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Thursday, 30 April 2015

The BBC's choice of whether to use 'said', 'claimed' or not report the story at all.

If a news story is negative for a party, person or country that the BBC opposes, yes the BBC is not the impartial reporter of the news that it claims to be, then the word 'said' or 'says' is used. As an example the headline on the BBC News main page this morning is:


If the news story is negative for a party, person or country that the BBC supports then the word 'claimed' or 'claims' is used. Look at BBC reports that start 'Ed Miliband has promised', later on will come 'the Conservative party claimed...'.

Of course if the story is really negative for a party, person or country that the BBC supports then the story will just not be reported at all. Currently if you News Google 'Margaret Hodege' these are the returned results...


On the BBC it is this...


Do you see how the BBC operate?

Unbiased by charter? I think not, bias seeps through their collective veins, you can see it every single day.

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