Well ... I don't care ... I am white, and therefore racist and therefore far right .... LOL!
The world has gone totally mad ... and its due solely to the white hating satanists who drive the media scripts ... their name starts with J and ends in S and has 4 letters. But I will let you into a little secret, they are not really J--S ... its all corruption and a framework of lies! The true J--s are something else entirely and that truth was hidden at the last reset.
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The title is from an article in the Telegraph by a retired professor of Social Work Education at Dundee University called Jane Fenton. Professor Fenton served as a social worker in the criminal justice system before going into academia to teach the subject. She has plenty to say about what she believes have been destructive changes, and being white has been turned into a synonym for racism:I have seen situations where social work has saved lives, but in recent years the profession has become captured by fundamentally political concepts that can rob social workers of their agency and, in some cases, put the population at large at risk.
In the past, social work seminars at university were lively places where students would discuss ideas and different approaches to problems. These are the crucial discussions that shape how the social workers of the future will do their jobs.
But around 2015, things changed – Gen Z began arriving on campus, having spent much of their childhood and adolescence on smartphones chasing ‘likes’, and in classrooms where ideas (initially developed in the US) about systemic racism, decolonisation, patriarchy and oppression had taken hold.
Now, if you walk into a social work classroom, you’ll often find silence. This is because many students are afraid to depart from the orthodoxy that has permeated both actual social work and the teaching of it: critical social justice theory.
Under this theory, which is seen by many as the only morally acceptable way to approach social work today, society is explained by the power differentials between the oppressed and the oppressor. It is often taught as an all-encompassing truth rather than what it is: a strongly contested way of seeing the world.
At its very core is the power-and-privilege hierarchy. At the top of the hierarchy: straight white men. Everyone else is arranged underneath, depending on their identity, with significant moral status conferred on those who belong to groups in the ‘victimised’ category. If you are a black person, you are oppressed; if you are a woman, you are oppressed. If you are a disabled black woman, you are very oppressed. These are nice, simple calculations to make....<<<Read More>>>....
