“By their fruits shall ye know them.” -Jesus from Matthew 7:1
It is often challenging to determine the operational principles of a powerful entity, especially when revealing those principles undermines the very objectives the organization aims to achieve. Simply put, if an organization tells you its rules, it risks neutralizing its own effectiveness.
The only reliable way to discern an entity’s motives is by analyzing its outputs. In the case of the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC), one must scrutinize their reportage on major issues, identify recurring patterns, and assess whether the reporting aligns with hidden agendas. This approach allows us to infer the underlying rules driving their actions and to question why such rules remain undisclosed.
From there, one can explore why these rules exist and why the organization cannot openly disclose them.
Two Case Studies: Rotherham and the Islamic State
The BBC aired a report in 2014 about the industrial-scale child-sex-slave gangs in Rotherham. These gangs were predominantly composed of Muslims, nearly all of Pakistani origin, targeting white British girls. The report, however, conspicuously avoided mentioning the Islamic faith of the perpetrators. While the coverage, to a small degree, acknowledged the scale of the abuse, it grossly underestimated the number of victims and omitted the ideological or cultural context behind these crimes. […]
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