Re: Those upon the political Right...
Posted: Sat Nov 29, 2025 5:22 pm
The comments by Lucy White, a rightwing activist, have drawn criticism from across the political spectrum amid warnings that explicitly racist language is becoming increasingly normalised in British life.
White, described as a public policy expert during appearances on GB News and Rupert Murdoch’s TalkTV, said on her X account on Wednesday: “Today, the Deputy Speaker presiding over the Budget Statement in the UK House of Commons is Nus Ghani.
“Nus Ghani was born in Kashmir, Pakistan. There should not be a single person born in Pakistan in the UK House of Commons.”
Youngian wrote: ↑Sat Nov 29, 2025 6:21 pm If Nusrat Ghani was the deputy speaker I heard on the radio ticking off a noisy Tory MP by telling him she expected better, she's a rising star to watch.Minor minister under May and Truss. Fired for being too brown by Johnson. Rather hawt, despite being a Brexit fan. Serious Cobra Baroness vibes.
The idea that the sewer that is GBN should sack a contributor for racism is an odd one, which ones aren't?
The best way to protect your culture is to go out and do the cultural things you like.Ed West is London-focussed, and doubtless not particularly hard up. How much is there in London that he could go and support? As Stephen Bush says, go to Wigmore Hall.
For England: join in church raffle to raise funds to fix the roof, go to the village fete, teach your children to cook traditional English food, support bands playing in your local pub, watch the local cricket team, watch the am drams, go to the panto, take up moris dancing, whatever you think is good about English culture. Similar for Scotland.
Don’t just complain that other people have cultures they want to celebrate. You’ll probably find a lot of immigrants want to experience English/Scottish culture as well as their own.
Tubby Isaacs wrote: ↑Sun Dec 07, 2025 11:16 am One of my favourite posters on the Guardian BTL posted this.That traditional ploughman's that was 'codified' post WW2, etc etc etc.
The best way to protect your culture is to go out and do the cultural things you like.Ed West is London-focussed, and doubtless not particularly hard up. How much is there in London that he could go and support? As Stephen Bush says, go to Wigmore Hall.
For England: join in church raffle to raise funds to fix the roof, go to the village fete, teach your children to cook traditional English food, support bands playing in your local pub, watch the local cricket team, watch the am drams, go to the panto, take up moris dancing, whatever you think is good about English culture. Similar for Scotland.
Don’t just complain that other people have cultures they want to celebrate. You’ll probably find a lot of immigrants want to experience English/Scottish culture as well as their own.
I remember Darcus Howe talking to some white British people in a pub, and playfully observing that while their baguettes looked nice, what was wrong with the traditional English ploughman's lunch? If you think this sort of stuff matters, which I don't really, it's not immigrants that forced the change to baguettes.
Tubby Isaacs wrote: ↑Sun Dec 07, 2025 11:08 am I can remember this attitude being there with Daily Telegraph types many years ago, culture as a sense of superiority. But they had the free market as well at that time, as something they argued positively for. What do they have now?The good old free market that’s bought us consumerised off the shelf cultural choice and appropriation.
davidjay wrote: ↑Sun Dec 07, 2025 12:32 pm It seems to me that the 'patriots' who talk about saving British culture hate the things about Britain that outsiders revere - Parliamentary democracy, the NHS, police, BBC, RNLI, National Trust.It's remabkable to reflect how that list has grown as the haters have grown more and more extreme.
RedSparrows wrote: ↑Sun Dec 07, 2025 3:23 pmWe've covered this with folk songs.Tubby Isaacs wrote: ↑Sun Dec 07, 2025 11:16 am One of my favourite posters on the Guardian BTL posted this.That traditional ploughman's that was 'codified' post WW2, etc etc etc.
The best way to protect your culture is to go out and do the cultural things you like.Ed West is London-focussed, and doubtless not particularly hard up. How much is there in London that he could go and support? As Stephen Bush says, go to Wigmore Hall.
For England: join in church raffle to raise funds to fix the roof, go to the village fete, teach your children to cook traditional English food, support bands playing in your local pub, watch the local cricket team, watch the am drams, go to the panto, take up moris dancing, whatever you think is good about English culture. Similar for Scotland.
Don’t just complain that other people have cultures they want to celebrate. You’ll probably find a lot of immigrants want to experience English/Scottish culture as well as their own.
I remember Darcus Howe talking to some white British people in a pub, and playfully observing that while their baguettes looked nice, what was wrong with the traditional English ploughman's lunch? If you think this sort of stuff matters, which I don't really, it's not immigrants that forced the change to baguettes.
RedSparrows wrote: ↑Sun Dec 07, 2025 3:23 pmI didn't know it was that recent. But I thought Darcus had point about it. If I were writing for the Telegraph, I'd seek to trace it back to someone in London, preferably French. Who elected the Baguette Police? That sort of thing.
That traditional ploughman's that was 'codified' post WW2, etc etc etc.
Youngian wrote: ↑Sun Dec 07, 2025 3:40 pmAs Ian Gilmour said of Thatcherites, the market ruled until it didn't want a Thatcherite product. Thatcher-Major did actually make a fairly sensible accommodation with public opinion on the NHS that mostly neutralized the issue until people got fed up with everything being run down,
The good old free market that’s bought us consumerised off the shelf cultural choice and appropriation.