Vile, disgusting and evil; that just about covers my feelings regarding the Oslo attacks. However there is one wrinkle that I need to write about - the BBC.
This is Christmas and all their birthdays in one for the BBC. From now on if anyone dares to doubt the 'religion of peace' then this Oslo attack will be brought up to show that 'all religions have their extremists'. The BBC will ignore the relative number of attacks, ignore the vicious genocidal hatred pumped out by Islamic regimes and the multitude of Islamic terrorist groups on a daily basis and instead concentrate on one isolated event. The BBC were muted in their initial coverage of these attacks as they feared an Islamic dimension but now are in full flow. The BBC disgust me on a daily basis.
This is Christmas and all their birthdays in one for the BBC. From now on if anyone dares to doubt the 'religion of peace' then this Oslo attack will be brought up to show that 'all religions have their extremists'. The BBC will ignore the relative number of attacks, ignore the vicious genocidal hatred pumped out by Islamic regimes and the multitude of Islamic terrorist groups on a daily basis and instead concentrate on one isolated event. The BBC were muted in their initial coverage of these attacks as they feared an Islamic dimension but now are in full flow. The BBC disgust me on a daily basis.
Last I checked there were in the region of about 17,500 Islamic attacks since the Twin Towers incident, compared to around half a dozen attacks linked to Christian/right wing groups.
ReplyDeleteBut the BBC will stick to its anti right narrative no doubt.
How tasteful to use this terrible event to make a shallow point, based on hypothetical future coverage. Also, I wouldn't describe the initial coverage as 'muted'.
ReplyDelete