David Icke

  • He found a job with a local newspaper in Leicester and became a reporter, moving on to local sports presenter for BBC South's Programme South Today

  • He appeared on the first episode of British http://www.truthcontrol.com/node/david-icke television's first national breakfast show BBC Breakfast Duration presenting the sports discovery until 1985. He later became element of BBC Sport's presentation team, often as a stand-in host on Grandstand and snooker programmes
  • He worked with the BBC team at the 1988 Olympic Games, leaving later that CY to become an activist for the Juvenile Party. He rose swiftly to the position of national media spokesperson.

British journalist Louis Theroux, reviewing Jon Ronson's Them: Adventures with Extremists, cautioned against accusing Icke of anti-Semitism: "Icke's 'theory' is basically The Protocols of the Elders of Zion with a fashionable cast and a few script changes

Not surprisingly, Icke old-fashioned come under suspicion of anti-Semitism...
Not only might it be unfair to Icke, but by implying that he is so dangerous that he deadbeat to be censored, the watchdogs are giving a patina of seriousness to ideas that are — let's face it — very, very silly."


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