GANGLAND BRITAIN
GANGLAND BRITAIN

Monday

Ed Miliband condemns David Starkey's race comment


06:55 |

Labour leader Ed Miliband has described historian David Starkey's comments on race as "disgusting and outrageous".

Mr Starkey told BBC2's Newsnight "whites have become black" after four days of rioting across England.

Mr Starkey added that "a particular sort of violent, destructive, nihilistic, gangster culture has become the fashion".

Mr Miliband said these were "racist comments, frankly, and there is no place for them in our society".

Speaking at Haverstock School, his former school in Chalk Farm in London, Mr Miliband also said it was "absolutely outrageous that someone in the 21st Century could be making that sort of comment".

He added: "There should be condemnation from every politician, from every political party of those sorts of comments."

Mr Starkey was being interviewed as part of a panel on BBC2's Newsnight on Friday when he made his controversial remarks.

He said: "I think what this week has shown is that profound changes have happened... there has been a profound cultural change. I have just been re-reading Enoch Powell, the 'rivers of blood' speech.

"His prophecy was absolutely right in one sense. The Tiber didn't foam with blood, but flames lambent wrapped around Tottenham, wrapped around Clapham.

"But it wasn't intercommunal violence. This was where he [Enoch Powell] was completely wrong.

'Foreign country'
'What has happened is that the substantial section of the chavs that you wrote about have become black. The whites have become black. A particular sort of violent, destructive, nihilistic gangster culture has become the fashion.

"Black and white, boy and girl operate in this language together. This language, which is wholly false, which is this Jamaican patois that's been intruded in England.

"This is why so many of us have this sense of literally a foreign country."

Mr Starkey added: "Listen to David Lammy [Labour MP for Tottenham] an archetypal successful black man.

"If you turn the screen off, so you were listening to him on radio, you would think he was white."

The two other authors who were also on the Newsnight panel on Friday with Mr Starkey have responded to his comments.

In the Guardian, Dreda Say Mitchell called Mr Starkey's views random and confused but says "most people will realise this".

While Owen Jones suggested in the New Statesman that Mr Starkey's comments could provoke dangerous repercussions.

However another author, Toby Young, has come to Mr Starkey's defence, blogging on the Daily Telegraph website that the historian was not being racist.

He said: "Starkey wasn't talking about black culture in general, but, as he was anxious to point out, a 'particular form' of black culture, i.e. 'the violent, destructive, nihilistic, gangster culture' associated with Jamaican gangs and American rap music."

 


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