News Round-Up
23 October 2024
by Will Jones
Democrats Are No Longer Hiding Their Plan to Censor America
22 October 2024
by Will Jones
The star of Bridgerton’s new spin-off TV show has admitted she chose her TV shows growing up based on the race of the cast. Maybe she needs some unconscious bias training?
The new 'progressive' elite is waging war on meritocracy as being supposedly 'white' and 'racist' and is pushing quotas and race-based selection in its place, writes Adrian Wooldridge.
Michael Vaughan has had racism charges against him dismissed, but the BBC still refuses to bring him back, showing that for the woke it's not innocent till proven guilty but guilty even when proven innocent.
It's becoming increasingly common for U.K. universities to set up 'positive action' schemes which directly discriminate on the basis of race. A new letter challenges this controversial practice on legal grounds.
Ian Fleming's James Bond novels are the latest literary works to be butchered by sensitivity readers. Changes in racial language are one thing, but other edits reduce Fleming's descriptive flair to embarrassing clichés.
The University of North Carolina moved against encroaching woke culture and voted to ban diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) statements and politically preferential hiring.
The Equality Act allows 'positive action' by employers to favour candidates based on race. But what if this harms employees by, for example, perpetuating stereotypes of racial inferiority, asks Amber Muhinyi.
Year Zero is fast approaching at Aberdeen University as it sets out plans to "embed a bold, progressive and sustained programme of antiracist curricular reform", giving all courses three years to "decolonise".
Rejecting race-based positive discrimination isn’t a mad or selfish attempt to disrupt the programme, but simply standing up for equal treatment under the law, writes Amber Muhinyi.
Many critics of wokery allow that the woke have "good intentions" but just err in the means to achieve their goals. But is that really true? David Hansard thinks not.
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