliantly call out the bias of BBC interviewers during live interviews (meaning that they couldn't edit out Benn's courageous exposing of their bias) one of the earliest examples of 'fearless speech' that I can recall.

At the time, and even during Jeremy Corbyn's era, I used to see this as a simple left/right issue, and that the BBC was inherently C/conservative.

Now I see it rather differently. It's not about left and right, but about establishment and anti-establishment. That is, Benn wasn't demonised by the media, including the BBC, because he was left-wing per se, but because he called out establishment abuses of power.

That is, to use the jargon: the BBC was and is institutionally biased against anything or anyone challenging the mainstream establishment narrative. And I think the same goes for Corbyn - and perhaps, even, for Liz Truss (see the article by lan Fantom in The Light issue 31).

FLERE HISTORIER FRA The Light

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The Light

Why do we trust the political class?

IT began, as most national embarrassments do, with good intentions and a graph. Gordon Brown, that high priest of responsible arithmetic, decided around the turn of the millennium that Britain owned too much shiny metal and not enough moral superiority.

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Issue 63, 2025

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Dilemma of conflicting 'rights'

No community should violate the freedoms of a minority

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4 mins

Issue 63, 2025

The Light

The Light

The ritual execution of Princess Diana

ON 31st August 1997, Princess Diana died in a car crash in Paris's Pont de l'Alma tunnel. Official accounts are contradictory and simple research points to a long-running conspiracy.

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Issue 63, 2025

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Sugar industry's fluoride 'solution'

Researchers tasked with sweetening tooth decay problem

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4 mins

Issue 63, 2025

The Light

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Trump's colonial plan

U.S. takes Gaza, and Israel takes the West Bank

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5 mins

Issue 63, 2025

The Light

The Light

All that glitters is not gold

Precious metal value boosted by economic turmoil

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3 mins

Issue 63, 2025

The Light

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End of the road is serfdom

Who controls the public mind? Economist warned of path to totalitarian oppression

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4 mins

Issue 63, 2025

The Light

The Light

Pushback against vast data centres

Communities in U.S. rally to repel Big Tech planning bids

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4 mins

Issue 63, 2025

The Light

The Light

Water: Much more than we think

Gel-like state could be key to health and consciousness

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2 mins

Issue 63, 2025

The Light

Discover the formidable legal shields safeguarding your rights

The UK constitution isn't a single book; it's a living arsenal forged across centuries in charters, conventions, and court rulings.

time to read

2 mins

Issue 63, 2025

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