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Theme Changer

 Topic: Anti-immigration

 (Read 14679 times)
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  • Anti-immigration
     Reply #60 - May 04, 2017, 06:39 AM

    A lot of texts shown in the court cases had the rapists seemingly justifying their actions by referring to their victims as "kaffirs". This isn't to say that islam is responsible any more than islam is responsible when a man who sleeps around, suddenly finds out he got a woman pregnant and desperately tries to find an islamic justification for not having to be responsible for it.

    There is a good argument that conservative attitudes come into and a stereotype what white parents just let their children run wild/roam the streets, and I've heard so many comments degrading women sexually for not dressing in a way muslims like. This sort of attitude is nothing new, you can look up endless studies on how conservatism/restrictive culture breed this mentality of a victim "Asking for it". It inevitably manifests as anti-woman as so much of the system is set up to control women. Just look at attitudes to single mothers. If the father decides to abandon his responsibilities, fucks off to sleep around with younger women and party until dawn, he'll be the one that gets the sympathy, while the mother, who actually stayed and did her job, gets the scorn. She's the bad one. Happens every time.

    `But I don't want to go among mad people,' Alice remarked.
     `Oh, you can't help that,' said the Cat: `we're all mad here. I'm mad.  You're mad.'
     `How do you know I'm mad?' said Alice.
     `You must be,' said the Cat, `or you wouldn't have come here.'
  • Anti-immigration
     Reply #61 - May 04, 2017, 08:01 AM

    I reread your last post, monstart, and it struck me that you've come up with a near-ideal form of the reactionary's lament. As an experiment, a little find and replace exercise:


    But I don't think that's true. The reason why I said issue regarding immigration and racism cause a much larger public outcry compared to other issues is because feminism, LGBT issues don't cause such an outcry.

    The best example i can give of this is when Nick Griffin, the leader of the BNP appeared on question time. The backlash and and the outcry was incredible, there were protesters outside the studio, the whole studio audience was incredibly hostile and the man was arguably bullied on the show and never invited back, despite holding seat in the European parliament.

    Compare that with say, Peter Hitchens who is an open conservative Christian who appears regularly on the show. He is not a feminist, does not support gay marriage (or mass immigration either by the way), very unpopular opinions nowadays as we all know yet you don't see anywhere near the kind of hostility that Nick Griffin received.
  • Anti-immigration
     Reply #62 - May 04, 2017, 08:38 AM

    You mean... social attitudes have moved on and being openly nasty about foreigners or black and brown people isn't the done thing anymore? Sounds like a sense of nationality that goes beyond ethnicity or religion to me. Aren't you meant to be for that sort of thing?
    Neutral to whom? Certainly it is not at the level of practical politics, where it all too often is a proxy for race (yeah, go ahead and deny that), and absolutely not at the level of legislation designed to turn the rest of us into cops. A case in point.
    I think I see your problem. You're confusing the mechanisms of censorship - the curtailing of freedom of expression - with the dynamic reactions of other people to socially unpopular opinions. If you find yourself self-censoring in your conversations - a slightly different thing to being censored, but whatever - to avoid such negative feedback, congratulations: you've just found yourself in a minority and have side-stepped having to justify your own existence.

    And yet, a non-optional self-justification (for those of us who don't look or sound 'local') is something you apparently expect others here to undergo when they are drawn into talk about there being too many immigrants or how The Muslims are Taking Over. To illustrate - as English as I may sound in real life, I will always have a brown skin, and certain groups of people will always home in on my appearance as an indicator for 'foreign' and/or 'Muslim'. Are you seriously going to tell me not to take it personally when I hear 'go back where you came from' or worse? I mean, if we're really talking about popular discourse on immigration, this is precisely what an awful lot of it comes down to, and there's no detoxifying it because it's said with the exact opposite of dispassion. Why should I - or anyone else - pretend that this isn't the case?


    Well this is the crux of the matter.

