
However, when you understand that slavery was endemic throughout the world, amongst all racial and ethnic groups, you do wonder if this concentration on one particular slave trade is to engender within Whites a constant feeling of guilt about the past, and, as a result, the total rejection of ancestral roots for the embrace of multiculturalism. This is, of course, due to the obsessive concentration on the Trans-Atlantic slave trade in media, education and politics. When we turn our minds to the subject of slavery, the images that we associate with that word are almost always that of Blacks in chains on some plantation in the Caribbean or the American South, with Whites as their overlords. This book and many others like it are the first steps to challenging this false narrative. All of this is justified by claiming that we somehow deserve it because, again, only we committed slavery. Namely, the destruction of our statues, rewriting of our history to imply that only we committed slavery, our replacement through mass immigration and the constant violence against us via things like the mass rapes of young white girls in the UK by imported Muslims, the murder of young white girls at a pop concert in Manchester and the forced integration and mass importation of non-whites into our countries.

This is a complete fabrication and a dangerous one that I believe was purposefully designed to deracinate and disenfranchise and most importantly to silence white people from fighting back against what is happening to them.

In recent months we have seen a rewriting of history taking place that claims that only whites committed slavery and that we are somehow responsible for all evils in the world.
