- Sun Apr 23, 2023 11:56 am
#42914
Where to start?
Once the great hope, the successor to Bernie Grant, but now enmeshed in an aura of loopiness.
Not to go over her greatest hits but she has done one today.
Tomiwa Owolade (a freelance leftist writer who does some work for the New Statesman) wrote a piece in The Observer, entitled 'Racism in Britain is not a black and white issue. It’s far more complicated' in which he examined the findings of the Evidence for Equality National Survey - which he finds to be challenging, noting for example that more people of Irish descent reported being subjected to racist assaults than people of Black descent:
However, Abbot took exception, and wrote
Many people have interpreted this as her attempting to get the whip withdrawn, but I don't think so. She has since retracted.
I think that this is another example of the Corbynite blind spot - the Corbyn left is so convinced of its own moral righteousness that they cannot conceive that they are in any way out of step. Blinkered in a deadly fashion.
She has now been suspended from the party. About time.
https://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/entry/ ... gn=uk_main
I'm with Russ:
Once the great hope, the successor to Bernie Grant, but now enmeshed in an aura of loopiness.
Not to go over her greatest hits but she has done one today.
Tomiwa Owolade (a freelance leftist writer who does some work for the New Statesman) wrote a piece in The Observer, entitled 'Racism in Britain is not a black and white issue. It’s far more complicated' in which he examined the findings of the Evidence for Equality National Survey - which he finds to be challenging, noting for example that more people of Irish descent reported being subjected to racist assaults than people of Black descent:
Black Caribbean people, for instance, are more likely than black African people to say they have experienced racism – nearly 50% for black Caribbean people and more than 30% for black African people. Which also means that more than half of black Caribbean people and two thirds of black African people say they experienced no racist assault. All of this from a survey many have used to conclude that Britain is far from being a racially just society.This, he argues, means having a rather more nuanced view of racism than 'white = top, Black = bottom'.
Remarkably, the survey found that 40% of white Irish people reported experiencing some form of racist assault in their lives. This means that white Irish people are more likely to say they have experienced prejudice in Britain than black African people and all Asian ethnic groups: Indian, Pakistani, Bangladeshi, Chinese and other Asian groups.
There are racial inequalities in our society. This much is true. But this should be approached with subtlety rather than simplicity. This is because ethnic minority people in this country have diverse experiences and any commitment to fighting racial disadvantage needs to incorporate this complex truth if it wants to be truly effective.It's a short piece, and I would have thought pretty uncontroversial.
Morally speaking, racism is a black and white issue. But when it comes to how it manifests itself, it is multidimensional. The most comprehensive survey on racial inequality for nearly 30 years needs to be examined comprehensively.
However, Abbot took exception, and wrote
Many people have interpreted this as her attempting to get the whip withdrawn, but I don't think so. She has since retracted.
I think that this is another example of the Corbynite blind spot - the Corbyn left is so convinced of its own moral righteousness that they cannot conceive that they are in any way out of step. Blinkered in a deadly fashion.
She has now been suspended from the party. About time.
https://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/entry/ ... gn=uk_main
I'm with Russ:
Oboogie liked this
The moneychangers have fled from their high seats in the temple of our civilization. We now restore that temple to the ancient truths. The measure of the restoration lies in the extent to which we apply values more noble than mere monetary profit.