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After Hurricane Melissa: A Call for Jamaica’s Stars to Stand Up for Their Fans

In the aftermath of Hurricane Melissa, Jamaica is reeling. Entire communities have been left in ruins, homes flattened, roads destroyed, and countless families displaced. From Portland to Clarendon, Kingston to St. Mary, the island carries the deep scars of one of the most devastating storms in recent memory. Yet even as the rain subsides and the floodwaters begin to recede, one truth remains clear — Jamaica’s greatest strength has always been its people. And right now, those people need help more than ever. This is a call, not to the government or to politicians, but to the sons and daughters of Jamaica who have risen to fame and fortune. To the entertainers, influencers, athletes, and public figures — both at home and abroad — the time has come to stand up for your fans. These are the same people who streamed your music day and night, who wore your brand, who shared your posts, who prayed for you when you were just starting out. Today, many of them are left without shelter, without ...

BBC, TikTok & the Israel Backlash: Free Speech or Editorial Failure?


By Dadrian Latchman | Media News

The BBC’s recent livestream on TikTok has ignited a firestorm—not for its content, but for the comment section. As viewers tuned in, the feed was flooded with vitriolic remarks aimed at Israel, ranging from political criticism to outright hate speech. For a broadcaster that prides itself on neutrality and editorial rigour, the decision to leave comments open raises serious questions. Is this a failure to moderate, or a deliberate stance in favour of digital free speech?

TikTok is no stranger to polarised discourse, but when a publicly funded institution like the BBC enters the arena, the stakes shift. Should a national broadcaster allow its platform to be hijacked by inflammatory rhetoric? Critics argue that the comment section should have been disabled or heavily moderated—especially given the recent backlash over antisemitic chants aired during Glastonbury coverage. Others insist that silencing the public, even in its most raw form, undermines democratic expression. But where is the line between free speech and platforming hate?

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This isn’t just a tech glitch or a social media oversight—it’s a moment that exposes the BBC’s struggle to adapt its editorial standards to fast-moving digital spaces. If the broadcaster wants to maintain its reputation for impartiality, it must decide: does it moderate, disengage, or embrace the chaos? And more importantly, who gets to decide what’s acceptable in the public square when the square is global, live, and unfiltered?

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What do you think? Should the BBC have disabled comments to protect its neutrality—or is this just the messy reality of free speech in the digital age?

Should public broadcasters moderate live comment sections on platforms like TikTok?

  • ✅ Yes – hate speech shouldn’t be given a platform

  • ❌ No – free speech must be protected, even if it’s uncomfortable

  • 🤷 Depends – context and content matter

  • 🔒 Just turn off comments altogether

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