
Union flag dress girl's school exclusion was mad & cruel but good thing could come out of this sorry saga
But it is also utter madness that schools spend so much time and effort on ridiculous 'days' like this, which can so often end up being brutal for both kids and parents.
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Courtney Wright's school in Rugby, Warwickshire, said the celebration day was 'designed to promote inclusion, understanding, and appreciation of different backgrounds, traditions and heritages'.
But it has backfired. Hugely. It has now had to close early for the summer over 'extremist threats'.
Utterly ridiculous
The dress Courtney carefully chose was deemed 'unacceptable' and she was segregated from class and unable to read out the speech on British history she had worked hard to prepare.
After the 12-year-old's dad spoke out the school was forced to issue a grovelling apology and it sparked a political debate, with Downing Street saying the Prime Minister always believed that being British is to be celebrated.
Marvellous. But what I hope this saga really does now is lead to a sensible decision to clamp down on the amount of organised events like this within schools.
Because they are getting out of control and are often utterly ridiculous.
It was once just Red Nose Day but now there is everything from diversity weeks to history days and dinosaur days to recycling week.
I get that some are educational but the ones that involve buying expensive new clothing that only gets worn once, or full-on fancy dress outfits with a theme, are unfair on both parents and kids. Many dread them.
There are schools now having such regular themed events that some parents pretend their kids are ill to avoid sending them in.
School banned my daughter, 12, from 'diversity day' for wearing Union Jack dress - the reason was ridiculous
Luckily, my son's primary school only marks the bare minimum.
But when the notifications on my Year 1 WhatsApp group go off before 8am, I get a sinking feeling, knowing I've probably forgotten to prepare him for some event or another.
It is usually the same kindly and organised parents who remind the forgetful ones like me that a jazzy sock or specific coloured T-shirt is required at an hour's notice.
I don't want to seem like a bah humbug misery here. I am sure all the schools around this country mean well when they arrange activities to bring the kids together and make them happy.
But what can seem like a genuinely brilliant, fun, and inclusive 'day' to the school can cause misery for others.
Dressing up means they don't only have to feel good, but look good too. The wrong outfit can cause mayhem.
The last thing busy parents need is a half-hearted outfit that can be ridiculed, and those battling to manage a weekly food budget can do without coughing up for one-off outfits too.
Obviously schools will say there is the option to opt out but who really wants to be the parent that does that to their kid?
The worst event of the year is surely World Book Day in March.
At some schools it has become an event of the creatively gifted, craft-loving parents versus the panic-stricken ones who are forced to purchase pricey Amazon next-day delivery numbers.
The average cost for an Insta-worthy outfit for the day is now £20 — which could be better spent on buying actual reading books instead.
Sighing with relief
This week, parents went into meltdown after discovering the price of summer holiday camps have soared to more than a grand for six weeks.
But many will be sighing with relief that they have a break from preparing for the next obscure school celebration.
I would imagine Courtney's school won't be arranging one any time soon after she said she felt 'embarrassed' and 'upset'.
But, as dreadful as this episode has been for her, I hope it has given a valuable lesson to other schools around this country.
A reminder they are primarily there to teach our children — and maybe they should just stick to celebrating that.
Yamal's small hassle
SO, Spanish footballer Lamine Yamal is being accused of 'exploiting' dwarves by hiring them from a company to serve drinks and entertain guests at his 18th.
The Barcelona forward could face a court case.
It's fair to say that hiring dwarves isn't for everyone.
But as one of those who was employed for the evening explained to Catalonian radio station RAC1: 'No one disrespected us – let us work in peace. I don't understand why there's so much hype.
'We're normal people who do what we want in an absolutely legal way.' He has a point.
If they weren't for hire, this stupid footballer wouldn't have been able to book them.
SMURFS star John Goodman looks amazing after dropping 200lb.
But reading how he did it sounded like some kind of history lesson of the future.
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John says it is thanks to ditching booze, hiring a health coach, eliminating sugar, working out and mindful eating.
We will one day remember this as the 'old- fashioned way we once dieted' before we all started shoving needles in our bellies.
