Recently in social inclusion Category

Does homophobia pass Warsi's dinner-table test?

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Tory party co-chairman Baroness Warsi (right) must endure some awkward times at dinner parties. She really must because, as the UK's first Muslim woman cabinet minister, she felt strongly enough about attitudes towards her faith that she can only conclude that Islamophobia is now socially acceptable.

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It had passed the dinner-table test, she said.

How often Warsi has to put up with ignorant remarks we do not know - certainly she has attracted hostility from members of her own faith, let alone those of other faiths or those of us who have none.

However, some people of faith believe their religion is beyond criticism, a maxim they would never apply to their belief, say, in economic theory. Anyone confident in their beliefs, whether it is in a god or in the theories of Milton Friedman, would surely welcome debate. It is, if nothing else, a sign of intellectual maturity.

That does not excuse some of the sweeping statements regarding Islam - misogyny and homophobia are favourite subjects - which can be applied equally to the other Abrahamic faiths. I don't see too many gay Christian clergy, for example - apart from the famous Dean Jeffrey John who is repeatedly overlooked for a bishopric. Nothing to do with being gay, I'm sure.

Ah, homophobia. How would that go down at a Warsi gathering? Another awkward moment, I suspect.

In 2005, Warsi, then a parliamentary candidate, accused Labour of passing laws allowing children to be "propositioned" for gay sex and that homosexuality was being peddled in schools to children as young as seven. It is barely worth adding that she also opposed the lowering of the age of consent for same-sex relationships.

That was six years ago and Warsi may have tempered her views, perhaps because she has belatedly seen reason or perhaps for political gain. Or perhaps she hasn't.

Dinner, your Ladyship? 

Picture: Rex Features

Can the US teach the UK about social tolerance?

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Who would have guessed it? Wisconsin, the birthplace of the Ku Klux Klan, is the most tolerant state in the US.

By an odd coincidence - one that would appear to be at odds with its apparently fluffy outlook - the state also hosts the most drunken city, Milwaukee. 

Religious worship in schools is so divisive

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Education, education, education. But not of the religious kind, please. And especially not collective worship, also known as assembly.

Can a law against class discrimination work?

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It is an appalling indictment on our (mythical) meritocracy that we are less socially mobile today than we were in the 1950s, the era of gentlemen's clubs, secret handshakes and bowler hats.

The return of boxing days

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Is the mood changing on young people and boxing? 

Multicultural UK gives Dominic Grieve the yips

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Wrong place, wrong time, wrong everything. The shadow home secretary Dominic Grieve chose the backdrop of the Conservative Party conference in multicultural Birmingham to have a go at, yes, multiculturalism.

Differing perspectives on social evils

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The Joseph Rowntree Foundation has been canvassing opinion from key social commentators about what is concerning them about Britain.

Two prominent Labour MPs this week set out their visions for a fairer Britain.

Sure Start: Labour needs to spin again

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You have to hand it to them; the Tories are in rampant mood as they make inroads into traditional Labour territory. Whether it concerns the emergence of an underclass (credit, Iain Duncan Smith), families and inequality (credit, Michael Gove) and our "broken" society generally (credit, Call Me Dave), they are revelling in it. Perhaps they are pining for the halcyon Thatcher years of generosity.

JRF offers microcosm of attitudes on race

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 By Mike McNabb

A report from the Joseph Rowntree Foundation on immigration and inclusion came to my attention as it offered some grounds for optimism. Inevitably, there was a down side with certain myths about immigrants stubbornly immutable.

About Outside Left

   
  Outside Left questions the thinking behind today’s social policy, with a sometimes wry, occasionally cynical, always straight-talking look at the political elite that shapes it, written by sub editor, Mike McNabb.

 

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