Or if they refuse to integrate themselves, that's a real thing too. Ethnic enclaves are cool, but there are limits and a certain amount of personal responsibility involved.
Or if they refuse to integrate themselves, that's a real thing too. Ethnic enclaves are cool, but there are limits and a certain amount of personal responsibility involved.
It is quite hard for some flavours of immigrant to integrate in nation states where the base population isn’t already set by colonial immigration. Which is a nice way of saying that outside the US/Canada/etc “indigenous population” tends to be a far-right talking point that is shared by some leftists, rather than a woke one.
This comports with my experience. I'm an immigrant in my country, although I can pass if I don't speak. My partner is also an immigrant, but he is visibly not from here. (OTOH, he has no accent!) HIS son was born and raised here, but I would not say that the kid is all that integrated with the majority culture. (In fact, at the ripe old age of 11, he is going through a phase(?) of strongly rejecting the majority culture and identifying with his dad's culture.) And because 1) he looks like his dad, and 2) he's got a foreign name, he is likely to experience just as much difficulty in the employment arena as any real immigrant.
"if you other people and don't integrate them"
Or if they refuse to integrate themselves, that's a real thing too. Ethnic enclaves are cool, but there are limits and a certain amount of personal responsibility involved.
It is quite hard for some flavours of immigrant to integrate in nation states where the base population isn’t already set by colonial immigration. Which is a nice way of saying that outside the US/Canada/etc “indigenous population” tends to be a far-right talking point that is shared by some leftists, rather than a woke one.
This comports with my experience. I'm an immigrant in my country, although I can pass if I don't speak. My partner is also an immigrant, but he is visibly not from here. (OTOH, he has no accent!) HIS son was born and raised here, but I would not say that the kid is all that integrated with the majority culture. (In fact, at the ripe old age of 11, he is going through a phase(?) of strongly rejecting the majority culture and identifying with his dad's culture.) And because 1) he looks like his dad, and 2) he's got a foreign name, he is likely to experience just as much difficulty in the employment arena as any real immigrant.
That’s interesting, A weakness of mine is that most of my perspectives are inevitably amerocentric Still, I’m not sure I’m getting your meaning.