My experience is quite the opposite with BBC having a clear anti war stance.
My experience is quite the opposite with BBC having a clear anti war stance.
Most interestingly, it's about who holds the microphone and is allowed to say whatever they want, unquestioned.
It’s equally easy to cherry pick this sort of thing to build a narrative of some ulterior agenda. Especially given the high pace that news demands in the social media age.
What gets covered could simply be who a journalist happened to talked to the past week or what is trending on social media that will get clicks.
The problem here is the enormity of what is actually going on in Gaza: a slaughter and a terror campaign we haven’t seen the likes of since Pol Pot. It is not two sides in disagreement, each jostling for attention on roughly equal terms, each somewhat right and somewhat wrong. Two years in, we’re well beyond that and the only thing that matters is that one side is sadistically slaughtering the other and the world is pretending it’s not happening.
So you are saying, you dont know of:
The genocide in Tigray
The Darfur genocide
The history of the DRC
The Rwandan genocide
The Genocide of Isaaqs ...