logo
I have changed my mind: anti-white racism exists

I have changed my mind: anti-white racism exists

Yahoo10-04-2025

I have long been reluctant to use the phrase 'anti-white racism'. It is a term I have worried might fuel a grievance narrative and foster resentment in an already crowded field of competitive victimhood.
But as time passes, it is becoming increasingly difficult to ignore what looks like a growing pattern of institutional discrimination against white Britons.
The recent case involving West Yorkshire Police is another example, following closely on the heels of the controversy surrounding the Sentencing Council's guidelines on pre-sentence reports, which many have rightly described as 'two-tier justice'.
In this latest case, West Yorkshire Police have reportedly blocked white applicants from joining the force as part of a diversity recruitment scheme.
What is especially disturbing is how this policy has embedded a formal hierarchy of racial preference within the police force. According to internal documents, black and far east Asian candidates were awarded 'gold' status, south east Asians were ranked 'silver', while 'white others', including those of Irish or eastern European descent, were pushed into the 'bronze' tier.
This is not equality. It is a new kind of racial ranking, uncomfortably reminiscent of apartheid-era thinking, made socially acceptable only because those placed at the bottom are white.
This is not an isolated incident either. Last year, an employment tribunal upheld claims from white officers in Thames Valley Police who were denied promotion or entry under policies that explicitly prioritised candidates from ethnic minority backgrounds.
At a time when crime is rising and public trust in policing is under significant strain, we should be welcoming all capable individuals, regardless of race, to serve their communities. Competence and commitment should be the only criteria for suitability, not ethnicity.
Some will argue, particularly those profiting from the booming 'Diversity, Equality and Inclusion' industry, that these initiatives are needed to correct historical under-representation.
But this assumes that diversity necessarily improves policing outcomes. That assumption is, at best, unproven. Take the case of the now-disbanded Scorpion unit of the Memphis Police Department in the United States – a unit composed mostly of black officers, some of whom were involved in the horrific killing of Tyre Nichols, a black man.
That tragedy only reinforces the point: representation alone does not guarantee justice, professionalism or public confidence.
But why do disparities in application and promotion rates exist? I would argue that narratives pushed by organisations like the National Black Police Association – claiming the force is institutionally racist – have likely deterred many ethnic minority applicants.
And dragging officers through questionable disciplinary processes, such as the case of police firearms officer Martyn Blake following the shooting of Chris Kaba, only serves to undermine trust on all sides. And seeing a force riddled with scandal hardly makes it attractive to join.
In the name of fighting racism, we are instead fuelling it. Overtly discriminatory policies, however well-intentioned, hand the genuine far-Right an easy and increasingly valid argument: that white people are now being treated less favourably than other groups.
Even more insidiously, these initiatives are often prejudiced against ethnic minority candidates themselves. By lowering intellectual or moral standards, institutions send the message that minority applicants cannot compete on merit. That is not equality: it is patronising and ultimately harmful.
We face a fundamental choice. Either we uphold the principle that all individuals, regardless of race, have the capacity to serve with integrity and impartiality, or we continue to divide society by judging people on the basis of their racial group.
If equality means anything, it must mean equal standards, equal opportunity, and equal treatment. Abandoning this conception of equality risks tearing apart the very fabric of public trust we are so desperate to restore.
Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Public disorder breaks out in Northern Irish town, with missiles thrown at police
Public disorder breaks out in Northern Irish town, with missiles thrown at police

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Public disorder breaks out in Northern Irish town, with missiles thrown at police

