Many of those rightly criticising Carr’s grotesque joke have been guilty of whipping up hate against this persecuted group

Comedy is a barometer of popular attitudes. What people deem funny, and what they feel is acceptable to laugh at, tells us a lot about society. After the comedian Jimmy Carr “joked” that the Nazis’ industrialised extermination of Europe’s Roma population was a “positive”, several Tory ministers decided that a line did actually exist in public discourse, and that this time it had well and truly been crossed.

Carr’s comments were “abhorrent and they just shouldn’t be on television,” declared the culture secretary and newly minted tribune of the oppressed, Nadine Dorries. The health secretary, Sajid Javid, denounced Carr’s “horrid” joke and called for audiences to boycott him.

Owen Jones is a Guardian columnist

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Labour group urges Keir Starmer to back better Brexit deal

MPs and activists urge their leader to commit to aligning Britain with…

Palestinians flee as Israel bombards territory from air, sea and land

Escalation triggers violent protests in West Bank and further clashes between Arabs…

‘I find it stressful’: Lewis Hamilton reveals he dislikes driving outside of F1

Seven-time world champion says he considered quitting sport Driver still ‘on mission’…