uk no longer shackled to a corpse', a reference to a comment once made by the eurosceptic mp douglas carswelldidn't have quotation marks we put these points to bbc news, and they told us: a couple of weeks ago, viewer russell moore contacted us with his thoughts on a practice that others have observed on bbc news. i would like to share my frustration at what i call suggestive reporting. the increasingly used bbc technique of shouting questions at politicians as they walk in and out of meetings. are you still in control of your party, prime minister? of course the person has no intention of answering or maybe hasn't even had the question, but that doesn't matter. we see the pictures, we hear the accusation and of course that is what sticks. it in itself that becomes the news and a new truth to be repeated. do you want to be the chancellor, foreign secretary? at best it is cheap, lazy, sensationalist and only worthy of tabloids, but at worst it can feel like a deliberate technique, using the suggestive technique to plant ideas in our subconscious and in short to get the public to think and beli