People Who've Actually Experienced Racism Are Unhappy About The Post-Brexit Safety Pins Campaign
“I’m frustrated that when people of colour spoke about our lived experiences of racism before, we were dismissed and told to stop exaggerating,” one critic said.
In response to a rise in racist and xenophobic attacks reported across the UK post-Brexit, an American woman living in London suggested people wear safety pins to show solidarity towards EU citizens and other communities who are targets of abuse.
Kashmir Meat & Poultry in Walsall, West Midlands, which was attacked by a petrol bomb this week.
Luke Johnston / Via Luke Johnston / SWNS
Allison, who didn't want to reveal her last name, told BuzzFeed News on Wednesday why she started the #safetypin campaign: "I thought about something that would cost nothing and had no political affiliation. Something that says, ‘I am a safe space, you can sit next to me, you can talk to me, you can ask me for a help'."
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