The point made in a recent Daily Sceptic article about the UK universities, applied to our disgraceful Australian universities as well, perhaps more so. It is argued that in the Arts and Humanities, and so-called Social Sciences, but increasingly seeping into the harder physical sciences, there is an anti-White, anti-Western bias. For example, In August 2024, the Telegraph reported that the University of Nottingham had removed the term "Anglo-Saxon" from university module titles as part of efforts to refute "nationalist narratives." Talk about letting the anti-white racist cat out of the bag!
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2024/08/31/anglo-saxon-cancelled-to-decolonise-university-courses/
The University of Nottingham has also completed a review of the connections of this university to the slave trade, which England worked to end, but still goes on in the non-White world more than ever. This created a a legacy of "racism" at the British institutions, and big-time reparations are needed to deal with the eternal white guilt of the ultra-liberals. May I suggest, closing down universities like this, and giving the money away to irrelevant Black folks who have not known slavery for generations? After all, if the foundations of the university are based upon racism, the second worst thing in the universe (guess what number one is), the universities must go!
"Degree courses focused on the "undertakings of white people" have made universities racist, according to a review by a Russell Group university that has pledged to make reparations in response. The Telegraph has the story.
The University of Nottingham and Nottingham Trent undertook a joint review of their connections to the slave trade, and set out how these have created a legacy of "racism" at the institutions.
They pledged to make slavery reparations as a result of their review, which found that the universities' "racially unbalanced curriculum" ignores the "equally significant efforts of people of African descent". The report does not state in which specific subjects this parity of achievement has been ignored.
Its authors, a group of Nottingham academics, concluded that "these are issues that require urgent and sustained attention".
Under the pledge made following the review, the universities are set to devise a plan for reparative justice to atone for links to slavery and mitigate "enduring detrimental legacies".
No definitive plans have yet been made to address the issues raised in the report.
The report was overseen by a steering group that included six people appointed by the two universities who "identify as black". Authors credited their "biological proximity to the historical atrocity of slavery" with raising awareness of "ongoing emotional pain" throughout the project.
The report into the connections between Nottingham universities and the slave trade stated that key benefactors, the 6th and 7th Dukes of Portland, benefited from slavery despite both having been born after abolition.
Descendants of family members who may have directly owned slaves benefited from the social and "cultural capital" that came with wealth initially generated through forced labour, according to the report.
Such cultural capital, the report states, may include the aristocratic cultural conventions of "reading classical European literature" and "travelling to historic landmarks". …