    We need to differentiate between discussions regarding immigration, and national identity. And yes, I do think they are separate issues.

    If people are arguing that there are too many Muslims or certain people born and raised here don't belong, I.e national identity, then it's completely reasonable that British minorities are going to take this personally, this is their home, they were born and raised here and I fully support their right to be here, as everyone should. We need to find a way that everyone can come together and have one British identity that goes beyond race or religion. We certainly have not achieved that yet. We have a crisis of identity.

    Having said that however, a very large percentage, if not the majority of British people, feel like Britain has changed too quickly and it's understandable to not enjoy feeling like a stranger in your own town/city. You mentioned a self-censorship because it's an unpopular opinion, Polls show it's actually a popular opinion, we just don't express it openly out of fear of being called a racist or offending our fellow citizens whose ancestors recently arrived here. But there's no need to be offended. Such an opinion does not necessarily mean we wish certain people were not here or we want to kick certain British people people out. As I've argued in more detail in previous post. The fact we don't speak openly about how we feel out of respect for minorities shows how much the average Briton now actually cares about and respects minorities. It shows how much things have changed.

    Your very reaction highlights what I've been arguing, I've never said anything that demonizes anyone yet I've had my intentions questioned and accusations of racism because I don't want mass immigration or multiculturalism. This is modern day Britain.
  • Anti-immigration
     Reply #63 - May 04, 2017, 07:30 PM

    Well this is the crux of the matter.

    We need to differentiate between discussions regarding immigration, and national identity. And yes, I do think they are separate issues.

    If people are arguing that there are too many Muslims or certain people born and raised here don't belong, I.e national identity, then it's completely reasonable that British minorities are going to take this personally, this is their home, they were born and raised here and I fully support their right to be here, as everyone should. We need to find a way that everyone can come together and have one British identity that goes beyond race or religion. We certainly have not achieved that yet. We have a crisis of identity.

    OK, I can't argue with this so far.

    Having said that however, a very large percentage, if not the majority of British people, feel like Britain has changed too quickly and it's understandable to not enjoy feeling like a stranger in your own town/city.

    And yet, it's very hard not to read this particular sentiment as a complaint: that foreigners or people with roots outside the UK are just too visible.

    You mentioned a self-censorship because it's an unpopular opinion, Polls show it's actually a popular opinion, we just don't express it openly out of fear of being called a racist or offending our fellow citizens whose ancestors recently arrived here. But there's no need to be offended. Such an opinion does not necessarily mean we wish certain people were not here or we want to kick certain British people people out. As I've argued in more detail in previous post. The fact we don't speak openly about how we feel out of respect for minorities shows how much the average Briton now actually cares about and respects minorities. It shows how much things have changed.

    If it is such a popular opinion, why does the need to self-censor exist? If it is out of respect for the feelings of those who one conceivably thinks there are too many of in any case, it is an odd form of respect. Saying 'no offence, chum, but we're seeing and hearing far too much of your sort around here' doesn't exactly offer an escape from the 'them and us' mentality - 'them' being established non-white ethnic minorities, new immigrants, Muslims, whatever, versus the 'us' of white and British - that characterises so much of the immigration debate as it is.

    Your very reaction highlights what I've been arguing, I've never said anything that demonizes anyone yet I've had my intentions questioned and accusations of racism because I don't want mass immigration or multiculturalism. This is modern day Britain.

    To take your statements at face value would be to overcome the huge barriers placed by the prior usage of the phrases "mass immigration" and "multiculturalism" in the demonology of the far (or even not so far) right in, er, modern day Britain. You will understand why I might have reason to be sceptical about something that on first and second readings sounds a little.. tone deaf, at best, given the forum it's posted in.

