Chris Packham thinks game shooters ‘psychopaths’
The ‘Make Badger Culling, Fox Hunting & Driven Grouse Shooting History’ march called for the banning of legal grouse shooting…
A broader point is becoming crystal clear: the BBC no longer deserves to be funded by what is, in effect, a poll tax. It’s simply not sustainable in this age of online streaming and consumer choice. The corporation was accused of breaching its charter obligations on political neutrality and objective reporting years ago, and I think the rot gets worse with every passing month. Enough is enough. We are going to have to switch off the BBC’s life-support system.
Put it like this: forcing the shooting community to pay for the likes of Chris Packham is as unjust as forcing a vegan to pay for a subscription to Shooting Times. You can choose whether or not you wish to buy Shooting Times. You have no such choice with regards to the BBC — at least, not if you want to watch any live TV.
According to the way the antiquated licence fee law is interpreted, anybody who plugs in equipment merely capable of receiving a live terrestrial TV signal is obliged to buy a TV licence, unless they are specifically exempt. We have to fork out even when we don’t consume BBC content.
Worse, the BBC hires people such as Mr Packham, who engage in blatantly political campaigning. The Beeb hides behind the risible excuse that he isn’t an employee, only a mere ‘contractor’. Yet to the viewing public he is a BBC presenter — they don’t care what the precise nature of his commercial contract is. He owes his public profile to the BBC. And we are forced to pay for him via the BBC licence fee. This is wrong. We shouldn’t be made to put money into the pockets of people who have declared war on our way of life.
I have no doubt that the BBC’s current funding regime is tottering on its last legs. It can’t last much longer. Not in an age of the internet and on-demand viewing services, against a backdrop of continual horror stories about BBC bias and overpaid celebrity presenters.
In the meantime, the answer may be to stop paying the licence fee and eschew conventional broadcast media altogether. This is a pity, because Auntie’s radio at its best is very good indeed. But why should anybody have to fund broadcasting that actually offends them? Subscription for specific services, rather than a universal licence fee, is the way to go.
The ‘Make Badger Culling, Fox Hunting & Driven Grouse Shooting History’ march called for the banning of legal grouse shooting…
Tim Bonner writes: “The new edition of BBC Wildlife magazine carries a column by Chris Packham which is remarkable in…
Cricket legend, philanthropist and countryman Sir Ian Botham has come under fire after pledging to donate 10,000 game birds from…
I already avoid the BBC most of the time. When I want general news, I look at trusted online sites. For in-depth news and features about shooting, I turn to Shooting Times — which is invariably better written and better informed than some poorly moderated online shooting forums. When I want films, I use Netflix.
I don’t mind buying content I want. But I resent being forced to pay for stuff I don’t want. Such as Mr Packham.
BASC calls for delay to the Scottish government’s muirburn licensing scheme amid concerns from practitioners over the code’s workability.
Following countryside organisations’ campaigning, penalties for illegal coursing have increased, with average fines up from £360 to £6,000