Now Johnny Mathis' Christmas classic When A Child Is Born has its lyrics censored on radio after being branded racist
Heart FM and Magic Radio are censoring When a Child is Born, it was revealed
Listeners have taken offence to the lyrics: 'black, white, yellow, no one knows'
Other listeners say the Johnny Mathis Christmas hit should be 'left alone'
Listeners have taken offence to the word 'yellow' in a lyric that refers to a child as 'black, white, yellow, no one knows'. Johnny Mathis, who made When a Child is Born popular in the 70s, is black.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-11546049/Radio-stations-censor-Johnny-M...not only but also:
NHS bosses want interview panels to justify why they have hired a white person over candidates from ethnic minorities
[The policy] has been in place at Royal Free NHS Foundation Trust since July 2018 for staff in senior positions, but was expanded in recent months to any role within the trust. If a white candidate is chosen, the panel chairman must write a report explaining why they were ‘more suitable’ for the role. It does not apply the other way around.
They must also provide ‘justification’ as to why any ethnic minority candidate was not chosen and provide detailed ‘scoring notes’ as evidence. Alongside this, they are required to suggest how the failed applicants can ‘develop their experience, skills, or amplitude’ for a better chance next time.
The report must then be sent to the trust’s chief executive, Caroline Clarke, within ten working days. Failure to do so sees them named and shamed in the trust’s monthly Workforce Race Equality progress report.
A Royal Free London spokesperson said: 'We are committed to having a diverse workforce and we seek to ensure all candidates, irrespective of their ethnicity, have equal opportunities to work at the Royal Free London.'
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-11573591/NHS-bosses-want-interview-pane...Clap hands, here come your next NHS nurses:
https://mobile.twitter.com/UltraDane/status/1609601702390530048They are singing old African sea shanties like, "gissa job, gissa job". Wonderful.