ChatterBank1 min ago
Has Multicultualism Worked In The Uk?
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Since the dawn of time multiculturalism has not worked in any country, how can Britain be any different?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.having been up and down the uk many many times in all areas my work takes me, i can only say there is only one minority group who will not integrate and thats not a poke at them either, but as far as i have seen they have no interest or desire to assimilate or integrate.
so has the multicultural experiment worked, yes for some ethnics
but not for the the three million other ethnics ?
so has the multicultural experiment worked, yes for some ethnics
but not for the the three million other ethnics ?
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From ichkeria at 17:11 //If people want to go off on one about Islam then that is ok, but that is really a separate topic.//
But it isn’t, because when people these days talk about the problems of multiculturalism, in the main the only real difficulties they perceive emanate from Islam. Other incoming cultures have, by and large, integrated into our society, and those who haven’t don’t generally create perceptible problems.
allen, emmie isn’t an idiot and she’s not lying. I too know London extremely well and there are most certainly areas where I would be reluctant to walk. A frank discussion about multiculturalism requires a willingness to acknowledge reality. Anything less is disingenuous.
237SJ, Irish travellers are not apparent in such numbers. Your analogy is a poor one. Furthermore, the rough areas of London you mention are not populated solely by indigenous Brits - far from it – so that one doesn’t gel either. Poorer areas are often rough, and they are always home to a large number of people from other countries.
But it isn’t, because when people these days talk about the problems of multiculturalism, in the main the only real difficulties they perceive emanate from Islam. Other incoming cultures have, by and large, integrated into our society, and those who haven’t don’t generally create perceptible problems.
allen, emmie isn’t an idiot and she’s not lying. I too know London extremely well and there are most certainly areas where I would be reluctant to walk. A frank discussion about multiculturalism requires a willingness to acknowledge reality. Anything less is disingenuous.
237SJ, Irish travellers are not apparent in such numbers. Your analogy is a poor one. Furthermore, the rough areas of London you mention are not populated solely by indigenous Brits - far from it – so that one doesn’t gel either. Poorer areas are often rough, and they are always home to a large number of people from other countries.
andy-hughes, perhaps the first generation did try to integrate and many did, i think militant islam set in with the younger generation of said first generation or second generation, maybe a bit like hippies in the 60's where they proclaimed peace love etc, we now have if you like islamism..want to belong to a group as they feel unwestern or something more, im trying to find a word for it, what i dont get is why do some want to go back in time to the 7th century on a war footing, the free world has moved on.
Of course, if anyone ever gets tired of wild speculation about what British Muslims actually think, you could always look into the best data we have available:
https:/ /policy exchang e.org.u k/publi cation/ unsettl ed-belo nging-a -survey -of-bri tains-m uslim-c ommunit ies/
This report is really worth reading in full. Among other things, it finds that most Muslims agree that there is a problem with extremism in their communities and most even support programmes such as Prevent to try and root it out. Vast majority support secular education.
Of course, like all data, it has its problems. But surely a better basis for discussion than rampant speculation on the internet, no?
https:/
This report is really worth reading in full. Among other things, it finds that most Muslims agree that there is a problem with extremism in their communities and most even support programmes such as Prevent to try and root it out. Vast majority support secular education.
Of course, like all data, it has its problems. But surely a better basis for discussion than rampant speculation on the internet, no?
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