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[return to "What influence has the BBC had on history?"]
1. Petera+Xc8[view] [source] 2025-11-20 08:03:29
>>pepys+(OP)
The BBC gets to say what history is because it documents the now. Farage does not have the popular support tha Corbyn had (has?) but you'd never believe it counting the number of interviews Farage gets with the BeeB. The game, as with Wikipedia, is to convince everyone you're unbiased and truthful and then sell us something. The question really is the relationship between the people's will (assuming you think democracy is a good idea) and the BBC's agenda setting.
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2. Angost+cg8[view] [source] 2025-11-20 08:35:36
>>Petera+Xc8
The polling suggests Farage absolutely does have that support. BBC coverage reflects that. And I hate the man
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3. Petera+F69[view] [source] 2025-11-20 15:27:35
>>Angost+cg8
And you are talking of current polling. I believe you will find that in Corbyn's hayday the polling was suggesting he would sweep labour to power.. but with the wrong politics. Hence being pro Palestinian was turned (in the bbc reporting) into "anti Semitic".
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4. nailer+xf9[view] [source] 2025-11-20 16:09:09
>>Petera+F69
I haven’t seen a single “pro Palestinian” that wants to destroy Jordan, ensure Jews and Druze are safe in Jordan Gaza Judea Samaria or anywhere else in the middle east, or do anything else to support a return to multi ethnic Palestine.

They pretty consistently just want a 23rd arab state, want all the Jews gone, don’t care about the 850K jews forced out of other arab states, and don’t think Jews are native to Judea or that Arabs come from the Arabian peninsula.

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