Summit News reported on a new BBC drama based in London which depicts a “dystopian” alternate reality where blacks are slave masters and whites are their slaves.
The show, Noughts & Crosses, stars a polemical “woke” rapper Stormzy and is based on a series of novels authored by Malorie Blackman.
The plot involves “an alternative history in which African people had gained a technological and organisational advantage over the European people, rather than the other way around.”
According to the story, slavery has been abolished but segregation stays in effect, with crosses (people of a darker complexion) being prohibited from having romantic relationships with noughts (people of a lighter complexion).
The white characters serve the black characters, while the former has their names mispronounced and the band aids are colored brown.
“At this point why don’t Netflix and the BBC and all the other leftist media outlets simply make a film or series called ”we hate white people”. It would be so much more honest,” one person commented on YouTube.
The show’s trailer portrays white people as angry mobs of violent young men.
“The things he [Callum] goes through particularly in school happened to me, like asking my teachers where the black scientists were on the curriculum and being told there weren’t any,” stated Blackman. “Or my first time in first class on a train and being accused of stealing the ticket.”
While operating under the banner of “diversity,” the show intends to foster resentment between whites and minorities.
“This comes at a time when white actors have been increasingly denied roles, historical roles being handed to minorities thus sacrificing authenticity, and with the BBC having been known to discriminate against white job applicants in the past,” reported National File.
Curiously enough, a new survey of the British television industry conducted by Creative Diversity Network discovered that BAME [Black and Minority Ethnic] on-screen representation was at around 23 percent, which is considerably higher than 14 percent BAME population in the UK.
Content like this is another illustration of the political correctness wars that have engulfed the West during the last 50 years.
If conservatives want to exert cultural power, they should avoid watching these shows like the plague.