The Church of England is our national church, a c. 500-year old institution which is also responsible for the upkeep of many historic buildings 🏴
But increasingly, it is beholden to dangerous ideas about race, culture, and immigration.
A 🧵 on the rot at the heart of the CofE
For centuries, the Church of England has been at the centre of our national life.
The CofE is our national church, and plays a central role in many national celebrations. It stewards thousands of historic buildings, and maintains thousands of Anglican schools.
But increasingly, the priorities of Church leadership are at odds with ordinary Anglicans.
In 2022, the Church commissioned a report into its own historic links to the trans-Atlantic slave trade. The Archbishop of Canterbury issued a formal apology for past wrongdoing.
That report found that the Church had historically invested money into Queen Anne's Bounty, a scheme established in 1704 to augment the incomes of poor clergymen.
Queen Anne's Bounty had made historic investments into the South Sea Company, a slave-trading corporation.
This was not unusual for a fund in the 18th century. Britain abolished the slave trade in 1807, more than 100 years after the establishment of Queen Anne's Bounty.
And there is no evidence that the Church specifically encouraged investment into the South Sea Company.
Nevertheless, the Church set up a £100 million fund to "address past wrongs" in January 2023.
This £100 million was to be spent on "a nine-year programme of investment, research, and engagement", particularly targeted at "communities affected by historic slavery".
To be clear, the Church doesn't mean *all* communities affected by slavery - which would encompass almost all cultures. Slavery has been a feature of human civilization for millennia.
It specifically means African and Caribbean communities affected by trans-Atlantic slavery.
But even this was not enough for some members of the clergy.
A group led by Bishop Rosemarie Mallett has called for the church to set up a £1 billion fund, "owned and run by black communities".
Mallett has called for the Church to provide direct cash grants to black people.
This comes despite the fact that nearly 1,000 historic cathedrals, churches, and chapels across England are at risk of falling into disrepair, according to the National Churches Trust.
No money to repair the roof of your parish church - but plenty for reparations.
But this isn't the only case of racial absurdity which has emanated from the Church in recent years.
Just this week, the Diocese of Norwich issued parishes with an 'anti-racism toolkit', encouraging parishes to avoid 'Eurocentric' prayers and to start anti-racism collections.
The advice, written by the Diocese's Racial Justice Action Group, encourages "monocultural" parishes to be "particularly receptive to diversity".
"We should find ways to reflect diversity in our churches, even if someone from a different culture is not physically present."
The Church has also been complicit in providing baptisms for asylum seekers looking to abuse the system.
Asylum seekers from majority Muslim countries often undertake false conversions, thereby allowing them to argue that they would be persecuted if deported.
One such baptism was provided to Abdul Ezedi, the Afghan asylum seeker who attacked a woman and her two children with acid in Clapham, London, back in January 2024.
Despite claiming to have converted to Christianity, Ezedi received Muslim funerary rites upon his death.
The Jamaican-born Bishop of Dover, Rose Hudson-Wilkin, has criticised the British public for welcoming refugees from Ukraine, arguing that they should be willing to open their homes to "brown people" instead.
She is also the first black female bishop appointed by the Church.
Hudson-Wilkin has argued that the Church of England is "institutionally racist" and insufficiently pro-immigration.
“I’ve always felt it’s important that the majority ethnic population has experience from outside their comfort zone", she argued back in 2019.
Meanwhile, outgoing Archbishop Justin Welby slammed the Government in 2024, for its plans to send illegal migrants to Rwanda for processing.
Welby argued that the Rwanda offshoring scheme would "undermine our global standing", despite similar schemes being trialled elsewhere.
Later in the same year, Welby resigned from his position as Archbishop of Canterbury, after a report revealed that his leadership had failed to deal with a prolific child abuser.
I wonder whether this incident might have damaged the Church's "global standing".
Increasingly though, this progressive worldview on race and immigration isn't the preserve of Church leadership - it's filtering down to the parishes.
Last month, on 16th February, a number of Anglican parishes held services marking 'Racial Justice Sunday', invented in 1995.
This report is from the 800-year old St Mary's Church, High Halden (pop. 1,584, 95.2% white).
Parishioners there received copies of 'A Sermon For Our Ancestors', an Afrocentric painting by artist Laura James, whose website features the following tagline:
"Black Is Blessed"
That was alongside "special prayers of penitence", and intercessions for Racial Justice Sunday.
