What's concerning is that Lord Adonis is a significant figure, particularly to political centrists, the group who have largely stayed firm in defending the BBC even if we are sick of seeing Farage on Question Time. In this era of fake news, of people proclaiming their distrust of the MSM (mainstream media), of protests outside BBC Scotland's buildings in Glasgow, of fictionalised stories from alternative news sources being taken as gospel by whichever group that story is designed to appease the beliefs of, in this time of all of that seeing a centrist big hitter crusading against the BBC it gives a sense of legitimacy to the radical anti-MSM elements of society. He is telling people it is ok to ignore uncomfortable truths, to dismiss them as lies.
I'm vehemently opposed to Brexit and unapologetic in my beliefs that we should have a second referendum on the issue. I'm biased on this issue. As I am on pretty much every issue I've spent any time learning about. That means when something on the news or in a paper comes out that doesn't conform to the biased world view I've got it is difficult to take on board. I understand why people want to shut it down, but that isn't how news works. News isn't there to conform to my bias, nor to Adonis' bias. Adonis isn't attempting to change the BBC, he is trying to sow the seeds of doubt in the minds of his Twitter followers or readers of his articles. If Adonis says the BBC is biased against my position, and I felt initially as though it was biased, maybe it is. It isn't me that's wrong, it's the children, as Pirnciple Skinner might put it. This is a dangerous path, one that leads to fake news, to important issues being ignored and dismissed and for the echo chambers of modern politics to be emboldened even further.