Former BBC radio presenter Nihal Arthanayake, who was at Radio 1 for more than 10 years at the same time as Mills, told ITV's Good Morning Britain on Tuesday: "My first thoughts were obviously with the alleged victim here, without question.
Shouldn't the first thought have been 'Is there even a 'victim' here?; apart from Mills, that is, who appears to have suffered from the BBCs desire not to repeat past mistakes? Full disclosure here - I listen to Radio Two every day, and Mills is a presenter I liked.
But even if he had not been, his abrupt sacking is looking like an overreaction driven by an over-cautious management, that could backfire if he decides to sue.
"But also, Scott Mills is a human, he's a person who got his dream job that has now been taken away from him, and his validation, largely, in life, probably was defined by that job.
Good point, shame it then descended into self pity on behalf of Auntie Beeb....
"Therefore, we have to be very careful. There's a current feeding frenzy going on.
Infamy, infamy, they've all got it in for me!
"A lot of that is driven by people who just hate the BBC, so they'll use that as a stick to beat the BBC with.
Whu eould that be, I wonder Nihal. Is it it's frequent peddling of obvious propaganda on behalf of those it has decieded are 'vulnerable minorities' instead of groups who want to change British society as it is, or who want to overthow basic principles in favour of insanity? Is it its strangely partisan approach to what it considers to be news?
"But there is a human being - well, there's two human beings - at the centre of this."
And a lot of humans out there who are no longer willing to fund a national broadcaster that appears to hate them.