    I think a way of moving from this impasse would be if you told us three things: what the phrases "mass immigration" and "multiculturalism" mean to you; how we might get away from the current state of 'us and them' politics; and what you think practical solutions to the problems these phrases represent would look like.
  • Anti-immigration
     Reply #64 - May 05, 2017, 11:37 PM

    Take it from an American. There ain't no problem that can't be solved with walls or guns.  cool2

    how fuck works without shit??


    Let's Play Chess!

    harakaat, friend, RIP
  • Anti-immigration
     Reply #65 - May 06, 2017, 04:36 PM

    x


    Oh please, the immigration debate has been going on in British politics for decades. And I don't recall anyone on this thread calling you a racist. It's hypocritical that you accuse us of censoring you just because we challenge your opinion rather than giving you a warm, fuzzy feeling for having it (would you like a safe space with that?) On the other hand, you are not attempting to censor people like the OP by telling them how they should and shouldn't feel about the anti-immigrant sentiment and how they should or shouldn't react to it (which admittedly I have done as well, but I wasn't accusing anyone of censorship to begin with).
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/west_midlands/7343256.stm

    Either both are attempts at censorship or neither are. Either way, it makes you look like a hypocrite.
  • Anti-immigration
     Reply #66 - May 06, 2017, 07:28 PM

    ^ exactly, immigration has been a non stop winge fest for as long as i can remember. its a staple for radio phone ins and there's hardly a day without msn mentioning something on foreigners. especially the muslim type.
  • Anti-immigration
     Reply #67 - May 06, 2017, 07:48 PM

    my top 4 favourite winges are:

    1. we can't put our flag up because of our muslims neighbours will complain.
    No please please put your flags up. I really don't mind. In fact i don't know any muslim family that would mind.

    2. everything is halal now.
    No it isn't.

    3. we can't say merry christmas anymore
    yes you can. I do!

    4. we can't even celebrate st georges day.
    you should if you want to.


    monstart, i'm not sure what you hope to achieve in a small forum like this. or what you want from us. may be you need to find the cause of immigration - best place to start is with the government.
  • Anti-immigration
     Reply #68 - May 07, 2017, 10:07 AM

    1. we can't put our flag up because of our muslims neighbours will complain.
    No please please put your flags up. I really don't mind. In fact i don't know any muslim family that would mind.

    2. everything is halal now.
    No it isn't.

    3. we can't say merry christmas anymore
    yes you can. I do!

    4. we can't even celebrate st georges day.
    you should if you want to.


    Heard these more times than I can count  Grin. Christmas is probably the most commercialised holiday on the planet. By October you are being reminded that Christmas is coming left, right and centre, yet somehow the government is on the verge of banning it to appease religious minorities.
  • Anti-immigration
     Reply #69 - May 08, 2017, 08:08 AM

    OK, I can't argue with this so far.
    And yet, it's very hard not to read this particular sentiment as a complaint: that foreigners or people with roots outside the UK are just too visible.
    If it is such a popular opinion, why does the need to self-censor exist? If it is out of respect for the feelings of those who one conceivably thinks there are too many of in any case, it is an odd form of respect. Saying 'no offence, chum, but we're seeing and hearing far too much of your sort around here' doesn't exactly offer an escape from the 'them and us' mentality - 'them' being established non-white ethnic minorities, new immigrants, Muslims, whatever, versus the 'us' of white and British - that characterises so much of the immigration debate as it is.
    To take your statements at face value would be to overcome the huge barriers placed by the prior usage of the phrases "mass immigration" and "multiculturalism" in the demonology of the far (or even not so far) right in, er, modern day Britain. You will understand why I might have reason to be sceptical about something that on first and second readings sounds a little.. tone deaf, at best, given the forum it's posted in.

    I think a way of moving from this impasse would be if you told us three things: what the phrases "mass immigration" and "multiculturalism" mean to you; how we might get away from the current state of 'us and them' politics; and what you think practical solutions to the problems these phrases represent would look like.


