THE row between the Government and the BBC over Hutton could be compared to two scorpions fighting -- no matter which one is killed it can only be beneficial.

Every member of the ultra-left National Union of Journalists has sworn to give the political parties of the right no good publicity, and give adverse publicity at every opportunity. Nevertheless, the BBC, in common with the curate's egg, is still good in parts.

For instance, 'File on Four' (Sunday February 2, dealt with the probability of acts of terrorism by Moslems already ensconced in Britain, and with the indifference of the Government and the security services to forestalling such acts. (Perhaps too much time and effort has been spent on investigating and persecuting the patriotic parties of the Right).

A spokesman expressed the opinion that it would take a major atrocity to galvanise this bewildered Government, and that it was only a matter of time before the event.

Blair finds himself on the horns of a dilemma -- he wants to flood Britain with immigrants until the indigenous white population has been outnumbered and reduced to impotence, and the national state attenuated to its extinction, becoming then only a province of the EU.

At the same time he knows that with every immigrant who sets foot on British soil the risk of a terrorist attack becomes greater, and with such an attack the certainty of sparking severe civil unrest in the long-suffering British people, which would ring down the curtain on the farce of Tone and New Labour.

N G Charnley

Chesterfield Road

Blackpool

You're entitled to your opinion but you are not entitled to imply that your supposition is fact - Ed.