Bun of a kind
IT seems baffling that a man who owns a chain of takeaway burger restaurants has now become the face of a . . . takeaway burger restaurant.
But that is exactly what Gordon Ramsay has done.
The chef owns a string of Street Burger outlets and now he's landed a six-figure deal from Burger King for a new campaign.
Gordon is a burger fan and once even admitted that part of his 'final meal' would be a burger from American chain, In-N-Out Burger.
You wonder where his loyalty would lie now.
Ladies on the brink
ENGLAND are through to the semi-finals of Euro 2025 – not a sentence that you can always say with confidence.
But the Lionesses got lucky with penalties, and after battling past Italy they could be in the final a week today.
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This amazing team of never-say-die women have changed all that and are giving inspiration to a generation of little girls who for years only had female role models in the world of athletics and tennis to look up to.
They are on the brink of brilliance, and with every kick they are changing the future of hundreds of girls around this country.
What's up doc
SOMEBODY needs to have a word with Ncuti Gatwa, who has quit Doctor Who at just 32 because he says: 'I'm getting old and my body was tired.'
Ncuti said it was strenuous and took a lot out of him.
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Unless he's rolling in it he will presumably have to keep acting for another few decades before his pension kicks in.
Let's hope he doesn't land anything too strenuous.
SPEAKING of age, the news that over-80s have been applying to become the legal parents of children born through surrogacy is quite shocking.
As Ncuti has shown, some people really don't feel their age, but there's just something not quite right about celebrating your 18th when one of your parents is opening their 100th birthday card from the King.
AS family holiday rip-off days go, I don't think you can beat Weymouth's Sandworld.
A family of four can spend £36.50 to see sculptures made out of sand, including a life-size Ben Shephard and Cat Deeley.
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When it was unveiled on This Morning, Ben asked: 'Is that us?' Exactly.
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The Sun
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Who asked for population of Greater Manchester to flood UK in just 4 years? Politicians are so out of touch with public
WHAT holds a country together? It's one of the most important questions a nation can ask. Yet, today, were you to quiz anybody in Westminster, they would probably stare back at you with a blank expression, unable to give you a convincing answer. 11 This was not the case in the most ancient civilisations, such as Greece and Rome, of course, where this question was always on the minds of leaders. In Ancient Greece, the writer Pericles warned that leaders will only hold their state together so long as they listen to the people they lead, 'for only then can leaders rule with their trust'. And in Ancient Rome, too, the statesman Cicero reached the same conclusion, warning the leaders of the city state that unless they look after their own people first — which he considered their 'highest duty' — then their civilisation will rapidly crumble from within and become vulnerable to external invaders. Why, you are probably asking yourself, am I rewinding the clock to these ancient thinkers? Because what they understood is what far too many of our politicians in Westminster today fail to understand — that once this sacred bond between the rulers and the ruled breaks, there is no going back. Once leaders become so out of touch, so adrift from the people they claim to represent, then their civilisation will plunge into chaos, carnage and darkness. And is this not what is happening in Britain today? A political class, a ruling class, that increasingly looks utterly adrift from the hard-working, tax-paying, law-abiding majority? Take another issue some of those ancient philosophers alluded to: The influx of outsiders and foreigners through the deliberate policy of mass uncontrolled immigration. Who voted for this? Only this week, shockingly, we learned that the population of England and Wales is growing at the fastest rate in history, with some 707,000 people added last year and some 2.5million since the outbreak of the Covid pandemic. Who voted for this? Seriously? Who voted for this population explosion, for a pace and scale of change that is now leaving many of our communities and our country unrecognisable? Who asked for their leaders to add the equivalent of the entire Greater Manchester area in only four years? And just look at how dramatic and historically unprecedented this is. Between the election of Margaret Thatcher, in 1979, and Tony Blair, in 1997, the annual rate of population increase in England and Wales never surpassed a peak of 188,000 people in a single year, and averaged roughly 111,000 people over each 12-month period. 