What you find with the BBC is they consistently put programmes on for the religious listeners which, although they're not my cup of tea, it's quite correct that they should be represented and I have no quarrel with it.
What you do find are lots of programmes similar to "An Island Parish", I only mention this programme as an example, now if you look or listen to these programmes they are unchallenged religious propaganda, again I have no objection to them individually.
There are a number of these religious programmes that go out on a regular basis BBC radio 4 seems to have the most of the BBC's religious content and once more that's OK why shouldn't religious people have their programming, there's no objections coming from my quarter.
T4TD is on six days a week an exclusively religious slot, then on BBC radio 2 five days a week Pause for thought another exclusively religious slot, the daily service BBC radio 4 (LW) Prayer For the Day seven days a week BBC radio 4, another one.
All of these programmes I have mentioned are presented by the religious for the religious there's no input from non-religious people, there are also a number of discussion programmes and debates about various aspects of religion and other philosophies, these are the only places where you hear or see non-religious people represented and something like 90% of these programmes the religious outnumber the non-religious people, plus they are debates or a discussion type of programme.
They did recently put on some unchallenged non-religious programming on radio 3 late night a couple of months back I doubt many noticed, I wonder why they put that kind of programme there on 3, the radio station nobody listens to, and late at night, it wouldn't be so that if anyone complained, "Well we did put a few programmes covering non religious subjects on the other night"; nothing new there they strategically placed for a reason of course.
The result is that on the main BBC TV channels and their main radio stations, they, the BBC, manage to inhibit non-religious voices to as a minimal part of any of their broadcasting time they think they can get away with, so it doesn't surprise me when they declare using the logic of the mad house that they wont allow non-religious voices on T4TD.
How much more does the £10 million a year BBC Religion and Ethics department want shut down non-religious representation and for how long do they think they can keep getting away with it.
Having non-religious voices on T4TD would be a very minor concession when compared to the large amount of unfettered religious representation they put out.
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