This one rears its ugly head from time to time.
The UK has had a large number of immigrants in recent times. Well, truth to tell, we've had waves of immigration over many years, and the current ones are generally from the Middle East or Eastern Europe.
The main thrust of recent times in this arena has been 'multiculturalism', whereby people are supposed to accept that other races/creeds have different values. The rather obvious outcome was ghetto areas, and there are chunks of England that are out-of-bounds to anyone white or non-muslim. That idea has completely failed and our prime minister has recently said that immigrants should integrate, not remain separate. Most commentators agree that had he said this five years ago, his backbench MPs would have torn him to pieces for being 'racist'.
Where do I stand on the issue? As far as I'm concerned, if you voluntarily go to another country, you accept that you are going to be in a place where people act differently. In most cases of emmigrants, the countries near to the one someone left often have very similar values, so why travel a third of the way around the globe only to find somewhere with different values and then try and make them act according to what you want/need?
I've got no problem with somoene who can and will learn the language. Learning the predominant tongue of a country will mean that the learner will take in some of the cultural values of their new home as they are taught. When languages interact, you get some flow between them - we have words from all over the world in English. Try kosher, fatwah, jihad - these words are commonly known, yet they came from other cultures. That's how integration works.
What I'd like to see is a system whereby those who are able to learn the language of their new country should do so to an acceptable degree within six months, or they get deported. Now, I don't think it should be compulsory for those who are over sixty, for example, as old people struggle to learn languages far more than young people, and there are people who are learning disabled, but both of these should be a minority in the immigration stakes. After that, if you can't speak the language to an acceptable degree so that you can at least survive in the country in which you wish to live, why should that country provide interpreters and translations of official languages in your tongue? It's downright rude to expect that.
As far as oppressive cultures go, where women are not allowed to learn etc, then don't be overly surprised when we just deport your sorry arse back to the hellhole from which you came. We have a tolerant and open culture over here, and women have the right to learn and vote. If you don't accept that, you don't fit in.
Rapscallion
The UK has had a large number of immigrants in recent times. Well, truth to tell, we've had waves of immigration over many years, and the current ones are generally from the Middle East or Eastern Europe.
The main thrust of recent times in this arena has been 'multiculturalism', whereby people are supposed to accept that other races/creeds have different values. The rather obvious outcome was ghetto areas, and there are chunks of England that are out-of-bounds to anyone white or non-muslim. That idea has completely failed and our prime minister has recently said that immigrants should integrate, not remain separate. Most commentators agree that had he said this five years ago, his backbench MPs would have torn him to pieces for being 'racist'.
Where do I stand on the issue? As far as I'm concerned, if you voluntarily go to another country, you accept that you are going to be in a place where people act differently. In most cases of emmigrants, the countries near to the one someone left often have very similar values, so why travel a third of the way around the globe only to find somewhere with different values and then try and make them act according to what you want/need?
I've got no problem with somoene who can and will learn the language. Learning the predominant tongue of a country will mean that the learner will take in some of the cultural values of their new home as they are taught. When languages interact, you get some flow between them - we have words from all over the world in English. Try kosher, fatwah, jihad - these words are commonly known, yet they came from other cultures. That's how integration works.
What I'd like to see is a system whereby those who are able to learn the language of their new country should do so to an acceptable degree within six months, or they get deported. Now, I don't think it should be compulsory for those who are over sixty, for example, as old people struggle to learn languages far more than young people, and there are people who are learning disabled, but both of these should be a minority in the immigration stakes. After that, if you can't speak the language to an acceptable degree so that you can at least survive in the country in which you wish to live, why should that country provide interpreters and translations of official languages in your tongue? It's downright rude to expect that.
As far as oppressive cultures go, where women are not allowed to learn etc, then don't be overly surprised when we just deport your sorry arse back to the hellhole from which you came. We have a tolerant and open culture over here, and women have the right to learn and vote. If you don't accept that, you don't fit in.
Rapscallion
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