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London Evening Standard. Only one in five white Britons votes for Labour
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I think that in many world cities people's identity and hence their social circle is becoming more and more shaped by their education and profession or trade, and less by their nationality or ethnic background. I certainly feel I have more in common with and can deal more easily with the Indian engineer or the Brazilian programmer I work with than a labourer from Rotterdam or Birmingham. But that's perhaps a preserve of the highly educated; it's great to be working with these guys and building contacts around the world. Trouble is that at the same time there are many people who feel in some way threatened by this 'globalisation',but what do we do about that? Slow it down to something they find less threatening? That doesn't seem realistic to me, so perhaps people need help to adapt and the education system needs to help people to thrive in this society. It looks to me like we're getting a big dichotomy between people; well paid, highly educated professionals who like and benefit from cosmopolitan societies and want to puch ahead with them, and at the same time a big group who feel threatened and seek a way out in radical nationalism or religion.Originally posted by xoggoth View PostDon't doubt it, there were many people of all ethnicities in places I worked at too and we never had any problems. However, I don't think that the relatively small number of highly educated people that contractors work with are a guide to anything. It is the far greater numbers of low income, poorly educated people that are the concern, they are less able and inclined to adapt to our own culture and more likely to attribute all problems to discrimination.And what exactly is wrong with an "ad hominem" argument? Dodgy Agent, 16-5-2014Comment
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Oh well mine's kind of pinkish beige but it turns light brown after a few days of sunshine.Originally posted by Unix View PostUsually it means white skin.
HTHAnd what exactly is wrong with an "ad hominem" argument? Dodgy Agent, 16-5-2014Comment
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I agree. Many who bang on about discrimination are equally biased, they just draw the lines in a different way. They associate with others of their own economic level and education and fail to appreciate the real problems that the ordinary man has in ethnically mixed areas, living among those who cling to their own culture. In my experience it never takes long to goad an educated socialist into mentioning "working class attitudes".I think that in many world cities people's identity and hence their social circle is becoming more and more shaped by their education and profession or trade, and less by their nationality or ethnic background. etcbloggoth
If everything isn't black and white, I say, 'Why the hell not?'
John Wayne (My guru, not to be confused with my beloved prophet Jeremy Clarkson)Comment
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OK so you're not a racist. But perhaps you're a snob? As in not feeling comfortable surrounded by the "lower orders",from a vocational perspective.Originally posted by Mich the Tester View PostI certainly feel I have more in common with and can deal more easily with the Indian engineer or the Brazilian programmer I work with than a labourer from Rotterdam or Birmingham.Comment
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How white though? If I have an Asian great grandparent, am I white? What if they were African? What if my sister has inherited the dark gene, and I don't? It's a grey area (pun intended...)Originally posted by Unix View PostUsually it means white skin.
HTHComment
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So you are saying middle class Indians etc don't cling to their own culture?Originally posted by xoggoth View PostI agree. Many who bang on about discrimination are equally biased, they just draw the lines in a different way. They associate with others of their own economic level and education and fail to appreciate the real problems that the ordinary man has in ethnically mixed areas, living among those who cling to their own culture. In my experience it never takes long to goad an educated socialist into mentioning "working class attitudes"."You’re just a bad memory who doesn’t know when to go away" JRComment
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Not to the same extent they don't. Hard to run a successful business, be a GP, or a contractor for that matter, and not even speak English or be unable to interact normally with anyone outside your own culture.So you are saying middle class Indians etc. don't cling to their own culture?bloggoth
If everything isn't black and white, I say, 'Why the hell not?'
John Wayne (My guru, not to be confused with my beloved prophet Jeremy Clarkson)Comment
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What, do they recommend a good curry house in Bangalore in case you happen to be there some time?Originally posted by Mich the Tester View PostI think that in many world cities people's identity and hence their social circle is becoming more and more shaped by their education and profession or trade, and less by their nationality or ethnic background. I certainly feel I have more in common with and can deal more easily with the Indian engineer or the Brazilian programmer I work with than a labourer from Rotterdam or Birmingham. But that's perhaps a preserve of the highly educated; it's great to be working with these guys and building contacts around the world. Trouble is that at the same time there are many people who feel in some way threatened by this 'globalisation',but what do we do about that? Slow it down to something they find less threatening? That doesn't seem realistic to me, so perhaps people need help to adapt and the education system needs to help people to thrive in this society. It looks to me like we're getting a big dichotomy between people; well paid, highly educated professionals who like and benefit from cosmopolitan societies and want to puch ahead with them, and at the same time a big group who feel threatened and seek a way out in radical nationalism or religion.Last edited by Gittins Gal; 16 July 2014, 17:02.Comment
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