22 Comments
Aug 21Liked by Millennial Woes

It’s almost like there ought to be an authority that determines who can write these shows and within what acceptable constraints.

Expand full comment
Aug 15Liked by Millennial Woes

It’s rather concerning how often Davies has said that he is focused on getting children to watch his shows.

Expand full comment
author

They're very open about it these days. If anything it has become a sort of "moral duty" to introduce this stuff to kids.

Expand full comment
Aug 15Liked by Millennial Woes

I lost count of how many times I grimaced and raised my eyebrows while reading this. What they’ve done to this show is absurd, grotesque, and sinister.

Expand full comment

Never watched a single episode but as I read every one of your articles my heart was sinking for Britain. Of all the good things and ideals you had, I cannot imagine a sadder end than this one. As endings go, ending like the nazis turned them and immortal inspiration but this is so shameful and pathetic that it almost undoes all the good that was done before!

Expand full comment
Aug 6Liked by Millennial Woes

This series of essays on Doctor Who has been absolutely superb. Like Woes I've been a fan of the show since I was a kid I'n the 80s hiding behind the sofa. I was sad when it was originally cancelled especially as the McCoy episodes were actually pretty good.

I was delighted to see it return in 2000's. Like a lot of people I was a little concerned when Davies got the job but I enjoyed the show and he mostly kept his politics and proclivities out of it.

Unfortunately over the course of its run its gradually became more and more "Woke " ie anti white, male and straight to the point where its now completely jumped the shark.

You could see the deliberate murder of Doctor Who as emblematic of the deliberate murder of Britain as a whole that we've seen over the same period.

Expand full comment

If it were up to me I would scrub everything after Matt Smith, even then the revived series has way too much wrong with it anyway.

Everything after Smith should be wiped but the continuity should begin again at Paul McGann being allowed to play his eighth Doctor in 25 minute episodes on saturday teatime.

Expand full comment
Aug 5Liked by Millennial Woes

It's strange that the Rwandan stabbing suspect was once featured in a Doctor Who promo. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t5wc1WqGScg

Expand full comment

After reading this series it makes perfect sense

Expand full comment
Aug 4Liked by Millennial Woes

“In order to make the Doctor homosexual, they had to make him sexual ..”

Yeah.. But homosexuality isn’t sexual. There is no mingling if genomes, no babies, perpetuating of generations and family involved. It’s eros stripped of telos, boundaries, meaning.

Just like stripping Dr. Who if his Englishness, the goal is spread of antinomian anomie, nihilism, chaos.

This is annihilation of identity and all distinctions par excellence, culminating in the annihilation of humanity in biological and cultural sterility..

Expand full comment
author

Yes. I'll be going into this aspect in the final part.

Expand full comment
Aug 4Liked by Millennial Woes

Reading through this series, I find myself thinking what a great documentary you could make out of it.

Expand full comment
Aug 4Liked by Millennial Woes

This series (by MW, not doctor who lol) rocks. I have never in my life seen a single episode but now I look forward to every Sunday

Expand full comment
Aug 4Liked by Millennial Woes

Mr. Miyagi was Japanese.

Expand full comment
author

Fixed.

Expand full comment
Aug 4Liked by Millennial Woes

It's sick and infuriating what has been done to us. I hope I live long enough to see a much-needed crusade...

Expand full comment

Deus Vult

Expand full comment
Aug 4Liked by Millennial Woes

I have enjoyed this series very much - if reading about such a vile man can be said to be enjoyable. Of course the powers that (shouldn’t) be want as many black and brown faces on tv as possible as they want to fool the masked morons into believing that the U.K. was always chock full of black people (and out and ‘proud’ gays).

My husband and I recently watched a film called Nasty Little Letters. It was set in a very rural Norfolk village during the early 1920s. The female police constable was Indian. The post mistress was black; the judge at the trial was a black man. The Indian police woman’s father had been a policeman, too, in the same village in the early 1900s. There were other Indian characters, although I have to presume, being fair, that they were related to the Indian policewoman, although that wasn’t clear. None of the white characters noticed this, or commented on it, they were all Martin Luther King colour blind. The lead character was a white, very foul mouthed Irish woman with an illegitimate child and oh yes…a black lover who lived with her openly. For all this the middle aged white woman who was her neighbour wanted to be her best friend, until she didn’t, and started sending her those nasty letters. The letters were cartoonishly, childishly pornographic (perhaps they were, the film was ‘based’ on a true story, perhaps the writers had read the original letters…who knows…)

So there we are. In remote Norfolk villages in the 1920s black and brown people held very middle and upper middle class jobs (they were judges!) and didn’t face any ghettoisation, were not shunned or even recognised as different. Loud, foul mouthed Irish women could live with a mild mannered black man and everyone fell over themselves to be kind and accommodating until she was suspected of being the nasty letter writer.

What are we meant to take from this ridiculousness? That the U.K. was never ever a racist country, but was accepting of everyone, no matter their race or immoral behaviour. Oh no! Surely that’s not what the powers that be want us to believe? Are we all far right racists who can’t even protest when one of these blacks kills our children or are we not? Not, if you were to watch this truly idiotic film and believed its portrayal of the UK’s past.

The target audience of once, present and future masked morons perhaps think there were more blacks in the U.K. 100 years ago, maybe not, they don’t really care. It doesn’t matter to most of them, they let the shite wash over their heads because isn’t that Olivia Coleman so lovely - she played the middle aged Queen, don’t you know? My sister in law loved this film so much she’s going to watch it again (she was a nurse who wanted to volunteer for jabbing other masked morons with the poison jabs). Her husband, my brother, didn’t even notice the black judge and laughed when I mentioned it. So funny! So what?

So what are these moronic film producers, directors and casting agents up to? Do they want to show that white people of the past were never racist? Or do they want to rub whites’ noses in diversity? Do they want it both ways - blacks were always amongst us, doing the exact same jobs, living on the exact same streets and in the exact same houses (nicer houses in the case of this film)? But at the same time whites are extremely racist and must be taught not to be…It’s a puzzle, is it not?

The modern world is so childish and foolish it’s hard to put up with. Masked morons, once, future and present rule. No more tv for me: that’s it, that’s enough of the utter, utter shite.

Expand full comment
Aug 6Liked by Millennial Woes

The modern world is not childish, it’s evil and drunk with a new religion that demands the sacrifice of millions. Never underestimate them. They’re ridiculous but they are evil incarnate.

Expand full comment
author

It's poison. I think the intention is to degraded our sense of ownership of this country. They are rewriting our history so that we no longer feel that the newcomers *are* newcomers, or that we have any special right to this land. It is a truly evil thing they are doing.

Expand full comment
Aug 4Liked by Millennial Woes

I agree. It’s all very depressing.

Expand full comment
Aug 4·edited Aug 4Liked by Millennial Woes

If there's any show on television that needs to go into hibernation for a minimum of twenty years, it's Doctor Who. In the meantime I will cherish my DVD collection of Classic Who adventures.

I've very much enjoyed your series talking about this, by the way. Thank you.

Expand full comment