11 But since Covid? Well, thanks to policies introduced by the hapless 'Uniparty', by politicians on both the Left and Right who are now openly ignoring what the people want, if not treating them with total contempt, these numbers have rocketed. Some 618,000 people were added to our population in the year to June 2022. Another 821,000 in the following 12 months. And now, in the year to June 2024, as we learned this week, another 707,000. What is the main reason for this? Well, it's definitely not what's called 'natural growth' among the native English and Welsh people — the kind of growth that ensures a country grows and evolves at a natural pace, where change is manageable. No. Far from it. Almost all of our population growth today is because of mass immigration, with 1.1million people migrating into England and Wales in the 12 months to June 2024, and 452,200 leaving. Think about that. Around 1.1million people in just one year — equivalent to adding a city the size of Liverpool, comprised entirely of migrants, in just 12 months. This is insane. Claims are nonsense And on top of that we can add another fact we discovered this week, which is that the number of small boat crossings this year alone has now surged above 25,000, up 51 per cent on the same point last year, and taking the total to more than 170,000 illegal migrants since 2018. The foreign-born and their descendants will emerge as a majority by the early 2070s. And roughly one in every four people on these islands will be following Islam by the end of the current century. What would those ancient thinkers have made of this, too, I wonder? A nation-state that cannot even control its own borders, where mainly young men of fighting age from distant lands are flooding freely into our country on a daily basis? In Westminster, our completely hapless politicians will try to distract you and downplay all this by blabbering something like 'we have always had an asylum problem', or, even worse, 'we have always been a nation of immigrants'. Both of these claims are nonsense. If you want to get a sense of just how historic and unprecedented this population explosion really is then consider just one astonishing fact, shared this week by an expert on the topic, Dr Paul Morland. In every single year since Tony Blair came to power, since 1997, there has been more immigration into these islands than there was throughout the entire period between the Anglo-Saxon era in the 5th and 6th Centuries and World War Two. At least until the last quarter-century, in other words, this country was defined by what those ancient thinkers thought was essential to maintaining the unity and survival of a state — a stable population with manageable rates of change, and where, on the whole, the people did trust their leaders because those leaders did make an attempt to listen and respond to the people. But today all that is long gone. Today, in sharp contrast, we are living in a much more fragile and febrile civilisation where, as the likes of Pericles and Cicero warned, our leaders are no longer fulfilling their first duty of keeping their own people safe. Far from it. Our borders are completely and utterly out of control. We do not know who is coming in and who is going out of the country. Bound by shared history We have even discovered that our own leaders have been importing members of the Taliban, alongside thousands of other Afghans, while gagging the Press and refusing to tell their own people. And now, because of this policy of mass uncontrolled immigration — a policy that nobody in this country ever voted for — we have a sense of what is about to unfold. White Britons are now forecast to become a minority in this country by the year 2063, and much sooner for the under-40s. 11 11 The foreign-born and their descendants will emerge as a majority by the early 2070s. And roughly one in every four people on these islands will be following Islam by the end of the current century. Unless something changes, and changes soon, then all these trends will only accelerate in the years ahead, completely transforming our communities and nation, and ushering in enough people to fill six cities the size of Birmingham in the next 12 years alone. The English philosopher Sir Roger Scruton once said that a nation is held together by something deeper than a contract — it is bound by a shared history, a shared culture and the sense we belong to one another. Is it even possible to maintain things like a shared sense of history and culture when millions of people are being added to the population, more than 80 per cent of whom are today coming from outside Europe. But how on Earth can we ever hope to hold a nation together that is experiencing this scale of population change? That is imposing policies and broken borders on a people who never voted for this, and never asked for it. And how, we might also ask, is it even possible to maintain things like a shared sense of history and culture when millions of people are being added to the population, more than 80 per cent of whom are today coming from outside Europe? I do not know for certain what those ancient thinkers Pericles and Cicero would make of it were they to come back to life and assess the state of Britain today. I suspect that, like thousands of years ago, they'd warn we are living in a civilisation that looks set to crumble from within — a place where our leaders no longer appear all that interested in fulfilling their responsibility to the people and where mass immigration is blowing apart that once sacred bond between the rulers and the ruled. And for these reasons alone, they would probably conclude that unless we can somehow find our way to a radical change of direction then our civilisation, as we currently know it, will most likely not survive. 11 11 11


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