The Racial Justice Party has won the latest election in a landslide. Almost immediately it sets to work in order to remove "oppressive whiteness" from the country. Laws are passed so that black and Asian people are allowed "appropriate representation" in all spheres of life. Particularly in the job market. Houses are removed from privileged, wealthy white people and redistributed Reorientation Centres are introduced for people unwilling to adhere to the new rules and regulations. In reality strict places of reform for the "culturally insensitive," which translated as white people of a particular social and economic background.
No one is safe, even those whose sensibilities and sympathies lie with the "oppressed." An indiscreet word to the wrong person, particularly a disadvantaged minority and a visit to a Reorientation Centre, which were springing up all over the country, could be on the cards.
The rising power in the Racial Justice Party is 28 year old Aiza Khan, the oldest daughter of a poverty stricken family of immigrants. She has risen slowly and almost without trace through the ranks and now has what she always wanted, power. And now she has that, she wants revenge. Revenge on all the white women who belittled and mocked her from her younger days. All the white middle-class establishment figures who underestimated her.
Aiza has a plan. Frustrated by their lack of true repentance and remorse for their centuries of white privilege, Aiza decides to take matters into her own hands and push through a Bill to establish Penal Colonies for white middle-class women throughout the country. Somewhere to make her dreams of revenge to come true.
27800 word story involving female domination, male domination, female subjugation, humiliation, spanking, shame, uniforms, role-reversal and social demotion