Perhaps St. Mary's drew upon the Church's official Liturgical Resources for Racial Justice Sunday, which encourages Anglicans to "acknowledge prejudice" and "pay attention to power".
Active participation in the Church of England has been falling for decades, as Britain secularises.
But with the Church now promoting Afrocentrism, mass migration, and slavery reparations, it seems unlikely that attendance will recover any time soon.
If Church leadership continues along its current path, it should not be surprised when conservatives turn away from supporting its position as our national church.
I doubt that ordinary Anglicans will continue to support an institution which seems resentful towards them.
Our institutions emerged over centuries. These institutions bound us together, and encouraged celebration of our culture and history.
But how much longer can that settlement last, when racial activists wear the trappings of our old institutions like a macabre skin-suit?
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The Home Office has barred Renaud Camus, a controversial French philosopher, from entering the UK.
They claim that his presence is "not conducive to the public good".
But is that a consistent standard? Let's look at some of the people that they've allowed to come to the UK:
Syed Muzaffar Shah Qadri, who is banned from preaching in Pakistan, was allowed to travel to the UK in 2016.
Qadri has celebrated the murder of politicians in Pakistan, arguing that it is legitimate to kill people who oppose Pakistan's oppressive blasphemy laws.
Qadri was a key influence on Tanveer Ahmed, a Bradford taxi driver who was convicted of the murder of another Muslim man, who he deemed insufficiently pious.
During his visit, Qadri delivered sermons at several UK mosques, including venues in Leicester, Woking, and Bolton.
Wales has quietly become a hotbed of historical revisionism, anti-white discrimination, and DEI 🏴
For decades, the Labour-led Welsh Government has pushed dangerous ideas about race, culture, and history onto an unwilling population.
A 🧵 on the disaster unfolding in Wales
But first, some context.
Since 1999, Wales has had its own parliament - the Senedd - with devolved responsibility for a number of issues.
Over time, the Senedd has received more powers from Westminster, allowing them to make decisions on things like healthcare and education.
But despite this transfer of powers, the UK press is relatively disinterested in Welsh affairs.
This has allowed successive Welsh Governments to pursue radical agendas, without the kind of scrutiny which similar policies might face if they emanated from Westminster.
Riverway Law has launched a challenge against the UK's ban on Hamas.
They argue that the Islamic terror group should be legalised in the UK. This shouldn't come as a surprise, given some of the other cases that they've supported.
A 🧵 on some of Riverway Law's recent work
In January 2023, Riverway challenged the Home Office's decision to strip British citizenship from a British Pakistani man who travelled to Syria, in order to join Al-Qaeda.
They argued that this was 'arbitrary' and 'disproportionate'. Their challenge were unsuccessful.
In September 2021, Riverway challenged the Home Office's decision to bar an Afghan man from entering the UK on national security grounds - after he had spent months with the Taliban.
They argued that the man would be at risk if he stayed in Afghanistan. They were successful.
Last July, four independent MPs were elected in heavily-Muslim seats.
They capitalised on Muslim frustration with the Labour Party's position on Gaza. Their campaigns focused primarily on winning Muslim votes.
But what have they been up to since the General Election? A short 🧵
Adnan Hussain was elected in Blackburn - a seat held by the Labour Party since 1945.
The constituency is 47% Muslim.
Hussain won with a narrow majority of 132 seats - the Muslim vote was split between Hussain and a candidate representing George Galloway's Workers Party GB.
Hussain has spoken twenty-five times in Parliament since he was elected.
Eleven of his interventions have focused on Israel or Gaza.
He has campaigned for immediate recognition of a Palestinian state, and the immediate cessation of all arms sales to Israel.
52% of British adults are now reliant on the state for their livelihood - and YOU could be paying for it.
That's according to @ASI's inaugural State Reliance Index, which tracks the number of Britons who rely, directly or indirectly, on the state.
A 🧵 on our findings
So what does the State Reliance Index consider?
We looked at adults (1) receiving benefits or state pension, (2) employed by the public sector, (3) in higher education, or (4) who work in the private sector, but in fields which only exist because of public sector regulation.
This was a conservative estimate.
We didn't even look at every area of the private sector which receives state subsidy - and nor did we include the charitable sector, which relies heavily on state support.
In other words, the true figure could be even more than 52%.