    I wasn't sure if it was worth trying to get my opinion across here one more time but I'll give it one more go.

    babooshka and Agirlwithdoubts have written so many strawmen points I don't know where to begin so i just won't bother.

    We talk about how many British people feel like Britain as changed too much. However, the vast majority of British agree that you don't need to be white to be British, so why are people upset?

    When we talk about Britain changing too much, it's not related to color of skin, like i said before, this is not the 1960s. It's a cultural shift. Many people walk through their town and city and feel like they live in a foreign land, and who can blame them for complaining? Nobody consulted them.

    I disagree with a lot of what former EDL leader Tommy Robinson says but he made an interesting point. He's made a career from complaining about the decedents of foreigners who have a strange cultural and religion, but his grandparents were foreigners with a strange cultural and religion. the difference is, there no such thing as an 'Irish English' like there is 'Pakistani British'.

    Before 1948 the only constant flow of immigrants (in much smaller numbers) to England were Irish, and that too was controversial, not everyone was happy about their arrival and they had a hard time. Most of us have heard the infamous sign 'no blacks, no dogs, no Irish' but the decedents of Irish immigrants nonetheless adopted the norms, culture and values of mainstream England and now just call themselves English. (Irish immigrants in Scotland on the other hand is different story).

    The point i'm coming to is that is what SHOULD have happened with immigrants after 1948. and interestingly that was originally the course that history was taking. Many second generation immigrants from the third world who were born in the 50s or 60s would be derogatorily called 'coconuts' by some of the younger second generation immigrants around today who were born during the 'multicultural' era. Hassan who was born in the 60s, in his autobiography on the forum, discusses how when he visited Egypt it was a cultural shock for him, even though his dad was from Egypt. Tell me, How many kids born to Pakistani parents in bradford nowadays would find Pakistan a cultural shock?

    British second generation immigrants born in the 50s and 60s adopted the norms, identity and values of mainstream British society because they knew nothing else. The numbers arriving here were much smaller, there was no established foreign community and more importantly the government had yet to adopt 'multiculturalism and diversity' as the official narrative as a country. It started during the 80s and accumulated with new labour's election win in 1997 this idea of being a 'diverse' country, opening up the borders allowing enormous amounts of people to arrive here and treating minorities as a different 'type' of British person.

    They thought, absurdly, that we were better of splitting society down religious and ethnic lines and have sections of British society that had different beliefs, norms and values than other parts.

    30 years later, after 7/7, Pakistani grooming gangs, more British Muslims fighting for ISIS than in the British armed forces, a British soldier behind decapitated on London streets, the rise of anti-Muslim hate, the EDL and Britain first. What a disaster it has been.

    Having said all of that, i don't think descendants of immigrants should be offended by people who argue against mass immigration and multi-culturalism. That doesn't mean we want to kick people out of the country or wish certain people weren't here or had never been born.

    Do married couples who never wanted children necessarily hate or want to get rid of their children who were conceived by accident? No of course not, and i would argue the same for the descendants of immigrants.
  • Anti-immigration
     Reply #70 - May 08, 2017, 08:27 AM

    I wasn't sure if it was worth trying to get my opinion across here one more time but I'll give it one more go.  


    No..no..noooo  it is worth .. try more times., and look at both sides of the coin
     

    Quote
    We talk about how many British people feel like Britain as changed too much. However, the vast majority of British agree that you don't need to be white to be British, so why are people upset?

    well maybe  i will  cut the word "vast" out of your text  and  give the benefit of doubt to what you said..

    Quote
    When we talk about Britain changing too much, it's not related to color of skin, like i said before, this is not the 1960s. It's a cultural shift. Many people walk through their town and city and feel like they live in a foreign land, and who can blame them for complaining? Nobody consulted them.

    good point .. good point   I am sure Their elected Govt of that time must have considered that  or maybe they thought  they need more cheap labour in England

    Quote
    I disagree with a lot of what former EDL leader Tommy Robinson says but he made an interesting point. He's made a career from complaining about the decedents of foreigners who have a strange cultural and religion, but his grandparents were foreigners with a strange cultural and religion. the difference is, there no such thing as an 'Irish English' like there is 'Pakistani British'.

    well I would like to see some some brown black red white green Zebra as chief spokesperson of EDL if not chief of it..

