BBC's Jew-Obsession Laid Bare:
- Philip James
- Jul 24
- 3 min read

There’s a genocide going on, but it’s not in Palestine, and it’s not being committed by Jews, so you won’t hear about it.
While Britain’s newsrooms obsess over Gaza there is a real genocide taking place in Syria, yet hardly anyone gives a damn, because this is only Muslims killing other Muslims, and nobody, least of all the BBC, give a toss about that.
In Syria more than 1,100 Druze have been slaughtered in cold blood. Men, women and children have been shot, beheaded and burned to death by Syrian regime militias, Bedouin gunmen, and Islamic clerics who dragged families out, executed fathers in front of sons, mothers in front of daughters, before ransacking houses, steeling anything of worth and burning down the rest. There have even been reports of Muslims throwing entire families of Druze off building tops, a barbaric execution method seemingly favoured by Muslims everywhere.
Yet flip on the BBC and it’s still wall-to-wall Gaza. Every rocket launch, every child’s tear piped into British living rooms to keep Israel in the dock and feed the same old obsession: the 'evil' Jews.
The Western media, especially the BBC love Gaza. It’s the conflict they choose to magnify endlessly — live coverage, emotional appeals, continuous analysis. Channel 4 churns out specials dissecting every missile. Sky News gives uninterrupted airtime to Palestinian suffering. The Guardian devotes pages to harrowing photo essays and opinion pieces railing at Israel. Their stance is always and obviously anti-Israel, anti-Jewish.
Meanwhile, the Druze massacre — a mass killing of over a thousand innocents — is buried in brief foreign round-ups, if mentioned at all. The Labour Party, loud and proud in its Gaza advocacy, has suddenly gone silent when it comes to the Druze. David Lammy, whose hatred for the Jews is bordering on psychotic, is nowhere to be found when it's not Jew-related. No fiery speeches. No emergency motions. No public marches or campus demonstrations demanding justice for Druze.
Why? Because the Druze don’t fit the narrative, that's why. They aren’t Palestinians, and they’re not being slaughtered by Jews, only other Muslims and nobody cares about that.
At their very core the BBC are antisemitic. GAZA provides a simple villain and victim story, a cause to rally behind, a moral drama endlessly repeatable, and easily feeds into a millennia of Jew hatred. This is self evident as their coverage of GAZA continues to fill hundred of hours of airtime a month.
If the Jews were the ones slaughtering the Druze the coverage would be relentless. There would be endless close-ups of Druze children maimed and killed. Endless condemnation of Israel, and a reframing of everything they do as proof of some ancient evil. But this is Muslims killing other Muslims and the BBC don't give a fuck about that. The BBC wouldn’t tuck it away in a minute-long segment. Labour MPs would be demanding action; celebrities would be flooding social media with outrage and hashtags, whilst the socialist wanker's party would be organising hate filled marches with all of them shouting ‘genocide’ at every opportunity.
But these are Druze, an ancient offshoot of Islam dating back to the 11th century, combining Shi’a mysticism, Greek philosophy, and Gnostic elements into a secretive faith. Yet these people face a modern massacre all-but ignored by all those who claims to defend human rights.
The difference is glaring: Gaza is a media spectacle, a political football, and a cause célèbre. The Druze genocide is inconvenient, complex, and doesn’t fit the preferred narrative.
Where are the protests for Sweida? Where are the endless news cycles and social media campaigns? Where is the outrage?
This selective spotlighting reveals a dangerous double standard. When Jews are involved, the world watches, reports, debates, and cries out loud. When others suffer, the silence is deafening.
The uncomfortable truth is that Jews receive a unique kind of media attention — both protective and, paradoxically, obsessive. This attention is often driven by historic guilt, political alliances, and a media culture that fetishises Israel-Palestine conflict to the exclusion of other horrors.
But the flip side is that this obsession has normalised vilification and made it fashionable again to hate Jews in certain circles, while leaving other victims, like the Druze, to die in the shadows.
It’s time to ask the hard questions: Why does the Druze genocide go ignored? Why do Western media and politicians scream about Gaza but whisper about Syria? Why is outrage rationed by ethnicity and politics?
Because in today’s media landscape, justice is selective, outrage is performative, and the Druze are the forgotten casualties of a fixation that isn’t just about news — it’s about who the world chooses to care about.
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