As many know here on Rogue Nation, the art of word-wizardry has coned recently due to the urgency of certain
sects in power who require an obedient society and a complacently in the media of assuming their customers
gobble down their poorly-written reports without question.
The British Broadcasting Company is always there jostling for space in the slowly decreasing puddle of what
-they always notify the public of, is the noble trade of communication. A hidden and yet, a vital link for the
gentry to convince the plebeians that they'd be rudderless without them and banal-speak is really a complex
couch of diction that may fall on deaf ears due to Joe-Public's baseborn status.
Here's two examples of Auntie Beeb's mode of penned machinations.
"At least 90 people have been killed and hundreds more injured in clashes between police
and tens of thousands of anti-government protesters in Bangladesh on Sunday
The unrest comes as student leaders have declared a campaign of civil disobedience to
demand that the nation's long-serving leader Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina step aside.
Internet services have been completely cut ahead of the "Long March to Dhaka" starting
from Shaheed Minar, a national monument in the capital
The death toll includes at least 13 police officers, and an indefinite nationwide curfew has
been put in place to curb further violence The student protest - which has been ongoing since
July - started with calls to abolish quotas in civil service jobs, but has since transformed int
a much wider anti-government movement.
At least 280 people have died as a result of the unrest so far, which has prompted the government
to restrict access to internet services in some parts of the country The UN has called for an end to
the "shocking violence" and urged restraint from Bangladeshi politicians and security forces..."
Archived BBC link:
......................................
"No 10 to hold emergency Cobra meeting after weekend of violence
Downing Street has confirmed there will be an emergency response meeting on Monday after more
than 150 people were arrested following violent disorder in UK towns and cities over the weekend.
It comes after Sir Keir Starmer condemned an attack on a hotel housing asylum seekers in Rotherham
and promised those involved in unrest would face "the full force of the law". Police responded to violent
scenes in Rotherham, Middlesbrough, Bolton and other parts of the UK on Sunday.
The Cobra meeting follows some of the worst rioting the UK has seen in recent years, in the wake of
the fatal stabbing of three young girls in Southport last week. Various parts of England and Northern
Ireland have seen violence break out in the days since, which politicians say has been fuelled by
misinformation on social media and far-right groups inflaming tensions.
Cobra meetings, or Cobr meetings as they are often also called, are named after Cabinet Office
Briefing Room A on Whitehall. It is an emergency response committee, a get together of ministers,
civil servants, the police, intelligence officers and others appropriate to whatever they are looking into..."
Archived Page:
BBC current Page: The Text Changed!
......................................
See the difference...? One article condemns an oppressive nature of a Government and suggests by subtle
wording that the deaths in the long-running 'unrest' is due to the hard-handedness of the military. The Internet
in Bangladesh was shut off for a time and again, the BBC imply this is a negative.
The second article regarding 'riots' in Britain is painted differently. The newly-installed Labour Government is
endorsed via word-conjuring of those who are State-funded, for their response to the recent disorder of a certain
section of the public and assure the assumed agreeing-majority that swift stern action will be taken.
One his oppressive, one is not oppressive enough. By the way, no deaths occurred and the small
amount of looting was reported to have been done by those of mid-teen age.
Closely following the established media's rhetoric on the criminal damage and arrests over the first British
weekend of August, is the suggestion that social-media is a major contributor to the anger and restraints
should be seriously contemplated.
The Internet is helpful to Bangladesh, the internet is dangerous to Britain.
It would be easy at this point to resort to the trendy schoolyard conduct of accusing the BBC of a certain type
of racism, but this branding would fail to address the real reason such syntax-sculpted partisanship takes place
daily.
Its all about social-order, the Class-system... the Caste-system. Those who know fine wines and have never
worried about what tomorrow might bring would possibly suggest that the 'peasants' may have no colour
and are all in a similar frame of mind, but it's just that they simply cannot appreciate the word 'control'.

