Monday 9 April 2012

The © Muhammad Haque Daily Ethical Commentary. The BBC remains an actively corrupting, untruthful organisation





0508 [0438]

[0415] Hrs GMT

London

['Easter Bank Holiday', Christian calendar]

Monday 09 April 2012.


The © Muhammad Haque Daily Ethical Commentary.


The BBC remains an actively corrupting, untruthful organisation.

As is seen in the following ‘report’ abut the trend in joblessness it has published in the past four hours.


The item refers o a research outfit which is mainly labour PARTY SUPPORTING. But the key facts that the BBC report refers to and has t refer to, have nothing at all to do with that reach outfit's political “leanings”. yet the BBC piece says of that outfit :


The left-leaning IPPR said it expected 50,000 more men and 50,000 women to become unemployed this year as public sector jobs continued to be cut.”


My question is: what has the IPPR’s “left-leaning” to do with the umber of jobs being cut by the CONDEM Collusion?


Is the BBC saying that those jobs would not be cut and the IPPR is makig the figures up?


And is the BBC by logical extension also saying that “right-leaning” research counterpart to the IPPR would dispute the numbers of public sector jobs that the CONDEM is cutting?


And that that dispute on the numbers would be validated by the fact of the political leaning of the IPPR and its Right-leaning counterpart?


And is the BBC also saying thereby that the millions of jobless people across the UK are really ot jobless ad that the umber is a fiction cooked up by “left leaning” observers ad commentators?


[To be continued]




THE BBC report [below] Muhammad Haque has commented on [above]:


UK jobless total 'to rise by 100,000 over summer'

Woman looks at job adsUnemployment is rising fastest amongst women

Some 100,000 more people will be without a job before the end of the summer, according to a new report.

The IPPR think tank says unemployment may not peak until at least September, and that it could be 18 months before the UK jobless total falls.

North-west and Eastern England, London, and Yorkshire and Humberside will see the highest increases, it predicts.

But it adds that the West Midlands, Northern Ireland and South West will see a job recovery.

'Personal tragedy'

The left-leaning IPPR said it expected 50,000 more men and 50,000 women to become unemployed this year as public sector jobs continued to be cut.

It predicts that 40,000 of those becoming jobless will be under the age of 25.

"The personal tragedy of the slow economic recovery is the way unemployment will continue to rise over the next year, even once the economy begins to grow," said Kayte Lawton, senior research fellow at the think tank.

"This has been the longest recession and the slowest recovery that Britain has ever experienced.

"The risk is that high unemployment becomes a permanent feature of the UK economy, as it did in the 1980s."

The Department of Work and Pensions said that while "the international economic outlook remains difficult... we will do everything we can to help the unemployed find jobs".

"There have been some encouraging signs that the labour market is stabilising, but there is clearly still a big challenge ahead to bring down unemployment," a spokesman said.

New figures later this month are expected to show another increase in the figures.

The most recent data from the from the Office for National Statistics (ONS), showed that UK unemployment rose by 28,000 to 2.67 million during the three months to January, with the unemployment rate at 8.4%.

The number of people claiming Jobseeker's Allowance increased by 7,200 to 1.61 million in February.

The rise in unemployment was the lowest in almost a year. However, unemployment amongst women accounted for most of the increase.

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