by Phil Beuning


David Attenborough turned 99 a little while ago. The man who’s spent a lifetime fear mongering that the world’s about to end… only for his own to be ending sooner. Ironic, really.
We all know the voice. Soothing, grave, and full of wonder. But behind the slow-motion lizards and tragic violins is a carefully crafted narrative. A steady drip of climate messaging framed as education but like most things on TV it’s soaked in agenda. And for years, Attenborough has been the BBC’s number one golden mouthpiece for environmental fear and behavioural control.
His nature programmes, like Planet Earth, admittedly have some stunning footage, but let’s not forget the fakery. Footage filmed in zoos passed off as wild. Scenes stitched together to create drama. Polar bears, apparently stranded, carefully staged to provoke emotion and manipulate people into thinking the planet is dying and needs to be ‘saved’ by unelected elites pushing global control.
Now compare that to David Bellamy. A real environmentalist. Straight-talking, principled, and impossible to buy. He was challenging the climate cult years ago, alone. He was refreshingly unscripted, without spin, and had no billionaire backers, unlike Attenborough. He just had the facts and the balls to say them, but because of that, they buried his career… And then they buried him.
Attenborough sold the apocalypse while Bellamy exposed the sales pitch… and one got sanctified, whilst the other got silenced. So forgive me if I don’t shed a tear when the curtain finally falls on Attenborough… Bellamy never got an encore. #Agenda2030#sustainability
I stopped watching Attenborough when he kept pushing the Global warming/Climate change propaganda. Bellamy was in my book a better wild life presenter. It was sad not to see him presenting.