Thursday 26 July 2018

Roots

BBC Radio 4 "The Moral Maze" discussed (25 July 2018) promoting diversity and "positive action". It was said of the BBC "It doesn't get the money if it doesn't have the mix." The heated debate ignored immigration. That's strange because immigration is at the root of this. The Race Relations Act includes the word "nationality". This means foreigners are entitled to deprive native Brits of work and promotion. Other countries would regard treating its own citizens in this way as barmy. Since we in Britain have passively acquiesced to being second-class citizens in our own country for so long it is hardly surprising the Government has taken it a step further by legitimising "positive action" which gives preference to everyone over native British men.

5 comments:

Jeremy said...

There is a lot of fuss about equal pay. Today's News focuses on academics at universities. But there is absolutely no fuss about foreign women (e.g., foreign wives) being legally entitled to deprive British men of work and promotion both because they are foreign and female. It has been part of British life for so long that it is considered natural and normal (by native Brits). But from a foreign perspective it is extraordinarily unjust. So we do we continue to put up with it?

Jeremy said...

Freedom of artistic expression, curtailed by the BBC because of its obsession with Diversity, is akin to freedom of speech. A female Presenter of BBC TV's excellent "Countryfile" went to court when she was replaced by a Producer who wanted a change of face. She was awarded a large sum. More recently, a male comedian on Radio 4's "The Now Show" was fired to make room for Diversity. It's no joke.

Jeremy said...

West Yorkshire police are celebrating winning the "Diversity Champion of the Year" award. This is the same police force that failed the victims of many Muslim grooming gangs.

Jeremy said...

BBC 1 TV "Countryfile" had an item (yesterday) on the Far Right in the countryside. It is natural that many people are made very unhappy by mass immigration, but this was dismissed out of hand by the Presenter's use of the word hate, which, we were told, was also used by social media to justify banning such groups. George Orwell (who worked at the BBC) knew all about manipulating language. Instead of the term Far Right why not say Radical Right? That brings to the debate the necessary and overdue idea of Reform. One would think that "Countryfile" would oppose/hate mass immigration, because of the many houses that are being built on our precious and diminishing green belts....

Jeremy said...

Does this mean that BBC Radio 4's long-running, polemical and influential programme "Woman's Hour" will have to have native British men as Presenters. Not a hope!