The BBC has once again demonstrated its role as a partisan propaganda machine rather than a neutral public broadcaster.
On its flagship evening news showNewsnight, presenter Matt Chorley repeatedly claimed Reform UK leader Nigel Farage called for a “white cold rage” in response to the murder of 18-year-old student Henry Nowak.
Yet Farage said no such thing. He called for “pure cold rage” — a measured, determined pushback against institutional failures and anti-white bias in policing and justice.
?The BBC had just sunk to a new low.On Newsnight last night, presenter Matt Chorley claimed Nigel Farage said people should respond to the murder of Henry Nowak with “white cold rage”.Nigel DID NOT SAY THIS.The insertion of the word “white” by the BBC is obviously…pic.twitter.com/OwFxXNUy5N
Chorley repeated the fabricated racial angle three times. The insertion was no accident. It transformed a call for equal justice and accountability into something that could be painted as divisive racial incitement.
When caught, Chorley issued a tepid apology on X, claiming a “misremembering” while insisting it “didn’t change the content of the interview.”
I owe Nigel Farage an apology.During last night’s Newsnight we covered the murder of Henry Nowak and the political reaction to the case, including discussing Nigel Farage’s comments about “pure, cold rage”.However I referred to “white cold rage”. This was a mistake on my…
Critics across the board rejected that claim outright.
Of course it changed the content of the interview, it added racially inflammatory comments where there were none. You'd never have made a similar revealing slip THREE times using black instead of white.Reflects your innate bias and that of the BBC.And I don't trust Farage…
Pure cold rage became “white cold rage” because the institutional mindset equates any pushback against two-tier standards with whiteness.
Source: modernity