Insights from the UK circa 1984 on Education and Race.
The madness goes back longer than we care to admit.
It is unusual to find Telegraph article that is moderately right-wing for once, I was pleasantly surprised to read the following piece: Cultures are not equal . Of course in my right-wing world the end conclusion would be that we need to move towards doing more to protect European lands from mass migration/invasion and perhaps incentives for remigration but understandably the Telegraph won't go that far.
The part of most interest was the reference to Ray Honeyford, I admit I had not heard of him and set out to read the wikipedia article and then his controversial essay.
This was a man writing in 1984 - a few years before I was born. We're now 30 years further into the multi-cultural destruction of Britain...
Choice excerpts below for your reading pleasure.
The propaganda generated by multi-racial zealots is now augmented by a growing bureaucracy of race in local authorities. And this makes freedom of speech difficult to maintain. By exploiting the enormous tolerance, traditional in this country, the race lobby has so managed to induce and maintain feelings of guilt in the well-disposed majority, that decent people are not only afraid of voicing certain thoughts, they are uncertain even of their right to think those thoughts. They are intimidated not only by their fear of giving offence by voicing their own reasonable concerns about the inner cities, but by the necessity of conducting the debate in a language which is dishonest.
Honeyford correctly notes how Britain's tolerance has been abused by those keen to destroy her. He also notes astutely how the intimidation of thought crime will continue to grow. We have arrived at such a situation in the UK where people do preface normal questions with "It makes me guilty to say" or "I'm not a racist but".
The term ‘racism’, for instance, functions not as a word with which to create insight, but as a slogan designed to suppress constructive thought.
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