    Quote
    Before 1948 the only constant flow of immigrants (in much smaller numbers) to England were Irish, and that too was controversial, not everyone was happy about their arrival and they had a hard time. Most of us have heard the infamous sign 'no blacks, no dogs, no Irish' but the decedents of Irish immigrants nonetheless adopted the norms, culture and values of mainstream England and now just call themselves English. (Irish immigrants in Scotland on the other hand is different story).

    The point i'm coming to is that is what SHOULD have happened with immigrants after 1948. and interestingly that was originally the course that history was taking. Many second generation immigrants from the third world who were born in the 50s or 60s would be derogatorily called 'coconuts' by some of the younger second generation immigrants around today who were born during the 'multicultural' era. Hassan who was born in the 60s, in his autobiography on the forum, discusses how when he visited Egypt it was a cultural shock for him, even though his dad was from Egypt. Tell me, How many kids born to Pakistani parents in bradford nowadays would find Pakistan a cultural shock?

    British second generation immigrants born in the 50s and 60s adopted the norms, identity and values of mainstream British society because they knew nothing else. The numbers arriving here were much smaller, there was no established foreign community and more importantly the government had yet to adopt 'multiculturalism and diversity' as the official narrative as a country. It started during the 80s and accumulated with new labour's election win in 1997 this idea of being a 'diverse' country, opening up the borders allowing enormous amounts of people to arrive here and treating minorities as a different 'type' of British person.

    They thought, absurdly, that we were better of splitting society down religious and ethnic lines and have sections of British society that had different beliefs, norms and values than other parts.

    30 years later, after 7/7, Pakistani grooming gangs, more British Muslims fighting for ISIS than in the British armed forces, a British soldier behind decapitated on London streets, the rise of anti-Muslim hate, the EDL and Britain first. What a disaster it has been.

    Having said all of that, i don't think descendants of immigrants should be offended by people who argue against mass immigration and multi-culturalism. That doesn't mean we want to kick people out of the country or wish certain people weren't here or had never been born.

    Do married couples who never wanted children necessarily hate or want to get rid of their children who were conceived by accident? No of course not, and i would argue the same for the descendants of immigrants.



    All that you wrote is irrelevant and PAST, why don't you directly say what you want to say  that is relevant to the present times??  And that is

    "PAKISTANIS OR KIDS OF PAKISTANI IMMIGRANTS ARE THE PROBLEM IN ENGLAND...

    did I make your crossed out text  more understanding  with few words??   or am i wrong??

    Do not let silence become your legacy.. Question everything   
    I renounced my faith to become a kafir, 
    the beloved betrayed me and turned in to  a Muslim
     
  • Anti-immigration
     Reply #71 - May 08, 2017, 09:16 AM

    I know that was the past but toor suggested i explain in more detail what I mean by immigration and multiculturalism so I have done, by looking at the past.

    The Pakistani community have problems like all communities in Britain have problems. They are not THE problem.

    There should not be different 'communities' there should be just 'British people' who happen to have different ethnic backgrounds. But of course, different ethnic groups now have their own values, cultures, beliefs and traditions so we need to differentiate between them, that's the divided country we have created.
  • Anti-immigration
     Reply #72 - May 08, 2017, 10:40 AM

    We talk about how many British people feel like Britain as changed too much. However, the vast majority of British agree that you don't need to be white to be British, so why are people upset?


    Again we have someone who isn't an ethnic minority, but for whatever reason thinks that he can speak for us and about our experiences. Do you get told time and time again that you are "British but not English"? Are you constantly having people who suggest that you need to prove some sort of "loyalty" to your country? People who won't utter racial slurs outright, but will still make it clear that they don't feel that you belong here as much as White English people?

