British live-style: Diversity drive to make Britain’s countryside ‘less white’ – Britain deliberately humiliates its white citizens

9:57 08.02.2026 •

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Rural areas tasked with coming up with strategies to attract more ethnic minorities to reflect multicultural nation. The British countryside will be made into a less “white environment” under nationwide diversity plans, ‘The Telegraph’ writes.

Officials in rural areas, including the Chilterns and the Cotswolds, have pledged to attract more minorities under plans drawn up by the Department for Environment, Food & Rural Affairs (Defra).

The plans follow Defra-commissioned reports that claimed the countryside would become “irrelevant” in a multicultural society, as it was a “white environment” principally enjoyed by the “white middle class”.

National Landscapes – previously called areas of outstanding natural beauty (AONB) – and their local councils have since committed to a number of diversity targets.

The Chilterns National Landscape team has set out proposals that include community outreach schemes to attract more Muslims to the area, particularly from nearby Luton.

More diverse staff will be recruited, marketing material will be produced featuring people visibly from ethnic minorities, and written in “community languages”.

Research has also been commissioned to support this work, some of which suggests that dogs should be kept under tighter control, as some groups are scared of them.

Malvern Hills National Landscape said in proposals: “Many minority peoples have no connection to nature in the UK because their parents and their grandparents did not feel safe enough to take them or had other survival preoccupations.”

It added: “While most white English users value the solitude and contemplative activities which the countryside affords, the tendency for ethnic minority people is to prefer social company (family, friends, schools).”

The area will aim to “develop strategies to reach people or communities with protected characteristics such as people without English as a first language”.

Nidderdale National Landscape in North Yorkshire warns that ethnic minority counties may face barriers to access, and have “concerns about how they will be received when visiting an unfamiliar place”.

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