Om Feeling My Culture
Feeling My Culture echoes what many British people are thinking and feeling, even if they are not saying it. Its view-from-the-street look at multicultural Britain today is a heartfelt and passionate critique that is both blisteringly funny and deeply serious. The UK's answer to Michael Moore's Stupid White Men, this fiercely anti-PC polemic takes no political prisoners, highlighting New Labour's betrayal of the British working class and calling for all our politicians to break the habit of a lifetime and show some common sense. The author has taught English to asylum-seekers and foreign-language students, shared flats and houses with them, and even married one. He enjoys living in a multi-ethnic society; but argues that whilst 'multi-ethnic' is a good thing, 'multicultural' is not, and that cultural integration is the only way towards racial harmony. Appalled by the damage done to Britain, its people and its culture, one day he walked out of the classroom and (without benefits, supported only by his Polish wife and a credit card) wrote Feeling My Culture. If the American comedian Bill Hicks had been the product of a dysfunctional working class environment, he may well have sounded something like this. A brutally relevant read! Frank Vincent - Independent Review
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