ippy ,you're not wrong . Long gone are the days when someone just read the news , now you get some soyboy's opinion attached to it telling us how we should comprehend it .
The other matter I was referring to in my previous post was about the way the BBC represents, more doesn't represent, the views of the non-religious anywhere on its airwaves without restricting/spiking the way it, supposedly according to the BBC, presents the views of the non religious, now 52% of the UK population.
One of the starting points of these limits put on the non-religious by the BBC where the non-religious are prevented from having an unobstructed say about their beliefs such as humanism, is structural and should be obvious to all when you read the title 'The BBC Religion & Ethics Department', this department on its own, its effect is very much like having all of the media output of the Conservative party being put out via the Labour parties central office or visa versa.
I went through this lack of unobstructed non-religious representation by the BBC lot a few years ago with one of the BBC's charter reviews and it has struck me with the subtlety of how the BBC operates and how it has some form of agenda with how it likes to adjust the line of how we think about various political agendas as well.
I am now subsequently seeing the parallels in the way the BBC tries to adjust our thinking about beliefs and the way the BBC tries to slant our general political thinking too and they're not using slightly similar methods for both the're using exactly similar methods; I no longer listen to the BBC on anything put out by their news department.
Regards ippy