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My dental experience
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Dragon Horse
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PostPosted: Wed 26 Nov 2008 19:17    Post subject: My dental experience Reply with quote

[This thread was transferred from the "Improving U.S. Society" forum because, although it starts by addressing U.S. society in advocacy mode (different ethnicities getting along), it soon switched to discussing general ethhic assimilation in the U.S. and France in discursive mode. -- FWS]

I had to go to the dentist this morning to get two cavities fixed and two crowns redone. Sad That was horrible and a long story.

Anyway I noticed something at the dentist office. I was in Vienna, VA, so middle to upper-middle class Northern VA.

The dentist was from Syria. The assistant was a black Arab from Sudan. Two of the other assistants were Hispanic (unknown origin, but looked Mestiza), one secretary was Dominican and the other African American (I'm guessing on the last one). The Dominican girl was about as dark as my mother, so most folks would consider her black. I only know she was Dominican because she spoke Spanish to the other Mestizo women and one remarked "she only speaks Spanish when we order food"... Laughing She was hot too. Surprised

Anyway...the Sudanese guy was trying to convert me to Islam. At first he asked me what Christians believed about Christmas and Jesus. Then completely switched to what Muslims believe and how "The Prophet" was correct. Laughing Rolling Eyes I just said "okay" to everything he said. Then I said my wife is Japanese and Zen Buddhist don't believe Buddha a god, so my wife was godless. That seemed to disturb him and he said I should convert her to Christianity because that was better than nothing. I guess because that is at least a religion "of the book". Laughing

Anyway...the only white people were patients.

I started to think that when I was a small child this would not be a likely staffing situation in America, and this would be in the early 1980's...late 1970's.

America is changing, at least in some areas.

Contrary to popular belief everyone seemed to get along and joke and laugh with each other although it was obvious English was not the native language of most of them , nor did they share the same religion, race, etc. Some thing we could all take a lesson from.
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G-Man
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PostPosted: Thu 27 Nov 2008 01:19    Post subject: Reply with quote

They were coexisting in the same work environment...I'm from New York City and witnessed the kinds of things on a regular basis. They may not socialize with each other after hours.
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Dragon Horse
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PostPosted: Fri 28 Nov 2008 20:35    Post subject: Reply with quote

G-Man wrote:
They were coexisting in the same work environment...I'm from New York City and witnessed the kinds of things on a regular basis. They may not socialize with each other after hours.


That's fine. My point was really that they could be civil in the same space to accomplish shared goals, without trying to dominate each other culturally/religiously.

You don't need to like me, just respect me.
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Melani23
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PostPosted: Mon 01 Dec 2008 14:52    Post subject: Reply with quote

And the only reason they all can do this is due to our great country - AMERICA! Very Happy

I doubt this would work in their home countries, or even in PC Europe. Wink

Cool
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Dragon Horse
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PostPosted: Mon 01 Dec 2008 15:56    Post subject: Reply with quote

Melani23 wrote:
And the only reason they all can do this is due to our great country - AMERICA! Very Happy

I doubt this would work in their home countries, or even in PC Europe. Wink

Cool


or if Pat Buchanan and the far right of the Republican Party had their way. Laughing
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G-Man
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PostPosted: Mon 01 Dec 2008 19:29    Post subject: Reply with quote

If they had their way, they'd simply impose restrictions on further immigration or stop it completely and clamp down on illegal immigration.
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Dragon Horse
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PostPosted: Mon 01 Dec 2008 19:46    Post subject: Reply with quote

G-Man wrote:
If they had their way, they'd simply impose restrictions on further immigration or stop it completely and clamp down on illegal immigration.


lol, that is not all they would do if they had their way. Read some of Pat's fellow travelers on VDARE.
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MisterLawyer
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PostPosted: Tue 02 Dec 2008 12:46    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
I doubt this would work in their home countries, or even in PC Europe. Wink


