This was disturbing and steps outside the usual QT commentary - George Galloway comes close to being attacked by the mainly young Jewish audience. Jonathan Freedland, Editor of the Guardian also speaks. A very heated discussion about the conflation between Israel and Jewishness.
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S

I like 'im, and as a dewd whose Jewish great-granddad scarpered from Germany to Canada, I find it extremely...galling how the anti-Jewish defamation league and various internal Israeli news networks have set the terms of the debate to: say anything against Israel and you're an anti-Semite. People talk about what a complicated, tangled web the modern world is, but I think in some regards it's actually fairly simple, and this so-called complexity is used to mask horrible acts under the guise of, "It's complicated". Right now I'm reading Joe Sacco's bit of comic-journalism from the early '90s, Palestine. Most Palestinian families had various family members who'd been kidnapped from their homes, tortured, or just disappeared off the face of the Earth, and that still goes down now. It's complicated.
S

This does feel a bit like those mimsy students saw another group getting hated by everyone across the world and felt a bit left out. I want to be a phobia, too!
C

First thing I noticed was not one of them wanted to talk about the rise in Islamophobia in Europe today. Not ignoring the rise in anti-semitism but they are both equal topics in my book. Both are as a result in the rise of fascism in Europe and we're seeing a return to an age where this was prevalent, i.e. 1930's. One of the many problems is is that no one wants to admit it, so these things will continue to escalate until politicians and idiots get their heads out of their arses and see what it is they're actually promoting.
C

I watched the bit at the end of the video, from where you saved it, witch hunt comes to mind. Regardless of what people think about him it's very hard to argue with him, personally I've a lot of respect for him, he's pretty much standing on his own among the old boys club and he's doing a bloody good job of pointing out the obvious things that the British parliament don't want to accept.
I

QT has become ludicrous. A bore one week as contestants play musical chairs with the middle ground of market economy politics. Bear pit or freak show (Phillips / Starkey etc) the next.
There are a lot of people who get on that show who would be better suited to Have I Got News For You and a lot more people who would make interesting contributions who will never get on because they have no interest in the the kind of consensus politics that the Beeb thinks indicates "balance".
George Galloway was deliberately ambushed. As with Russell Brand the other week I think Galloway thought that his oratorical skills could carry the day - as they often do in audience-free tv debates - but it wasn't going to be allowed to happen on QT. Call me cynical but you don't get to make films about former prime ministers that argue they should be subject to a war crimes trial and walk away from that. Post Saville there are a lot of chips to be cashed in with the BBC by the political establishment. George should have seen it coming. The Greens will be lined up to get ambushed and a rubbishing next. Oh and Tristram Hunt is the poorest nice-but-dim excuse for a Labour spokesperson I have ever seen on that show. Then again, as Helen Lewis points out in this week's NS, if Labour are so shit how come the race is so close????
Moral Maze on R4 is in some ways a far more interesting take on the same concept. You certainly get more detail on the subjects, interlocutors are a range of expert witnesses rather than members of the public and the more rabid contributors have far more opportunity to hang themselves. The best weapons against Melanie Phillips' nonsensical arguments (for example that the poor were better served in Victorian times by charity than under the welfare state) come out of her own mouth.
I

I think this is worth reading.
http://redmolucca.net/2015/02/09/reflections-on-question-time-of-5th-february-2015/
Shame the BBC were complicit in this kind of bias when only this week they had finally found their balls (and their soul) in taking on HSBC's role in holding open the door for their clients to relieve HMRC of their share of a few hundred million quid. To misquote Steve Jones "What fucking rotters".