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Racism in the Comments: DJ AG Forced to Delete Innocent School Video After Wave of Abuse
DJ AG set out to do something simple, spread joy through music. His recent visit to a South London school was meant to be a celebration of childhood, community, and the universal language of rhythm. The children danced, laughed, and embraced the moment with the kind of unfiltered happiness adults often forget. But the moment the video hit social media, that joy was drowned out by a torrent of racism so vicious it forced him to shut the comments down entirely. Hours later, he deleted the video altogether. Not because of the children , but because of the adults.
Craig Fulton was one of the first commenters, with his comment gaining most likes.
What should have been a wholesome snapshot of school life in modern Britain quickly became a magnet for bigotry. Commenters piled in with lines such as “Reform 100%”, “VOTE RESTORE”, “Is this Nigeria?”, “Where are the English kids?”, and “Not a single white person in sight — it’s worrying.”Others went further, declaring that seeing the children“made them angry,”as if the mere existence of Black British pupils in a London classroom was an affront. These were not fringe mutterings. They were loud, proud, and disturbingly comfortable in their hostility.
This is the Britain some insist no longer exists, a Britain where racism is supposedly a relic, a myth, an exaggeration. Yet here it is, laid bare in a comment section under a video of children dancing. Children.
The kind of comments that once hid in the shadows now sit boldly in public view, fuelled by a culture where people feel increasingly entitled to broadcast their prejudice without consequence. DJ AG didn’t delete the video because he regretted sharing joy. He deleted it because the country he shared it with revealed something ugly.
Children at a South London school choose joy, dancing freely to DJ AG’s music despite the world’s noise beyond the classroom.
And so the question hangs heavy: when does it end? How do you eradicate racism in a world where racists are raising racists, where hatred is passed down like an heirloom, where even a school dance becomes a, battleground for those desperate to police who belongs in Britain? The truth is uncomfortable, controversial, and impossible to ignore, racism in the UK isn’t gone. It isn’t even hiding. It’s right there in the comments, staring back at us, daring us to pretend otherwise.