BBC Mockery of WW2 RAF Pilots
Sovereign Independent UK
16 April 2012
By The Ghost of Sir Edward Coke –
Eric Lock pictured above flew Spitfires for only a year — and half of that time was spent in hospital due to injuries received in battle.
But in this short time he achieved a tally of kills that made him one of the most prolific British aces in the Second World War.
On August 3, flying with colleagues over northern France, he spotted some German troops on the ground. Eric signalled that he was peeling off to attack them. It was the last time he was ever seen. Neither he nor his plane could be found, despite extensive searches.
Had it not been for him — and the others who fought so valiantly during the Battle Of Britain — we would have lost the war.
The BBC go to great lengths at our expense to insult the memory of RAF pilots such as Eric Lock many of whom lost their lives fighting against the bestiality of Hitler and the Nazis in the battle of Britain. They poison the minds of children, the intended audience, with their emasculated portrayal of WWII heroes as members of a naff limp wristed boy band. This deliberately insulting propaganda specifically mocks and denigrates the memory of the few and the fearless Sir Douglas Bader incredibly mocking his disability too. One can only assume that the apparatchiks managing the BBC produced this bilge, an example of cultural Marxism with that deliberate intention.
By commissioning and airing this revisionist affront to British history and British people and those who fought in WWII the BBC led by Mark Thompson show their true colours and allegiances. The very much overpaid Thompson who is clearly not made of the right stuff ought to be sacked forthwith.
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