    So why the fuck are you telling us what you think our experiences are? What use is that to us?
  • Anti-immigration
     Reply #73 - May 08, 2017, 03:14 PM

    For goodness sake, those 'people' I was referring to is the British public not minorities.
  • Anti-immigration
     Reply #74 - May 09, 2017, 05:22 AM

    There should not be different 'communities' there should be just 'British people' who happen to have different ethnic backgrounds. But of course, different ethnic groups now have their own values, cultures, beliefs and traditions so we need to differentiate between them, that's the divided country we have created.


    So is this what you've been trying to say all along?
    You do realise that nothing stays the same. Even before 60s things were changing. A quick look at your advertising history should tell you that. Values have changed and so have cultures and traditions. everything changes over time........and mostly for the better imho.




  • Anti-immigration
     Reply #75 - May 09, 2017, 08:51 AM

    For goodness sake, those 'people' I was referring to is the British public not minorities.


    That was exactly my point. You claim that the vast majority agrees that you don't have to be White to be British. Our experiences are that there are quite a few British people (and I would not be surprised if they are not a minority) who do not view us as "fully British". You're an advocate for integration it seems, but that goes both ways.
  • Anti-immigration
     Reply #76 - May 09, 2017, 03:25 PM

    That's quite interesting to me. In my experience native British aren't really "racist", they're more "culturalist" if that's a word. Whenever I ask natives if non natives can be English, the majority will say anyone born in England is in fact English. In my own experience it tends to be none ethnic Brits who say you can't be English unless it's your bloodline. The natives themselves view you as part and parcel if you were born here.

    `But I don't want to go among mad people,' Alice remarked.
     `Oh, you can't help that,' said the Cat: `we're all mad here. I'm mad.  You're mad.'
     `How do you know I'm mad?' said Alice.
     `You must be,' said the Cat, `or you wouldn't have come here.'
  • Anti-immigration
     Reply #77 - May 10, 2017, 07:00 PM

    for anyone visiting London.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VV0BB0CxIFk
  • Anti-immigration
     Reply #78 - May 11, 2017, 03:57 AM

    That's how my little sister talks, but mostly just with her friends or when she's trying to annoy me. I get all of my roadman language from her  Cheesy
  • Anti-immigration
     Reply #79 - May 26, 2017, 07:32 PM

    lol,  I didn't actually know what roadman was till I came across Korean billy. I love him!
  • Anti-immigration
     Reply #80 - May 26, 2017, 07:48 PM

    He has done very well to learn how to talk like a roadman  so quickly.
  • Anti-immigration
     Reply #81 - May 26, 2017, 07:50 PM

    yes, I thought so too.
  • Anti-immigration
     Reply #82 - June 02, 2017, 11:09 AM

    Immigration enforcement is the greatest form of bigotry and discrimination in modern history.
  • Anti-immigration
     Reply #83 - June 02, 2017, 02:54 PM

    And here I thought the slang around my area was horrible. Well done London, well done.  Afro

  • Anti-immigration
     Reply #84 - June 02, 2017, 02:55 PM

    Immigration enforcement is the greatest form of bigotry and discrimination in modern history.


    No it isn't. No one is entitled to live in whatever nation they please when they please. Unrestricted immigration is called an invasion
  • Anti-immigration
     Reply #85 - June 08, 2017, 04:41 AM



     Cheesy Well that gives me some information that may prove useful. I'm from Nottinghamshire not Yorkshire, but I'm more familiar with this:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LGfCGmEWx8E

    `But I don't want to go among mad people,' Alice remarked.
     `Oh, you can't help that,' said the Cat: `we're all mad here. I'm mad.  You're mad.'
     `How do you know I'm mad?' said Alice.
     `You must be,' said the Cat, `or you wouldn't have come here.'
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