Alceste
Vagabond
I'm relating issues within England to here in Australia with my own opinions. The English part of my family have the same concerns as the rest of my family wherever they live in the world. In all honesty, my cousins are drop-kicks passing school because daddy has his chequebook ready. They don't deserve a job. In saying that, im sure many fully qualified English people (of any background) could become disgruntled when someone who's been in England for 2 years and can't speak English gets a job in front of them. Do you get what im trying to say? Is it fair to say this issue extends past the BNP? Its not like its only hard for white people to get a job. Perhaps non-white people may be reluctant to open their mouths because they can be easily percieved as immigrants as well?
I'll say it now, im sorry for disliking the open-door policy my country and England holds in terms of immigration. Perhaps i should go put my white pointy hat on and go lynch some non-white people
OK, well, I do think you're a racist. There, it's out. But, I think anybody who believes there is any such thing as "race" is a racist. So it's not the kind of hysterical insult you imagine it to be. To me, it's like people who believe in a deity are theists. People who believe in race are racists. From my perspective, there is no such thing as race. The very concept that there could be any such thing springs from xenophobia - an irrational fear of people who are different. Xenophobia is an unavoidable evolutionary trait. What we do with it when we find it within ourselves is what determines whether or not we are racists. If it makes us think there is a "them" and an "us", it has had a detrimental effect. I'm not saying you're going to go out lynching. But you are (in my view) missing out on the fun of being fascinated and enthralled by the incredible diversity of human cultures in the world. Living next to somebody from China doesn't make you any less of a "white person", whatever you think that means.
Have you ever really sat down and thought about why wages might be dropping? I'm sure you heard the phrase "correlation is not causation". You've seen some "non-white people" (whatever you think those are), and you've seen a drop in wages, so you conclude "non-white people" make wages drop. That's like sitting on a purple beach towel and getting a sunburn, concluding that purple beach towels make your skin peel off. What I'm saying is you need some more steps in between if you want to turn that into a rational argument. Do "white people" still take those jobs at lower wages? Yes? Well then you can't blame immigrants, can you.