LONDON (Reuters) -Public disorder broke out in Ballymena town centre in Northern Ireland following a protest reportedly over an alleged sexual assault case on Monday, with police saying a number of missiles had been thrown towards officers. The unrest follows a protest in the area, about 45 km (30 miles) from the capital city of Belfast, earlier on Monday evening, the police statement said, adding damage was reported to a number of properties. Social media footage, purportedly showing the disorder, captured plumes of fire near what appeared to be residential buildings, with police present at the scene. Another clip appeared to show a masked man throwing an object at police vans as a crowd looked on. Reuters could not immediately verify the authenticity of these clips. "We are urging everyone to remain calm and to act responsibly," Chief Superintendent Sue Steen said in the police statement. BBC News reported that hundreds of protesters had gathered in Ballymena in response to a case involving two teenage boys who appeared before Coleraine Magistrates' Court earlier in the day, accused of sexually assaulting a teenage girl in the County Antrim town. Irish media outlet RTE News reported that the teenagers, who it said are Romanian and spoke through an interpreter, cannot be identified because of their ages. A separate police statement from Sunday said two teenage boys had been charged with attempted rape in connection with a serious sexual assault on a teenage girl in Ballymena on Saturday evening.

New Jersey Democrats prepare to pick a candidate, and an identity for their party
New Jersey Democrats prepare to pick a candidate, and an identity for their party

Yahoo

time4 hours ago

  • Yahoo

New Jersey Democrats prepare to pick a candidate, and an identity for their party

