Politics has become louder - but not wiser. Across the world, public conversation is increasingly driven by anger, loyalty, and performance rather than understanding and solutions. People are encouraged to choose sides quickly, defend personalities, and treat disagreement as betrayal. Regaining Our World is not a book about left versus right. It is a book about how we lost the ability to talk - and how we might find it again.
Written in a calm, accessible voice, this book explores: how politics shifted from policy to performance why loyalty is often mistaken for truth how anger is redirected instead of transformed into solutions why blaming outsiders avoids real responsibility how communities can live side by side without fear or forced agreement This book does not ask readers to abandon their beliefs. It asks them to examine how those beliefs are shaped, defended, and used - and whether they lead to real outcomes.
You do not have to like everyone. You do not have to agree on everything. But we do need to relearn how to live together. For readers who feel politically homeless, disillusioned, or simply tired of constant division, Regaining Our World offers a steady, thoughtful path back to shared responsibility and civic dignity.
Politics has become louder - but not wiser. Across the world, public conversation is increasingly driven by anger, loyalty, and performance rather than understanding and solutions. People are encouraged to choose sides quickly, defend personalities, and treat disagreement as betrayal. Regaining Our World is not a book about left versus right. It is a book about how we lost the ability to talk - and how we might find it again.
Written in a calm, accessible voice, this book explores: how politics shifted from policy to performance why loyalty is often mistaken for truth how anger is redirected instead of transformed into solutions why blaming outsiders avoids real responsibility how communities can live side by side without fear or forced agreement This book does not ask readers to abandon their beliefs. It asks them to examine how those beliefs are shaped, defended, and used - and whether they lead to real outcomes.
You do not have to like everyone. You do not have to agree on everything. But we do need to relearn how to live together. For readers who feel politically homeless, disillusioned, or simply tired of constant division, Regaining Our World offers a steady, thoughtful path back to shared responsibility and civic dignity.