@lfdons I’m not saying Scotlands squad is able compete with the top teams but they have enough quality to be easily getting into the knockout stages but your manager is so dull can you imagine him getting you in the mood for one of scotlands most important games in 28 years 🥴
@ArchRose90 Apart from people who don’t pay taxes I haven’t heard a single person to say Labour have improved their lives and that from Labour voters included 😂
Henry Nowak is further proof of anti-white bias. I do believe it exists, but being completely open and transparent, I haven’t always.
Not because I ignored it, but because we have been taught that racism only goes one way since we were young children.
Throughout my time in primary school, all the way to University, the emphasis on fighting racism was always to portray a white, straight male as the culprit. Anti-white was usually dismissed as a far-right conspiracy used by the BNP to stoke division.
Positive discrimination was presented as an innocent solution which would help fix inequality. Institutional racism after the Stephen Lawrence murder was the new buzz word. Of course, being black and only knowing what I had been taught at the time, I had little reason to question it.
Things started to change once I started to notice that white working-class boys are actually underperforming more than their peers in school. This data didn’t scream “white privilege” to me.
Then the dreadful reports of the Pakistani rape gangs, heartbreaking stories started to emerge. At first, I was taken aback at the thought of politicians, police officers and social workers covering up the biggest UK scandal of my lifetime. These rapes went on for decades, whilst society was pushing white guilt. Sickening revelations certainly changed my outlook on race.
I began to be more vocal, arguing against white guilt and black victimhood during my time at University. What struck me at first was the racist responses from other black people who disagreed with me. I was told only white people could be racist. That lie is embedded in so many institutions.
By the time Black Lives Matter escalated in response to George Floyd’s death, my stance had completely changed. I thought supporting the idea of All Lives Matter instead of dividing people into races seemed more appropriate. I did not foresee that I would be classed as a “sellout” for desiring nuance and not seeing white people as enemies.
The BLM activism inevitably led to a rise in positive discrimination with more job opportunities barring white applicants than ever before. Completely wrong and counterproductive. It has also led to police officers treating white protesters more harshly than ethnic minority protesters at a pro-Palestine march.
It’s as clear as day to see. The evidence and data show this. Many others have probably been on a similar journey to me, but I question the sincerity of any adult who dismisses the idea of anti-white bias after all the revelations over the years.
@EssexPR Do you not feel that all this corruption is coming out deliberately to see just how much they can get away with until the public finally snap? Then when there’s riots more rules and regulations introduced 🤔
@Vr638877597@SimonBCritical@SkyNews@EdConwaySky It’s both lets me honest as much as it’s Isreal and their lapdog it’s also the UK government crippling the working class and outsourcing every aspect of our societal needs to others countries to pretend to be a green country.
@KamilGrka3@MichaelAArouet I mean we have oil we just have to lunatics who decide to import it from the same sea it’s extracted from that we have access to because Green 🥴
@narindertweets People like you are funny because you spout exactly what you are supposedly arguing against 😂 you only highlight white crime and completely ignore all other crimes the same way some white people highlight only migrant crime. Your arguments only create more division 😂