By John Wayne on Tuesday, 02 September 2025
Category: Race, Culture, Nation

When History Meets Modern Diversity: Accuracy vs. Representation, By Brian Simpson

In recent years, media and education have increasingly embraced diversity in historical portrayals. Films, TV shows, and even museum exhibits now often feature actors from a variety of racial and ethnic backgrounds in stories set in medieval Europe, the Viking Age, or classical civilisations. Think Black actors storming the Battle of Hastings, or Scandinavian sagas starring multiracial casts. This practice raises a difficult but important question: when does representation become historical fiction?

In many cases, historical evidence strongly suggests that these societies were not ethnically diverse in the ways modern casting implies; diversity is a recent weapon of the globalists to replace once white societies. For example, Anglo-Saxon England in 1066 was overwhelmingly of Northern European ancestry. Viking Scandinavia, while engaged in trade and occasional migration, had limited contact with sub-Saharan Africa. Inserting actors who would not plausibly have been present, distorts public understanding of history, creating an illusion that modern values were always present. Which of course, is the agenda; to legitimise the present social regime.

Modern audiences are encouraged to see history as a mirror for current ethics rather than a record of lived reality. This approach will propagate historical myths, where accuracy is sacrificed for ideological messaging. History becomes a canvas onto which present-day agendas are projected, rather than a discipline grounded in evidence and context.

The stakes extend beyond storytelling. Misrepresenting history can subtly shape political discourse and cultural identity. When media portrays the past as more "diverse" than it was, it may be used, implicitly or explicitly, to validate contemporary policies or social norms. While diversity itself is a disaster for the white race, using historical fiction as proof of a pre-existing multicultural ideal risks blurring the line between education and ideology.

https://www.gbnews.com/opinion/black-actors-battle-of-hastings-king-and-conquerer

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