The Labour MP Paulette Hamilton and singer Mel B are among leading Black Britons urging parliamentarians to make the UK the first western country to introduce a law to end afro hair discrimination.
Whut?!
The letter has been signed by 100 campaigners and supporters, including the singer Beverley Knight, writer and campaigner Patrick Hutchinson, singer and presenter Fleur East, school leader Evelyn Forde MBE and Prof Patrick Vernon OBE. It warns that the “omission of hair as a protected characteristic from the law has facilitated everyday discrimination and the normalisation of afro hair as inferior in every sphere of life”.
I don't think it's the hair that people see as 'inferior', actually.
Campaigners have long argued that British children are unfairly penalised in school for wearing natural styles and protective methods for the upkeep of their afro hair, while adults in UK offices also face discrimination, harassment and assault.
De Leon said: “Laws are actually there to tell people what is right and what is wrong and to protect minority groups from oppression, discrimination and injustice. We simply do not have the right laws in the UK to stop generations of Afro hair discrimination from continuing.”
Personally, I think we do have the right laws in England, and we certainly don't need any more.
9 comments:
While thousands of pensioners face a freezing winter; celebrities are sharing vile pics of abused children; and the world is on the brink of WWIII, a shed load of black people are demanding a law concentrating on hair! Perhaps these people feel they are so important that tonsorial styles should take precedence over everything else. They really are showing themselves to be numpties of the highest order. If I may make a suggestion, it would be that black people can only have afro styled hair, with any other style being considered cultural appropriation. Suck on them lemons, dipsticks.
Penseivat
Could we add old guy white hair to the petition?
Thank you DJ!!!!
Ye gods, is there NO limit to black solipsism, whining and need for attention!
Or their obsession with their hair!!
That said, I'm trying to think of the last time I actually saw an "afro".
I'd rather stick my dick in a wasp's nest than actually touch one though
I see this craziness had crossed the pond.
In my state (Arizona), a couple years ago passed a law to 'prevent hair discrimination'. Keep in mind that the percentage of black people in Arizona is .like less than 4 percent - no one's discriminating against your hair here.
Hilariously, this law was 'championed' by Rachel Dolezel - best known as a white woman who pretended to be black and recently lost her teaching job because she does porn on Only Fans.
I suppose that the "everyday discrimination and the normalisation of afro hair as inferior" is their lived experience? Or put another way, made up bollocks.
I do have a bit of a beef with schools and their obsession with hair. When I was at school in the 1970s they were always on our case for having our hair too long, boys only, girls could have theirs waist length. Now they have a problem with kids having their hair too short. Basically whatever is fashionable now rather than when the teachers were young.
Just goes to show that MPs have bugger all to do. Someone else is in charge in the shadows.
"They really are showing themselves to be numpties of the highest order."
Oh, yes!
"Could we add old guy white hair to the petition?"
🤣
"Ye gods, is there NO limit to black solipsism, whining and need for attention!"
They'd better up their game, the trannies are eating their luncvh in that regard!
"I see this craziness had crossed the pond."
Ah, all the best stuff comes from the US!
"..their lived experience? Or put another way, made up bollocks."
That's ewhat I always think too, when that phrase gets waved about.
"I do have a bit of a beef with schools and their obsession with hair. "
If it's not hair, it's skirt length. And these days that catches out the boys too!
"Just goes to show that MPs have bugger all to do. "
Maybe we don't need so many of them then?
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