Over 250,000 children accused of racism by UK teachers since 2000

The UK government is forcing teachers to accuse 3-year-old children of racism. (H/T The Blog Prof)

Excerpt:

Teachers are being forced to report children as young as three to the authorities for using alleged ‘racist’ language, it was claimed last night.

Munira Mirza, a senior advisor to London Mayor Boris Johnson, said schools were being made to spy on nursery age youngsters by the Race Relations Act 2000.

More than a quarter of a million children have been accused of racism since it became law, she said.

Writing in Prospect magazine, she said: ‘The more we seek to measure racism, the more it seems to grow.

‘Teachers are now required to report incidents of racist abuse among children as young as three to local authorities, resulting in a massive increase of cases and reinforcing the perception that we need an army of experts to manage race relations from cradle to grave.

[…]The Act compelled 43,000 public authorities, including schools and churches, ‘to promote good relations between persons of different racial groups’. Details of the incidents are logged on databases.

Teachers are allowed to report racism even if the alleged ‘victim’ was not offended or if the child does not understand what they were saying.

Freedom of Information replies obtained by civil liberties group the Manifesto Club show that between 2002 and 2009, 280,000 incidents have been reported.

Wow. The government is criminalizing more and more behaviors behaviors in order to create a “crisis” that requires more and more government intervention. This policy was put in by the left-wing Labour party in the UK, naturally. The Nanny-staters who want to micro-manage everyone to play nice.

And before anyone accuses me of being a racist, know that I am a brown person. So that left-wing name-calling doesn’t work on me.

5 thoughts on “Over 250,000 children accused of racism by UK teachers since 2000”

  1. Yeesh… I’d be interested to know what they classify as racism. For example, is noticing differences “racist”? I have seen this principle applied. If so, then they should be consistent and criticize recognition of differences between blondes and brunettes or short people and tall people. I’ve taught little ones of 4 or 5 and it’s quite cute to see how they are fascinated by each others differences in a quite unaffected, normal way without the racial baggage adults have.

    Oh and if you think the unhealthy fixation with the state managing what people say about race is bad in the UK, you should see SA…

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