The 'Art on the Underground' pamphlet guides visitors around the UK's capital city through green spaces in Brixton and South London, focusing on the "colonial connotations" of British gardens and horticulture.
The downloaded guide says it "addresses the legacies of the British empire" and looks "at gardens as places to consider injustice, oppression and colonial legacy" - rather than somewhere to simply enjoy plants and nature.
Comment: There is no subject or location safe from the social justice warrior.
According to the pamphlet, many common plants found in the UK have "colonial roots" and reflect "racial slurs." For example, the sightseeing map states that Wisteria's problematic history is related to John Reeve, an East India Company tea inspector, who brought the plant to England in 1812.
Comment: No surprise that Canada is assisting the worst elements in what's left of Ukraine's government. Canada's Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland has long-standing ties to the neo nazis there.