An "anti-racism" event at Goldsmiths, University of London, has banned white people and men from attending.
‘If you’re a man and/or white PLEASE DON’T COME', a Paki name Bahar Mustafa pleaded (of course, being a white male is not very fashionable and PC these days. The people who successfully ruined Top Gear, which was presented by three white men telling non-PC jokes, are now setting their sights on James Bond). She does, though, want "non-binary people" and women to attend.
Can these raging Left-wing loons not see the irony?
Hopefully, like many students, they'll grow out of their Left-wingedness when they get a bit older.
White people have been banned from an ‘anti-racism’ event at a British university
1102 comments
22 April 2015
Lara Prendergast
The Spectator
Bahar Mustafa, the Welfare and Diversity officer for Goldsmiths Students’ Union, must have a strong sense of irony. You’d have to, to run an ‘
anti-racism’ event which states that ‘if you’re a man and/or white PLEASE DON’T COME'. As the student publication
the Tab reports, the event claims to be ‘challenging the white-centric culture of occupations’, ‘diversifying our curriculum’ and building a ‘cross campus campaign that puts liberation at the heart of the movement’.
Back in February, Mustafa, who describes herself on Twitter as a ‘q
ueer, anti-racist feminist killjoy’, came to my attention when she helped organise a ‘BME ONLY social’ before a screening of the film
Dear White People. For those not acquainted with the lingo, this means for Black and Minority Ethnic only.
And now this, essentially the proposition of racial segregation in a British university. And yes, it’s trussed up in
the language of the new PC – ‘non-binary’, ‘safe-space’, ‘BME Women’, ‘
OUR liberation’ – but there are no two ways about this: this is division along racial lines, and it is astonishing that this is deemed acceptable. It wouldn’t be tolerated anywhere else in Britain - so why on earth is it being tolerated at a British university?
White people have been banned from an 'anti-racism' event at a British university - Spectator Blogs