Jeff Taylor gets it.
sects in power who require an obedient society and a complacently in the media of assuming their customers
gobble down their poorly-written reports without question.
The British Broadcasting Company is always there jostling for space in the slowly decreasing puddle of what
-they always notify the public of, is the noble trade of communication. A hidden and yet, a vital link for the
gentry to convince the plebeians that they'd be rudderless without them and banal-speak is really a complex
couch of diction that may fall on deaf ears due to Joe-Public's baseborn status.
Here's two examples of Auntie Beeb's mode of penned machinations.
"At least 90 people have been killed and hundreds more injured in clashes between police
and tens of thousands of anti-government protesters in Bangladesh on Sunday
The unrest comes as student leaders have declared a campaign of civil disobedience to
demand that the nation's long-serving leader Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina step aside.
Internet services have been completely cut ahead of the "Long March to Dhaka" starting
from Shaheed Minar, a national monument in the capital
The death toll includes at least 13 police officers, and an indefinite nationwide curfew has
been put in place to curb further violence The student protest - which has been ongoing since
July - started with calls to abolish quotas in civil service jobs, but has since transformed int
a much wider anti-government movement.
At least 280 people have died as a result of the unrest so far, which has prompted the government
to restrict access to internet services in some parts of the country The UN has called for an end to
the "shocking violence" and urged restraint from Bangladeshi politicians and security forces..."
Archived BBC link:
......................................
"No 10 to hold emergency Cobra meeting after weekend of violence
Downing Street has confirmed there will be an emergency response meeting on Monday after more
than 150 people were arrested following violent disorder in UK towns and cities over the weekend.
It comes after Sir Keir Starmer condemned an attack on a hotel housing asylum seekers in Rotherham
and promised those involved in unrest would face "the full force of the law". Police responded to violent
scenes in Rotherham, Middlesbrough, Bolton and other parts of the UK on Sunday.
The Cobra meeting follows some of the worst rioting the UK has seen in recent years, in the wake of
the fatal stabbing of three young girls in Southport last week. Various parts of England and Northern
Ireland have seen violence break out in the days since, which politicians say has been fuelled by
misinformation on social media and far-right groups inflaming tensions.
Cobra meetings, or Cobr meetings as they are often also called, are named after Cabinet Office
Briefing Room A on Whitehall. It is an emergency response committee, a get together of ministers,
civil servants, the police, intelligence officers and others appropriate to whatever they are looking into..."
Archived Page:
BBC current Page: The Text Changed!
......................................
See the difference...? One article condemns an oppressive nature of a Government and suggests by subtle
wording that the deaths in the long-running 'unrest' is due to the hard-handedness of the military. The Internet
in Bangladesh was shut off for a time and again, the BBC imply this is a negative.
The second article regarding 'riots' in Britain is painted differently. The newly-installed Labour Government is
endorsed via word-conjuring of those who are State-funded, for their response to the recent disorder of a certain
section of the public and assure the assumed agreeing-majority that swift stern action will be taken.
One his oppressive, one is not oppressive enough. By the way, no deaths occurred and the small
amount of looting was reported to have been done by those of mid-teen age.
Closely following the established media's rhetoric on the criminal damage and arrests over the first British
weekend of August, is the suggestion that social-media is a major contributor to the anger and restraints
should be seriously contemplated.
The Internet is helpful to Bangladesh, the internet is dangerous to Britain.
It would be easy at this point to resort to the trendy schoolyard conduct of accusing the BBC of a certain type
of racism, but this branding would fail to address the real reason such syntax-sculpted partisanship takes place
daily.
Its all about social-order, the Class-system... the Caste-system. Those who know fine wines and have never
worried about what tomorrow might bring would possibly suggest that the 'peasants' may have no colour
and are all in a similar frame of mind, but it's just that they simply cannot appreciate the word 'control'.

Jeff Taylor gets it.

Read The TV Guide, yer' don't need a TV.