What I actually wrote Hope, was:
"The only good thing I can see about the BBC's ban on the non-religious from T4TD, is that the BBC plainly shows it's hand".
Now doesn't that make more sense than your edited version?
Being disingenuous it's comes as second nature to you and so typical.
ippy
ippy, perhaps you don't understand quoting. As you will probably have noticed, I rarely quote a full post, choosing instead to pick a pertinent section that 1) points to the post I am referring to, and 2) highlights a point I want clarified or to disagree with. In this case, I wanted to know what 'hand' you believe that the BBC is plainly showing.
Perhaps you will now answer that question rather than practising the disingenuousness you so love to accuse others of.
My apologies I scan read, (a bad habit of mine), and read you wrong it's entirely my mistake, I should not have accused you of being disingenuous.
The hand the BBC is showing is very difficult nail down and very clever of them I suppose it's the many years of practice they have had and of course honing down any awkward angles they felt they needed to smooth out.
Bearing in mind no matter how much I think that religions are man made nonsense, I cannot see that it would be in any way right to stop making programmes for those that believe these things or are of faith, put it how you like, I assume we're at one on that, at least.
T4TD is the most blatant in your face example of how they do their best to confound any attempt by non-religious people to speak freely in and unchallenged.
I'm not for one moment saying non-religious never have their say Steve Jones was on that Sunday 10am BBC1 TV show two weeks ago and it almost goes almost unnoticed how the show was run, as all of this type of programme it's a sport of the BBC Religion and Ethics Department.
If anyone were to look into how the R&E department manages to limit/confound any non-religious content it's done in such detailed way by them if it's picked out or highlighted in any way it makes the picker look as though they have a lot more problems than they have.
I can appreciate that the odd time here and there that the non-religious person wishing to comment would get pushed onto the back foot, but when it happens most of the and time after time, rarely going the other way perhaps it might be telling something.
The behaviour I've described above is very much the same way the BBC touches the tiller a little here, a little there, when it does it's best to put out it's own political agenda, I think it is in fact exactly similar.
It works because if you or anyone else tries to describe how they do their best put their agenda into our heads, look how much it takes to make even the smallest swipe at them.
Of course anyone complains, point the finger, "look conspiracy theorist nutter"! Largely it works; clever, you've got to hand it to them.
I have to underline that I have no problem with religion being broadcast by the BBC, I just don't bother with it unless I'm working on that particular programme, what it's presenting and in what way is it being presented.
I have not been into finding a way to limit the BBC's religion output never have been all I want to see and hear is some regular programming of unchallenged non-religious broadcasting put on air without having to go out via the "BBC's Religion & Ethics Department".
ippy