You can't be pro-Life
and pay the TV licence fee
The BBC engage in worldwide
pro-abortion campaigning
There has
been a spate of letters in the Catholic press recently complaining about the
BBC's continued campaign to promote abortion worldwide. One commented on the
BBC sending a news reporter, Reeta Chakrabarti, all the way to Chile to
challenge a government minister in an adversarial way over the country's mainly
pro-life policies. It was quite plain the reporter was trying to put pressure
on Chile, a Catholic country, to enact pro-abortion laws. The writers of these
letters written after Robin Aitken's article in the Catholic Herald urge
Catholics to write to the BBC and complain. Whilst at CUT we say yes, complain
if you want, but we know full well that complaining to the BBC on issues like
their pro-abortion policy and everything pro-homosexual, gender change and
euthanasia, will have very little or no impact. For being pro-choice and pro-everything
homosexual are core values of the Corporation - it is their orthodoxy and they
clash head on with Catholic moral teaching and this is one of the main reasons
why Catholicism and our history will never get a fair hearing on the BBC. The
only way to start to redress the balance in how the BBC depicts the Church is
for Catholics en masse to refuse to pay the TV licence fee. How can any
Catholic seriously be pro-life when they fund the largest and most influential
pro-abortion organisation in Britain if not the world, The BBC?
Other
pro-life and pro-family countries are also in the firing line; Northern
Ireland, Poland and Catholic central Europe have also come under the pro-choice,
pro-same-sex marriage sights of the BBC's neutron bomb broadcasting strategies.
This is BBC social engineering and arrogance that would have made the Nazis
proud.
Prayer Crusader, St Theresa of Avila after reading AA Gill's obituary.
ReplyDelete"I don't know how long a child will remain utterly static in front of
the television, but my guess is that it could be well into their 30s" - A.A. Gill,