Thursday 29 June 2017

Not a BBC Broadcast: "Where is Your Positive Image? ...Ten Important Scientists in 1000 Years?"

Here's an outspoken Middle Eastern broadcaster, Youssef Al-Husseini, telling his Egyptian audience that in view of atrocities on westerners committed by Muslims round the world it's no wonder that the Islamic world has a bad image.

"Why do they hate us?!" he even says at one point.  "If they didn't, there would be something mentally wrong with them." 

And he goes on to observe: "Where is your positive image?" adding scathingly "C'mon ... Ten important scientists in 1000 years?..."

Clearly, this is not a BBC broadcast.

Nor is it likely that Mr Al-Husseini would ever be permitted to speak as he does in the studios of the biased and dhimmitude-inclined British national broadcaster, which is still feeding British schoolkids notions such as these:


For the genuine contributions of medieval Islam to knowledge, all praise.  But let's not practise inverse racism or gild the lily or belittle and disparage Western civilisation, as the BBC loves to do.

 
 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6gMQWdbcEmU

(Memri.org video)

Published on Jun 25, 2017
"MEMRI TV is a non-partisan, independent research institute providing research, analysis and translation of primary materials covering a wide range of issues, including on terrorism and ideological trends in the middle east. These video clips are provided as a public service to an international viewing audience to bridge the language gap and better educated and inform. Material about the statements of terrorists and extremists is provided to alert the public to threats and in no way constitutes an endorsement of such activities."

4 comments:

  1. 'When you're on the train from Edinburgh to London, you can see Durham Cathedral rising from a bed of broccoli treetops, pushing its way skyward like a majestic fairy-tale castle. When you're closer, it looks a little like an upturned plug, though the ancient appliance to which it could be attached remains mysterious.
    In the brilliant Britain's Best Buildings (BBC2, Saturday), Dan Cruickshank got endearingly animated about the cathedral's incredible history and its sacred geometry. He mapped the place in circles and squares, tenderly traced chevrons while pondering their significance and speculated on the Islamic influences on the architecture.......' https://www.theguardian.com/media/2002/nov/18/broadcasting.tvandradio

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  2. I have been allergic to Cruikshank, windmill arm gestures and all, ever since seeing him on a BBC programme from the Holy Land giving the required propagandistic dig at Israel.

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  3. Who knows? Maybe one of the gays they throw off the roof will fly and begin the Islamic Space Program

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    Replies
    1. You have a literally wicked sense of humour, Trudy! Sorry your comment has been posted tardily. I don't know what went wrong there.

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