Hi ippy, I understand - from a friend on the production side of the Beeb - that the wording of the existing Charter requires such things to be of a largely Christian nature - though I've heard the odd T4TD by Buddhist and Hindu speakers. I have also been told that the new Charter is likely to allow, even possibly require, speakers from a wider range of phlosophical viewpoints.
Regarding the suggestion that "religious believers no longer see it as such", you seem to miss the point. They often don't actually regard them as a privilege - there are some such 'chats' that, whilst claiming a religious provenance, have no religious content at all.
Regarding where I pointed out that "religious believers no longer see it as as a privilege as such", Hope it's you that's missing the point.
They often don't actually regard them as a privilege, correct, there are some such 'chats' that, whilst claiming a religious provenance, have no religious content at all, right, but if anyone non-religious would like to join in they can't, for the moment, join in because there is a ban on non-religious contributers.
I hear what you say but this is how it actually is with the BBC and T4TD at the moment and I must say if the shoe were on the other foot I would give every support to your lot if they were discriminated against by the BBC in this way, it's blindingly obviously wrong, wrong, wrong the way it is at present.
If you can't see and understand this Hope, you've got some mighty serious problems.
By the way I have no objections to programs about religion being presented by the BBC.
I only object to the discrimination against any non-religious content, such as T4TD and no regular programming for non-religious people or is there very much, if any, unchallenged output for us, unchallenged in the same way religious programs are able to present unchallenged programming more or less at will. What are they afraid of?
ippy