The Fractured Mosaic
The Myth of Multiculturalism
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Mason Witt
The book argues that modern multicultural societies are fundamentally at odds with how human beings evolved to socialize. It posits that for most of history, humans lived in small, tight-knit groups where trust, accountability, and cooperation were built on direct familiarity and repeated interactions.
The core thesis is that the shift to large-scale societies, especially multicultural ones, has broken this natural social model. As societies become larger and more culturally diverse, the predictability necessary for informal trust erodes. This loss of organic social cohesion creates a vacuum that can only be filled by artificial, formal systems.
Therefore, the book concludes that many hallmarks of modern life—expansive government, bureaucracy, and heavy regulation—are not arbitrary developments but necessary, compensatory structures required to manage the inherent friction and lack of trust in large, dissimilar populations. It frames multiculturalism not as a strength, but as an amplifying factor that strains the limits of human social wiring.
©2026 Dr W Sumner Davis (P)2026 Forester Books