HASKELL, N.J. – On Sunday morning, in a crowded Irish sports bar, Jack Ciattarelli described the moment that would probably clinch him the Republican nomination for governor. He missed a call from Air Force One. He called back. And President Trump said that he was about to hit 'send' on a Truth Social post endorsing him. 'He said: 'Jack, I've gotta tell ya – this is the most beautiful endorsement I've ever made. It says so many nice things about you. You're gonna love it,'' Ciattarelli told his supporters. 'I said: 'Mr. President, I'm honored.' Republicans and Democrats in New Jersey will pick their nominees to succeed Gov. Phil Murphy today, four years after Ciatarelli nearly denied Murphy his second term. In 2017 and 2021, Trump's unpopularity was an anchor on the GOP, its brand already battered by the unpopularity of former Gov. Chris Christie. But after last year's presidential election, when Trump lost New Jersey by just 6 points, Republicans doubt he'll be as much of a drag on their party as Murphy will be on the Democrats. In their own six-way primary, as they've debated property taxes, education standards, and how much to fight the administration's immigration raids, Democrats have taken on Trump – and acknowledged that voters are a little fatigued with them, too. 'If you think that you're going to be elected in November solely being a Democratic establishment candidate, and just hammering Donald Trump, it's not where the electorate is going to be,' Jersey City Mayor Steven Fulop told supporters at a Sunday rally in Fair Lawn. 'It's not going to be a referendum on Donald Trump,' said Fulop. 'It's going to be: Really, do you want four more years of Phil Murphy?' Murphy has stayed out of the Democratic primary, the first since the end of 'the line,' a system that gave preferred ballot placement to candidates endorsed by county parties. Rep. Mikie Sherrill (D-N.J.), a rising star in the party since her landslide 2018 win in a historically Republican seat, has locked up most of those parties' endorsements. That has helped make Sherrill the favorite for the nomination, and the target of anti-establishment campaigning by Fulop and Newark Mayor Ras Baraka. A Fulop PAC attacked her as a tool of the 'political machine,' and both candidates went after donations from employees of Elon Musk's SpaceX, a $400 fine she paid over missing the deadline to report one of her husband's stock trades, and an increase in her net worth since 2018. Those ads led to an awkward moment for Sherrill, on The Breakfast Club, when host Charlamagne tha God asked her to explain the accusation in the ads, and how she'd made $7 million in Congress. 'I, I haven't – I don't believe I did, but I'd have to go see what that was alluding to,' she said. That moment encouraged Sherrill's challengers, who've spent all year trying to challenge the electability aura of, as her ads put it, a 'Navy helicopter pilot, a federal prosecutor, [and] a mom of four.' Baraka, whose national profile soared after his arrest at an ICE facility in Newark, has campaigned on a record of lower crime in the city and a more progressive governing agenda, paid for by a higher corporate tax. At a Saturday rally in Jersey City, he said that critics who accused him of campaigning on 'rhetoric and platitudes' hadn't offered anything real to voters. 'They don't really understand the issues,' Baraka told Semafor. 'If you understand the issues, you could talk about them passionately. And I don't think they do. I think it's talking points, white papers and all kinds of other things that they put together, or people put together for them.' Polling has found a consistent lead for Sherrill, and enough undecided voters for a potential upset. Three other candidates have hoped to win them: Rep. Josh Gottheimer (D-N.J.), New Jersey Education Association President Sean Spiller, and former state Senate President Steve Sweeney, who lost his seat four years ago when Ciattarelli out-performed the polls. Sweeney, the only South Jersey candidate in the race, broke with the pack by saying he'd repeal the state's 'sanctuary' immigration status. Gottheimer and Spiller made news for other reasons: Gottheimer with a confounding TV ad that used AI to portray him boxing with Trump, Spiller with a $35 million spend from his union, dwarfing every other candidate's war chest. Sherrill had far more support from local and national Democratic groups, and pitched herself as the candidate Republicans didn't want to run against. On Saturday morning, at a Colombian restaurant in Elizabeth, she shared the stage with a slate of Latino politicians who touted their work for the region and the work Sherrill could do if she won. 'We need more mothers in these spaces,' said Senate Majority Leader Teresa Ruiz. 'We need more caretakers in these spaces.' The officially endorsed candidate of Union County Democrats spoke next. Ciattarelli, she said, 'broke land speed records getting to Bedminster to kiss Trump's ring.' But she knew how to fight Trump. 'As a former Navy helicopter pilot, as a former federal prosecutor, as a mom of four kids, four teenagers, I am telling you that I'm often reminded of a lesson that I learned when I was in the Navy,' she said. When ships ran aground, it was often because 'the people on the bridge' were scared to warn their commanding officers. 'And I tell you that, because I see that all the time in Congress.' Ciattarelli, a former state legislator who'd also run for governor in 2017, began running for this nomination as soon as he conceded to Murphy. He faces four other Republicans in the primary, including Bill Spadea, a radio host who attacked him for as long as he could for Ciattarelli's old, recanted criticism of Trump. Post-endorsement polling has shown Ciattarelli expanding his lead over the field, and on Sunday, the candidate ignored his opponents and promised to fix the problems he pinned on Murphy and the Democrats, from the cost of living to 'sanctuary state' policies that undermined police. 'They worry about pronouns. We worry about property taxes,' he said. 'They worry about supporting illegals and setting criminals free. We care about supporting our local police and keeping our community safe. [W]e've got an overdevelopment crisis. We'll fix that by stopping all this over-development in our suburbs.' After the rally, Ciattarelli told Semafor that Trump would be an asset for his campaign, pointing out that the president got more votes last year than Murphy got in any of his races. 'Look what he's done for New Jersey,' Ciattarelli said of Trump. 'He's put a temporary halt on the wind farms off the Jersey Shore. He's beating up on New York Democrats over congestion pricing, and he's willing to quadruple the SALT deduction on our federal tax returns. Those are all things that New Jerseyans overwhelmingly support. So I think we're in a really, really good position here in terms of what the President's positions are and what my positions are to win this election.' Democrats lost to Chris Christie twice, but they were gobsmacked by how close the 2024 election ended up being in New Jersey. Not all of them; Murphy had told many people, Trump included, that it would be the state's first single-digit race in 20 years. But why did Kamala Harris run nearly 400,000 votes behind Joe Biden? How, in four years, did Trump go from someone Ciattarelli wanted nothing to a political asset? These are questions for November, though Democrats absolutely expected Trump to be less popular in New Jersey by now. An Emerson Poll last month gave the president a slightly higher approval rating than Murphy, which feeds into Fulop's theory that another anti-Trump campaign won't be effective. You can expect Ciattarelli to win today. The Democratic race will be more revealing. Fulop is running a lot like Sen. Andy Kim (D-N.J.) did last year, campaigning with an anti-machine 'NJ for Change' slate, directly comparing Sherrill to Murphy's wife Tammy, who Kim beat in the 2024 primary with an anti-machine campaign. (Murphy ended up pulling herself off the ballot.) Polling has not picked up any boost to Baraka since his arrest, which every other candidate condemned. Republicans describe a Democratic Party that is so Trump-crazed that it'll nominate whoever fights him the hardest and most furiously. If that doesn't happen for Baraka, we'll learn something about a very diverse Democratic electorate. Democrats believe that Ciattarelli's embrace of Trump, and refusal to break with him on anything, will end up being a liability — especially his plan for a garden state version of 'DOGE,' an idea that has shined less brightly after it didn't meet Elon Musk's cost-saving expectations, and after some of its cuts led to money-wasting confusion. 'Jack Ciattarelli, over and over again, refuses to put a sliver of daylight between his plans for New Jersey and Donald Trump's,' New Jersey Democratic State Committee spokesperson Ryan Radulovacki said in a statement. 'If Jack Ciattarelli makes it to the general election he'll have to fully own his '100% plus' embrace of Donald Trump's harmful, costly agenda, no matter what he says or how he tries to run from it.' In the Associated Press, Adriana Gomez Licon and Mike Catalini looked at how Democrats were re-approaching the Latino voters who drifted last year, and how the primary 'highlights the challenges in traditionally blue areas where the party's loss of support among Hispanics in 2024 was even more pronounced than in battleground states.' In Politico, Madison Fernandez and Ry Rivard lay out how each Democrat could win the primary. In the New Jersey Monitor, Nikita Biryukov, Dana DiFilippo and Sophie Nieto-Munoz capture what each candidate said as they closed out their campaigns.

