No profit intended, I was gifting it to you sinkov as a token of my unadulterated love for your right wing nonsense, checks and balances and all of that...
Bless her, she's a National Treasure, but I'll manage without the momento thanks. Have you tried Ebay, there's some right garbage makes good money on there.
No profit intended, I was gifting it to you sinkov as a token of my unadulterated love for your right wing nonsense, checks and balances and all of that...
My argument sinkov is that the Metropolitan Police demonstrate prejudice, discrimination and antagonism towards young black males.
Personally, I see little everyday discrimination directed against any single person or group of people based on their membership of a particular racial or ethnic group, such as Muslims.
I'm not sure I have ever seen anyone in Clitheroe who isn't white, but here in Bolton we have a very diverse, multi-cultural population of around 300,000. I have lived here for over ten years now and see no evidence of "racism".
Institutional racism is however a more very challenging area to define because of its very secretive nature. I read of loads of pay outs being awarded to people (usually black), because of racial discrimination that has become established as normal behaviour within a society or organization, just like the Metropolitan Police force or NHS.
Which brings me back 360 degrees to where I started this discussion.
"Institutional racism, also known as systemic racism, is a form of racism that is embedded through laws within society or an organization."
Can you point out BT, which laws, rules, regulations, guidelines, call them what you like, which govern how the Met is run, allows, encourages or condones racism, or it's officers to act in a racist manner ?
That individual officers in the Met are racist is indisputable, every police force will have them, most walks of life will have them, this is not proof that the organisations they work for, or the country they live in, is institutionally racist.
There are a few BAMEs in Clitheroe, there is no problem, when I lived over Burnley way I did see evidence of racism, it was almost entirely involving sections of the Asian community, they fought each other like rats in a sack, and I had a ringside seat. There were no white people involved at all.
First hit on google and they are popping up like rabbits with a ferret in the hole...
https://www.theguardian.com/commenti...-bame-officers
There appears to be two separate debates here
1) Racism
2) Abusive power.
Living in Burnley, albeit in an area where the residents are unanimously white British, I have not seen a lot of racist behaviour. The only time I saw racism was when I was in hospital and on the same ward were two Asians one an Indian and the other Pakistani. During visiting times, it was common to see the hatred between to two families nothing to do with skin colour more to do with things happening in their countries of origin.
As for the abuse of power, during the 1970’s I had a friend who was a police sergeant and had been seconded to South Yorkshire during the miners strike. He said that they hated arriving on site to be teamed with officers from London’s Metropolitan Police force, as they knew that there would be trouble because if the miners were being peaceful in their protest, then the Metropolitan police officers would ensure they provoked violence, he said it seemed to be in their culture. Almost 50 years on it seems things have not changed. With all the recent publicity surrounding our home secretary I think she is unlikely to inspire confidence that our government will act to root out any institutional racism or bullying within the Metropolitan Police Force.
I'm sure you did BT, you know that I know how the Grauniad works, a Grauniad sub-editor can summon up a dozen or more witnesses to racism in the Met with one snap of her fingers, (actually I'm thinking about back in the day, nowadays she'd be able to summon up a couple of hundred racism in the Met stories with one tap on her keyboard). And I know that you know how the Grauniad works, and you know that I know that you know.
I need a cup of tea now to clear my head, to be continued tomorrow.