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Nicolas Alvarez <nic### [at] gmail is the best com> wrote:
> Correct; but one thing is disagreeing with immigration, and another is
> racism...
Most multuculturalists seem to equate the two things.
--
- Warp
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480fc20a@news.povray.org...
>He's not responsible for what his ancestors did or didn't.
Have you ever noticed that people who claim full glory and responsibility
about the wonderful stuff their ancestors did are often the same who
suddenly claim to have neither shame or responsibility about the horrible
stuff the same ancestors did?
It goes like this :
- Your grandpa's stepfather's cousin invented the nail clipper
- Wow, WE invented the nail clipper in MY family! WE're the greatest family
that ever lived. I'm so proud to be part of that family, to live in the land
that invented the nail clipper and to breathe the air that went through the
lungs of people who invented the nail clipper. No other civilization could
invent the nail clipper! It's in MY genes!
- He made a bundle of money out of it and paid for the family mansion you're
still living in
- WE are a hard-working family and I deserve every single cent from all this
hard work!
- Your grandpa traded slaves and committed genocide
- Not my fault! I wasn't even born! Why should I care?
- He made a bundle of money out of it and paid for the family mansion you're
still living in
- Not my fault! I wasn't even born! Why should I care?
G.
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I found this opinion on the subject interesting:
http://ars.userfriendly.org/news/?id=1208466459
On a related note, the prime minister of Sweden bragged some time ago
about how many hundreds of different languages are spoken in Sweden, that
all those languages have a great potential.
I have the feeling that most multiculturalists seem to have this
utopistic (and naive) notion that the more the languages in some place,
the merrier. That it's a richness if there are people speaking different
languages.
I fail to see how this is a good thing. Even if all those people understood
and spoke fluently the official language of the country (which many of them
usually don't), I still fail to see the benefits of so many languages. On
the contrary, too many people speaking too many different languages and
not understanding each other only causes problems, monetary problems (which
are usually paid by taxpayers) not being the least of them.
One may argue that people have the *basic right* to their own language,
to preserve it and to use it, and nobody has the right to force them to
use another language, that it's part of basic human rights. That's fine,
but that's not my point. My point is that most multiculturalists seem to
believe that it's *beneficial* the more the languages are spoken in a
given community. Beneficial to who, and how exactly?
--
- Warp
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Jim Henderson <nos### [at] nospam com> wrote:
> On Wed, 23 Apr 2008 19:11:06 -0400, Warp wrote:
> > The history of a person started when he was born.
> Gads, I smell another semantic battle coming up here, so I'll bow out.
No, it's not about semantics.
You claim that a person's history consists of his ancestors' history
besides his own life. I disagree. Why should it have any effect on your
actions what your ancestors did or didn't do? Why should your own
ancestors' actions have more effect on yours than the actions of someone
else's ancestors?
And in this thread in particular: Why should the social status (in this
case being an immigrant) of your distant ancestors have any effect on your
own social status or your opinions? You are not your ancestors. You are
not what they were. You are you, and what you are depends only on what
you have done.
--
- Warp
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Gilles Tran <gil### [at] agroparistech fr> wrote:
> "Warp" <war### [at] tag povray org> a ?crit dans le message de news:
> 480fc20a@news.povray.org...
> >He's not responsible for what his ancestors did or didn't.
> Have you ever noticed that people who claim full glory and responsibility
> about the wonderful stuff their ancestors did are often the same who
> suddenly claim to have neither shame or responsibility about the horrible
> stuff the same ancestors did?
That may be, but I was just expressing *my* opinion above. It might not
be the same as the average opinion of people.
I can honestly say that I wouldn't take any credit of anything my
ancestors have made, be them great or horrible. I only take credit of
things I have done personally. (And no, this is not something I decided
because of this thread. I'm absolutely sure that if I was asked about this
in the past, I would have answered like this.)
--
- Warp
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48105b19@news.povray.org...
> Gilles Tran <gil### [at] agroparistech fr> wrote:
>> "Warp" <war### [at] tag povray org> a ?crit dans le message de news:
>> 480fc20a@news.povray.org...
> That may be, but I was just expressing *my* opinion above. It might not
> be the same as the average opinion of people.
The problem being that in countries where such debates are common, this is
not just the average opinion of people but part of the political platform
for the extreme or no so extreme conservative/right-wing parties that
eventually shape actual policies: taking all the credit for the good things
and "Who, me?" denial for the unsavory stuff, typically acts of genocide,
slavery and colonization that are still an everyday burden for the victims'
descendants. The denial can go even further: in France, the ruling
conservative party just tried to push the idea that colonization was a jolly
good thing after all, too bad the uppity natives didn't like it so we had to
kill thousands of them.
You can somehow see that in sport supporters. When their team wins it's
"their" win and "their" victory - even though they're just a bunch of couch
potatoes - but when it looses it's everybody else's fault but theirs.
G.
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Stephen wrote:
> And the food! Made these isles the laughing
> stock of the culinary world.
In the European version of heaven, the cooks are French, the police are
British, the mechanics are German, the lovers are Italian, and it's all
organized by the Swiss.
In the European version of hell, the cooks are British, the police are
German, the mechanics are French, the lovers are Swiss, and it's all
organized by the Italians.
Regards,
John
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Orchid XP v8 wrote:
> Somebody sent me a text message that ended with "this message is not
> available in arabic, [...] or any other **** immigrant tongue!"
>
> I just found it interesting that "immigrant" is basically a Latin word,
> brought to us from Italy when the Romans invaded Britan. And "tongue" is
> from an old German language, from when they invided Britan.
>
> In fact, you know what? Basically "our" entire language was created by
> these hated "immigrants". So next time you curse them, just remember
> that the words you're using to do it with are words THEY INVENTED!
>
> Irony, much?
>
The U.S. is much, much worse about this, considering how we colonized
this continent. Heck, we're building a wall, even!
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4810592a@news.povray.org...
> You claim that a person's history consists of his ancestors' history
> besides his own life. I disagree. Why should it have any effect on your
> actions what your ancestors did or didn't do? Why should your own
> ancestors' actions have more effect on yours than the actions of someone
> else's ancestors?
Everybody is born with some inheritance in the practical form of economic
capital and in the figurative form of social and cultural capital (*). This
capital can be positive (wealth, good networks, education) or negative
(poverty, bad networks, illiteracy) and affects directly your history,
present and future. So while your history does technically start when you're
born, it is shaped (positively or negatively) but what came before, and so
are your actions, like it or not.
It's possible to unclaim some of the assets you were born with (**), but
most of the time you have to live with them (***) and act accordingly.
G.
(*) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cultural_capital
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_capital
(**) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Passing_%28sociology%29
(***) http://www.case.edu/president/aaction/UnpackingTheKnapsack.pdf
and lolcats http://elusis.livejournal.com/1744514.html (only if you read the
above)
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Gilles Tran <gil### [at] agroparistech fr> wrote:
> (***) http://www.case.edu/president/aaction/UnpackingTheKnapsack.pdf
Maybe it's a cultural thing (ie. I don't live in the US), but I didn't
understand what she is talking about.
Maybe it isn't, but it just *sounds* like heavy multiculturalist
propaganda (ie. white westerners are all racists, even without knowing).
--
- Warp
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