Courses on the NHS Leadership Academy’s website include a lecture from
an actress who has said that people born in Britain cannot avoid being
prejudiced as Britain is a country that legalised oppression.
The
actress Nova Reid delivered a Ted-X talk where she declared that;
“regular exposure to racial microaggressions can cause more harm than
overt acts of hate.”
According to The Times:
In the 2019
Ted-X talk, Nova Reid warned that people subjected to repeated
microaggressions can develop post-traumatic stress disorder.
She
cited examples such as racially insensitive questions including “where
are you from?”, “your hair’s like a sponge, can I touch it?” and “are
your family cleaners?”
Reid, an author and former actress from
Hertfordshire, describes herself as on a “mission to improve racial
injustice”. She runs an online course with a £1,074 enrolment fee,
including VAT.
The term microaggression is thought to have been coined by the American psychiatrist Chester Pierce in the 1970s.
The
Oxford English Dictionary defines a microaggression as a “statement,
action, or incident regarded as an instance of indirect, subtle, or
unintentional discrimination against members of a marginalised group”.
Reid
said in the talk: “They are a form of everyday discrimination that we
have learnt. [It is] an inevitable and unavoidable byproduct of being
born into and living in a country that legalised oppression [and] that
financially benefited from oppression for hundreds and hundreds of
years.”
Reading out a 2015 piece of research, she added:
“Regular exposure to racial microaggressions can cause more harm than
overt acts of hate.”
Last year civil servants were told not to
use the expression “black mark” as part of the Cabinet Office’s online
lessons on allyship, privilege and microaggressions for Black History
Month.
The NHS Leadership Academy offers training and resources
to develop leaders. among individual staff, organisations and local
academies.
Sources at NHS England stressed that the NHS
Leadership Academy courses were not mandatory. A spokesman said: “This
is not an NHS video and these online courses are not part of any
required training.”
Microaggressions. Manna from heaven for a
minority with a chip on his shoulder. All that matters is the perception
of the complainant. The accused has no chance. It matters not that you
haven’t done or said anything to offend anyone.
He feels your unconscious bias, therefore it must be real. To deny it is to gaslight him.
Madness....<<<Read More>>>...