News Round-Up
15 April 2025
by Toby Young
Revealed: Why UK Electricity Costs So Much
15 April 2025
by Sallust
A senior BBC employee branded Jewish people “Nazis” and white people "barbaric bloodthirsty rapacious murderous genocidal thieving parasitical deviant breed". She seems to have a good grasp of DEI ideology.
British Transport Police is set to launch a bursary for "British African students" in an attempt to fight "systemic racism" and "Afriphobia" in the force in a move critics have slammed as "more discrimination".
Obsessed by modish woke ideology, the National Trust has devised a competition in Sir Isaac Newton’s name which Sir Isaac Newton himself would not be eligible to enter.
"So when should we expect to see short Asian women in the NBA?": Elon Musk pwned US billionaire Mark Cuban this week when the former freethinker and now pusher of woke orthodoxy claimed that "diversity helps businesses".
Channel 4 has launched a protest against the appointment of four white directors to its board – even though one of the five new appointees is non-white, a proportion of 20% in a country where 18% are ethnic minority.
Harvard's Diverse Black Female President Claudine Gay is obviously a plagiarist, says Eugyppius. Not only has she copied many passages word for word, she appears to have appropriated Carol Swain's entire research agenda.
The BBC has admitted that the concept of "white privilege" is contested after its youth-focused news service received a complaint over its "controversial" definition of the term.
NHS bosses are offering a £100,000 contract for "anti-racism" consultancy services, despite cash-strapped hospitals mulling scaling back operations this winter to balance the books.
People who chant for Hamas, punch TERFs, topple statues, burn churches, defund the police and run unconscious bias training all follow the same poisonous ideology of critical social justice theory, says Dr William McNally.
The English FA's over-zealous policing of 'racist' jokes has landed it facing racism allegations of its own. It's all part of the relentless rise of 'compelled offence', says Steven Tucker.
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