Imagine going to an African country and complaining how bad it is that it's overwhelmingly, how the people there eat the food they like and don't make any effort to cater to your preferences, and how it's an uncomfortable psychological burden on you to have to navigate blacks spaces.
----------------------------
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2025/09/01/overwhelmingly-white-countryside-halal-food-report-claims/
Britains's 'Overwhelmingly White’ Countryside Needs More Halal Food, Report Claims
The British countryside is "overwhelmingly white" and needs more halal food, a report has claimed. Academics argue that rural England should make 'sustained inclusion efforts' for ethnic minorities.
The University of Leicester's Centre for Hate Studies produced the report, on the issue of rural racism. In it, academics claim that ethnic minority communities face challenges in the countryside because rural England is overwhelmingly white. This creates feelings of discomfort, the report states, and the psychological burden that comes with navigating predominantly white spaces.
The report also raises concerns that traditional pub culture and other "monocultural customs" are exclusionary. It states that the countryside lacks "appropriate facilities to meet religious and cultural needs", and does not cater to "dietary norms that are rooted in religious or cultural practice", such as kosher and halal, adding to feelings of exclusion.
[Apparently Brits are supposed to stop going to their
local pub because the foreign invaders don't feel included.
And there just aren't enough mosques in Britain, either.
Native Brits in the countryside are missing out on all the
cultural enrichment the mosques, with their wailing calls
to prayer 5 times every day, can bring to a community.]
To tackle rural racism and increase diversity, a series of recommendations are set out in a section of the report, How Can We Make the Countryside More Inclusive?
[If I was living in one of the few towns that have so far been
spared the joys of cultural enrichment, I'd take this list of
recommendations and be sure to do the exact opposite of
every one of them.]
The report notes that "the availability of halal food or spaces for prayer could make a significant difference in whether people feel comfortable
visiting the countryside". It states that rural businesses should adapt to improve "cultural sensitivity", saying: "Welcoming minoritised individuals
into the countryside means more than tolerance; it requires thoughtful adaptation, sustained inclusion efforts and a willingness to change."
[Of course it's the native Brits who are supposed to forego
their own culture and norms and adapt to the illegal aliens,
not the other way around.]
These suggestions mark the conclusion of a two-year project led by Prof Neil Chakraborti, Leicester's Hate Studies lead, along with his colleagues Amy Clarke and Prof Corinne Fowler.
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