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Yes, I think that will be why progress is slower in the largely white, working class towns. Less integration so it's easier to blame the "outsiders" and the feeling that "we have it bad and no-one cares". Obviously parallels with Brexit.
The Black Lives Matter UK website and fundraising page seems to have imported a lot of stuff from the US one and some of it not very well (the abolition of the police line was from the UK fundraising page for instance). There's a lot of confused messaging that people will pick up on as to why they don't support the movement (although arguably a fair chunk of them are looking for any excuse).
I feel the acknowledgement of slavery/empire will be difficult in the current generations, largely due to the lack of education around it and that a lot of focus was on how successful it was economically rather than the costs. The current protests may help with that but who knows how long it will take.
Support for the general thrust of black live matters requires a certain amount of recognition of white privilege. Whether you’re poor and white or rich and white, or doing okay and white, because that’s what the movement is trying to dismantle.
It’s not going to be easy or quick, poor working class white folk can feel hard done by, but they are as much a part of the problem as the rest of white society, because it’s easier to blame the BAME people in your neighbourhood/town/city than try to acknowledge your own racism/involvement.
The specifics you mention are pretty american, though I haven’t heard about “disrupting the nuclear family” and the disbanding the police line just muddies they water in terms of what “defunding The police” in the us actually means.
Most of the specifics in the uk are about recognising that the foundation of generational wealth in the uk is based on slavery and the empire/commonwealth which little Englanders love so much but isn’t such a great emblem for those people whose lands were taken. It’s also about making society look at and correct the racism which has made a level playing field (educationally, economically) impossible to implement, or be worth a damn. And that stating that you don’t see colour isn’t worth much at all and actively reinforces the current system..