kEiThZ
Superstar
Back to the article now...
Assimilationist policies are not in and of themselves an affront to human rights.
At the end of the day, multiculturalism vs. assimilation is a bit of a false debate.... None of those are changed by saying you support multiculturalism or assimilation.
I understand where Tewder's coming from.... I don't think its fair to label his views as racist.
I am fairly sure that this is also what Tewder means when he says others might find our values offensive.
Back here, the reality is that multi-culturalism as an official policy has done very little to really promote a national identity. It's cause we really haven't done much to define and defend our own culture (save Quebec).
Anyway, let's not take the debate to such extremes. I have not seen Tewder advocate anything as extreme as what you've pitched on here. So please don't paint him as some kind of bigot.
encouraging newcomers to celebrate the culture and identity of their homelands is simply wrong
Policies of assimilation are not about stripping people of their rights.
a criticism of state-funded Multiculturalism is in no way a criticism of diversity
I do see that using the word 'assimilation' was pretty dumb of me and I had no idea that it was an actual policy with an appalling history. Having now read about what occurred I feel like a complete idiot and profoundly apologize to all for having ignorantly endorsed it. I hereby promise to stop and think before any of my ranting, pontificating, and getting all pissy in the future.
It's tangential, but I'd also point out that multiculturalism has problems within immigrant communities.
That depends. When immigration in large numbers from the home country tails off at some point and if that immigrant community is still isolated four or five generations further down the line, then we could have a real problem.If you invite people from other cultures and tell them to keep their culture, well, some of those cultures are deeply steeped in a sense of xenophobia or ethnocentricism. What's to be done about that?
It's a shame when ignorant wannabe "devil's advocate" types with axes to grind about newcomers and multiculturalism start hijacking threads to spew their social gripes.
Northern Magus, would you please stop the ad hominem attacks against Tewder? I understand you care passionately about multiculturalism, but that doesn't make it right for you to demonize people who question the policy. This thread has been an interesting and civil discussion up to your recent posts. It would be a shame to see it become some kind of left-wing version of the Glen Beck show.
^Public health care and integrating immigrants from non-Western cultures as well as we do were huge reforms.
Re: criticisms of multiculturalism: it's kind of a moot point. I remember reading about a study a few years ago that found that despite our multiculturalist policy and the U.S. assimilation policy, immigrants to Canada (or, more precisely, thier children) tend to assimilate into the dominant culture more than immigrants to the United States. A policy of multiculturalism might have made Canadians less xenophobic, but it hasn't kept newcomers from assimilating. Most children of immigrants from China or India are culturally identical to people whose background is Scottish or Irish.
RE: public funding for multiculturalism - what is that exactly? For those of you who want that funding cut, what programs specifically don't you like? What problems would cuts solve?