Once, I could walk through these streets with ease, feeling a quiet pride in being part of something greater, a nation defined by decency, order, and quiet courage. Today, that pride feels fragile. Not lost but strained, a subtle unease has replaced the calm, and it's impossible to ignore.
This book was born out of that feeling, the disquiet that grows when the values we once took for granted begin to feel negotiable. I wrote not as a politician or academic, but as a citizen who loves this country, who believes in its potential, and who fears the slow corrosion of its moral centre.
The term Faragism was never meant as an insult. It was a way to name a growing mood, a mixture of anger, fear, and nostalgia that has crept into our national conversation. Like all ideological currents, it began with grievances that many found relatable. Over time, those grievances evolved into a narrative, and the narrative hardened into identity.
Race, Identity, Great Britain, and Faragism will not condemn any person or party. It is an exploration of how good people can be drawn toward ideas that divide, and how societies fracture when integrity gives way to indignation. It is about what happens when "us" and "them" replace "we."
Britain has endured many storms, wars, recessions, pandemics, cultural shifts; and each time, we have managed to rediscover our balance. Yet this time feels different. Our divisions are quieter, more private, but just as dangerous.
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