I'm Not Racist I Want My Country Back!

About The Book

<p><strong>I'm Not Racist I Want My Country Back!</strong><br> </p><p><em><u>How Race Power and Nostalgia Shape the World We Live In</u></em></p><p><strong>2025 Print edition:</strong> A clear unsentimental investigation into racism and race relations white privilege and systemic bias nationalism and populism colonialism/empire and apartheid immigration and borders identity belonging mixed-race experience politics and policing. Braiding narrative with systems thinking this book shows how language law media and code work together to produce advantage and exclusion-often invisibly always consequentially.</p><p><strong>What this paperback covers</strong>: cultural criticism and political commentary; decolonisation and reparations; media framing propaganda and algorithmic bias; British imperial legacies and French Algeria; South African apartheid and US civil rights; class colourism and the market for morality; how nostalgia fuels grievance and take our country back politics. It's rigorous yet readable provocative yet fair-designed for reading groups students of sociology and cultural theory and anyone who prefers clarity over comfort.</p><p><strong>Inside each chapter</strong>:</p><ul><li><strong>Racism 2.0 - Unpacked</strong> - historical sociological and policy context</li><li><strong>The Mirror Test</strong> - a practical reflection or provocation you can apply today</li><li><strong>Across the Divide</strong> - fiction meets reality via four families: the Grants (England) the Whitemans (South Africa) the Bakiris (France) the Washingtons (USA)</li><li><strong>Global Snapshot - Meanwhile...</strong> - concise world examples</li><li><strong>Podcast Teaser - Mini-Story</strong> - an audio-friendly scene to continue the conversation</li></ul><p><br><strong>Why it matters now</strong>: In a noisy era of culture wars the book cuts through slogans to expose incentives defaults and feedback loops-how institutions platforms and policies entrench inequality while claiming neutrality. It offers a usable vocabulary for discussing race nationalism immigration allyship media bias and algorithmic decision-making without euphemism or moral panic.</p><p><strong>Why you'll value this book</strong>: Its written for readers of anti-racism and social justice; students of history political science and sociology; journalists educators and policy practitioners; people navigating multicultural mixed-race or adopted identities; anyone curious about decolonisation reparations and the difference between intention and impact.</p><p><strong>Tone & approach</strong>: thought-provoking meticulously sourced in spirit (no jargon-dump) with dry wit and moments of satire to make difficult truths readable. It invites debate not tribalism-tools not talking points.</p><p><strong>Paperback features</strong>: clean minimalist interior; highly legible typography (Arimo family) considered headings and spacing for long-form reading; consistent chapter architecture for quick reference; print-friendly design for annotation and study.</p><p><strong>Keywords woven naturally</strong>: racism; race relations; white privilege; systemic racism; colonialism and empire; apartheid; nationalism and populism; immigration and borders; mixed-race memoir themes; adoption stories; cultural critique; political commentary; sociology; cultural theory; media studies; propaganda; algorithmic bias; decolonisation; reparations; identity and belonging; critical thinking; uncomfortable must-read non-fiction.<br> </p><p><strong>If you're ready to swap comfort for clarity</strong>-to test assumptions map mechanisms and imagine repair-this paperback is your guide. </p><p><strong>Read it. Debate it. Have a laugh. Pass it on.</strong></p>
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