Fugitive's girlfriend charged with aiding breakout at New Orleans jail where she once worked
Fugitive's girlfriend charged with aiding breakout at New Orleans jail where she once worked

Associated Press

time5 hours ago

  • Associated Press

Fugitive's girlfriend charged with aiding breakout at New Orleans jail where she once worked

NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Authorities arrested a former New Orleans jail employee on Monday and accused her of aiding in the 10-inmate breakout at the facility last month, which included an escape by her boyfriend — a convicted murderer. The former jail employee, Darriana Burton, 28, is one of at least 16 people arrested and accused of aiding the escape of the inmates on May 16. Authorities said only two remain at large: her boyfriend, Derrick Groves, and Antoine Massey, who is facing charges of rape, kidnapping and domestic battery. According to police reports, Burton also allegedly 'picked up' and transported another fugitive, Lenton Vanburen, to a relative's home during his escape. Burton was fired from her job in 2023 after she was arrested on allegations of bringing a folding knife and a bag of Cheetos containing tobacco and marijuana into the jail. The charges were dropped in part due to her lack of criminal history, and she 'successfully completed' a pretrial diversion program, the Orleans Parish District Attorney's Office told The Associated Press. 'I categorically deny any involvement in introducing contraband into the jail or assisting in any escape,' Burton said May 30 in a text message to The Associated Press. 'These allegations are false and I intend to fully defend myself through the proper legal channels.' Agents with the Louisiana Bureau of Investigation and the U.S. Marshals Service coordinated Burton's arrest after obtaining a warrant on May 27. She was taken into custody in the Plaquemines Parish jail, authorities said. Burton and Groves 'were in an on-again, off-again relationship for three years,' dating back to the time when she was still working in the jail, authorities said. 'We will continue to pursue anyone and everyone who has aided and abetted these criminals. We will find you, arrest you, and prosecute you to the full extent of the law,' Louisiana Attorney General Liz Murrill said in a statement. 'We will arrest all aiders and abettors, and we will eventually get Antoine Massey and Derrick Groves back to prison where they belong.' ___ Brook is a corps member for The Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store