by Jim Chimirie on X
There is a new belief taking hold among Britain’s institutions, and it is as dangerous as it is dishonest. The countryside, we are told, is “too white.” Not green. Not rural. Not historic. White. And therefore a problem to be fixed.
This is not satire. It is official policy. Government-commissioned reports now describe England’s hills, fields, pubs and footpaths as a “white environment” that risks becoming “irrelevant” unless it is reshaped to reflect a “multicultural nation.” Rural authorities are instructed to attract specific ethnic groups, redesign access, rewrite interpretation, adjust behaviour, and rebrand culture itself. All paid for by the taxpayer.
This is not about access to nature. No one is barred from walking in the countryside. There are no gates marked by race. What is being objected to is not exclusion, but presence. The wrong people, in the wrong numbers, in the wrong place. Solitude is suspect. Pubs are “problematic.” Dogs are a “barrier.” Englishness itself is quietly reframed as a form of hostility.
Read also: No, England’s countryside is not too white by Andrew Tettenborn, CapX
