By CR on Friday, 26 June 2020
Category: Constitution and Law

Big Brave Conservatives? By James Reed

     I did not know that there were any conservatives left in the UK university system; certainly, there are none in Australia, and even if there were, they would be just as cowardly as these guys:
  https://www.breitbart.com/europe/2020/06/21/oxford-prof-academics-fear-career-death-if-they-defend-british-empire/

“A leading scholar at the University of Oxford believes conservatives are afraid to stand up to the “zealous left-wing minority” who want to “erase and rewrite history” in case doing so prompts the mob to destroy their careers. Nigel Biggar, regius professor of moral and pastoral theology, has criticised renewed demands, prompted by the Black Lives Matter movement, for statues and memorials to individuals who do not meet the standards of the 21st-century social justice left to be torn down, and for children to be taught a negatively slanted history of Britain’s imperial past. “The problem is that most academics know nothing about imperial history,” Professor Biggar told The Telegraph. “What they do know is that it’s not fashionable to stand up for the British Empire and they also get the impression that if you dare to that, like me, you get mobbed,” he said, referring to a 2017 attempt to cancel him for suggesting Britain’s “morally mixed” history could be a source of “pride” as well as “shame”, “just like that of any nation-state”. “If you are younger your career is at risk if you stand up for unfashionable causes,” Professor Biggar explained, adding that, this combination of ignorance and timidity allows “A zealous left-wing minority of academics [to] persuade a much larger majority of ignorant… and uncertain academics who don’t really want to get into trouble.” “Institutional leaders are acting like rabbits caught in headlights yielding to pressure,” he said of the recent streak of cave-ins to Black Lives Matter activists, with libraries, museums, and universities, agreeing to remove statues and memorials and “decolonise” their collections and curricula. “At the moment we have crowds of mainly young people marching down the streets, shouting and screaming. They give the impression of numbers and power but do they represent majority opinion?” he asked.”

     Well, the politically correct neo-Taliban are in over-drive, rolling out everything they had planned in double time now. Anyone for Black history 24/7?
  https://amp.theguardian.com/education/2020/jun/08/calls-mount-for-black-history-to-be-taught-to-all-uk-school-pupils

“Pressure is mounting on the government to review the national curriculum and make the teaching of black history mandatory for all pupils in schools in England. Campaigners are collecting signatures for an open letter to be sent this week to the education secretary, Gavin Williamson, calling on him to make the teaching of black history compulsory in primary and secondary school and across a range of different subject areas. The campaign, led by a group called the Black Curriculum, has attracted widespread support in the wake of Black Lives Matter protests over the killing of George Floyd in the US, and in light of the disproportionate impact of Covid-19 on black and minority ethnic people. Organisers have requested a face-to-face meeting with Williamson and want a response by Windrush Day on 22 June. The letter states: “Thousands of us, the British voting public, are grief-stricken and concerned about the existing status quo in the UK, which disregards the lives and contributions of black British people.” It says young people studying the national curriculum in schools in England are not given a full or accurate version of British history. “Despite numerous calls over the years to reform the national curriculum to incorporate black histories, these requests have been denied,” it says. “Learning black history should not be a choice but should be mandatory. Our curriculum should not be reinforcing the message that a sizeable part of the British population are not valued.”

Campaigners want black history to be included in the national curriculum from key stage 1 in primary through to key stage 4 when students take their GCSEs, and across subjects including history, citizenship, English and PSHE (personal, social, health and economic education). Lavinya Stennett, who founded the Black Curriculum, said: “There’s an appetite for change. People want to see the events of the past weeks lead to lasting change. It’s something we’ve known is important for a long time. Finally people are listening.” Black history, including topics such as migration, belonging and empire, can be taught as part of the history and English curriculum in secondary schools, but whether pupils get to study it depends on the exam board and modules chosen by schools. Another challenge is that academies, which are not controlled by local authorities, have greater freedoms and are not required to follow the national curriculum, meaning many children may miss out on opportunities to study black history. Labour has promised that pupils will be taught about injustice and the role of the British empire as part of the national curriculum if it wins power. Black history is also studied and celebrated in Black History Month every October. Rosamund McNeil, the assistant general secretary of the National Education Union, said: “Government needs to be more proactive. It’s time to show leadership on making the curriculum more diverse and more representative. It’s really helpful we have Black History Month in October, but it’s not enough to just do it in one month. We have to ask ourselves why we are not eliminating racism quickly enough.”

Catherine West, the Labour MP for Hornsey and Wood Green, has also written to Williamson calling for a review on the issue. She said she had been contacted by hundreds of her constituents complaining about the “complete lack of BAME history” in the curriculum and the ineffectiveness of the education system in tackling systemic racism. “Whilst changing our education system will not necessarily bring an end to racism in the UK, I firmly believe this is an important step in beginning the process of ensuring racial equity in the UK and will go some way to tackling the issues which have been so widely discussed in the past few days,” West said. Pran Patel, an education consultant who runs a campaign to decolonise the school curriculum, said that in the last few days views of his website had risen from 500 a day to 6,000. He said: “Through no fault of their own, our curriculum leaves one group of children feeling inferior and another group with a sense of superiority. Black children don’t see themselves reflected back, and end up feeling they can’t be the person they see in the inspiring story.” Shaminder Takhar, an associate professor of sociology at London South Bank University, said: “Decolonising the curriculum gives voice to those who have previously been marginalised. Viewed in the context of anti-racist struggles such as BLM in the time of Covid-19, it highlights hierarchy and inequality. It is a move towards a more inclusive society.”

It comes as a new art education project, backed by Turner-prize nominated artist Yinka Shonibare, is aiming to transform how Britain understands its role in the transatlantic slave trade by placing sculptures that explore its legacy in UK cities. The World Reimagined project will see 100 globe-shaped sculptures erected in cities across the UK in the summer of 2022, which will be accessible to local schools, and created by well-known and community-based artists. Founding board member, singer and former EastEnders star, Michelle Gayle, told the Guardian she wanted to create a project that would start conversations about Britain and slavery, and provide an educational element for school and community groups. “It’s a cog in the wheel of what we need to learn about the truth of British history. Everyone can get involved, meaningfully,” she said.”

     Sounds like an excellent reason for whites to downscale, enjoy the decline, let the economy burn, and home school, and home stead. But, really this sort of pc history has dominated mainstream school teaching for decades  anyway, so it is nothing new, just an intensification of the woke pressure. I image that after a while, even the most diverse students are going to get sick of this. Nothing produces a backlash more than having stuff rammed down one’s throat, so to speak.

     Hard to say how long it will take before it all falls apart, but for me, the sooner the better, given how degenerate the West now is. But, going back to the academic career bs, really there is no legacy for anyone’s work, whatever side of politics it falls on, since it all is going to be swept away in the coming social collapse. Books burn easy and how long before crazed Leftist mobs turn to burn these ivy towers, made of paper and silicon chips? And, I am so grumpy now that I see this as inevitable in a Spenglerian way of thinking about the decline and fall of the West. Let’s get onto the next civilisation please.

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