You Tube Theology

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Short (5-20 mins)
Ethics
Anglican

George Floyd Was the SPARK That Ignited Woke Madness – Nigel Biggar

Theologian

Nigel Biggar


Duration

12.45


Uploaded to YouTube

7 June 2026

Added to Database

13 June 2026


YouTube description

Did the death of George Floyd completely transform how Britain talks about empire, slavery, race, and national identity? In this explosive conversation, Oxford professor Nigel Biggar joins Andrew Gold to explain why he believes 2020 marked a cultural turning point that changed universities, media, politics, and public debate forever. 👉 Subscribe to The Daily Heretic now for fearless conversations: https://www.youtube.com/@hereticsclips/videos

Nigel Biggar is one of Oxford University’s most respected professors of ethics and public theology — but after arguing that British history contains reasons for both “shame and pride”, he became one of the most controversial academics in Britain.

In this focused discussion, Biggar explains how the George Floyd protests accelerated a dramatic shift in public attitudes toward colonialism, British history, empire, race relations, and national identity.

Why did statues suddenly become symbols of oppression? Why were institutions scrambling to apologise for Britain’s past? And why did nuanced discussions about empire become almost impossible overnight?

The conversation explores colonialism, British Empire debates, slavery, race politics, cancel culture, academic freedom, public morality, identity politics, historical memory, and the growing ideological divide inside universities and media institutions.

Biggar reflects on the intense backlash he faced after publicly questioning increasingly one-sided portrayals of British history. From online petitions to professional pressure and the collapse of publishing relationships, he describes what happens when academics challenge dominant ideological narratives.

What makes this interview particularly compelling is Biggar’s insistence that history must be approached with complexity rather than moral absolutism. He argues that reducing British history entirely to oppression creates a distorted understanding of both Britain and the wider world.

The interview also examines Britain’s role in abolishing the transatlantic slave trade, the ethics of empire, anti-racism activism, postcolonial theory, and why many academics now privately fear speaking openly about controversial historical subjects.

Andrew and Nigel discuss whether modern institutions increasingly reward ideological conformity while punishing dissenting voices who challenge prevailing assumptions about race, colonialism, and identity.

The conversation also touches on free speech, media narratives, public shaming campaigns, historical education, national self-confidence, and the psychological impact of teaching societies to view themselves primarily through guilt.

Despite the highly charged nature of the subject, the discussion remains focused on ethics, historical inquiry, intellectual honesty, and open debate rather than inflammatory rhetoric.

Biggar repeatedly argues that healthy societies should be capable of discussing difficult historical truths without collapsing into ideological tribalism or collective self-hatred.

This interview stays tightly centred on one key issue: why Nigel Biggar believes George Floyd became the inflection point that fundamentally reshaped Britain’s cultural and historical debates.

🎥 Watch the full podcast here:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AAQXqggRBQE

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