From what I have seen thus far it would work fine in greater Paris. Here, where you would never hear a mainstream politician speak about their religious beliefs, I helped decorate Christmas trees at my daughter's public school with a classmate's mom who was wearing a hijab (of Moroccan decent) and her teacher who was born in Algeria and who last week, when some kids were talking about God, told her first grade class that she doesn't believe in God. Or the social worker assigned to my immigration case at ANAEM who made sure I understood my contract agreeing to integrate myself into French society or potentially have my visa canceled, who had an ever so slightly detectable accent in French, spoke good English, and whose name was Eva _____akova. Wink
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G-Man
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PostPosted: Tue 02 Dec 2008 13:34    Post subject: Reply with quote

That's because France isn't multicultural as opposed to (kind of) multiethnic. They can tolerate racial and ethnic diversity but not cultural diversity, which is good in my opinion. I see nothing wrong with France demanding that people who settle in their country adapt to French values or hit the road.
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MisterLawyer
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PostPosted: Tue 02 Dec 2008 14:02    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
That's because France isn't multicultural as opposed to (kind of) multiethnic. They can tolerate racial and ethnic diversity but not cultural diversity


You are absolutely correct. Europe is much much less "P.C." that many Americans think.

Quote:
...which is good in my opinion. I see nothing wrong with France demanding that people who settle in their country adapt to French values or hit the road.


I agree. It is their country.

Going through the French immigration system has been a very enlightening experience. Even though I will only be here for 2.5 years by choice for work reasons, because of my visa category I have a indefinitely renewable "carte de séjour," (like a green card) so I am treated as a permanent immigrant, which includes mandatory French classes for those deemed not able to communicate in daily situations in French (thankfully my French was deemed sufficient) and efforts to integrate oneself into French society, which as far as I can tell means availing oneself of the government job placement service to find a job if you don't have one already, learning about the French Republic's principals of laity, liberty, equality, and fraternity and not engaging in anti-social behavior.
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erasmusinfinity
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PostPosted: Wed 25 Feb 2009 23:16    Post subject: Reply with quote

G-Man wrote:
That's because France isn't multicultural as opposed to (kind of) multiethnic. They can tolerate racial and ethnic diversity but not cultural diversity...which is good in my opinion.


That is a finely worded observation. I have observed this difference and have never managed to put the right words to it.

I think that America has many problems that relate to it's attempts at what you are calling cultural (as opposed to racial and ethnic) diversity. Of course, anything can be justified - for better or for worse - under the guise of cultural diversity. For if we are to respect everyone else's culture, and we understand that any sort of value can belong to some sort of culture, then anything can be made immune to criticism simply by attributing it to a culture.

MisterLawyer wrote:
I am treated as a permanent immigrant, which includes mandatory French classes for those deemed not able to communicate in daily situations in French (thankfully my French was deemed sufficient) and efforts to integrate oneself into French society, which as far as I can tell means availing oneself of the government job placement service to find a job if you don't have one already, learning about the French Republic's principals of laity, liberty, equality, and fraternity and not engaging in anti-social behavior.


I'm not so sure about the French language requirement, but it seems to me that such principles of liberty, equality and fraternity are cross cultural values that are based on respect for human worth and that it would be legitimate to apply them to all people of all cultures.
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caribj
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PostPosted: Wed 25 Feb 2009 23:29    Post subject: Reply with quote

Melani23 wrote:
And the only reason they all can do this is due to our great country - AMERICA! Very Happy

I doubt this would work in their home countries, or even in PC Europe. Wink

Cool



Sorry. This happens in many other countries in the world. Start with the one to our immediate north, Canada. Its perfectly possible in the UK as well. Large metro cities and surrounding areas are now like this.
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caribj
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PostPosted: Wed 25 Feb 2009 23:33    Post subject: Reply with quote

G-Man wrote:
That's because France isn't multicultural as opposed to (kind of) multiethnic. They can tolerate racial and ethnic diversity but not cultural diversity, which is good in my opinion. I see nothing wrong with France demanding that people who settle in their country adapt to French values or hit the road.
'''

Yet immigrants and their kids seem to do better in "PC" USA, Canada and maybe even UK than they do in France. Could it be that people are left to their own devices here and not forced to be what they are not?
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pianoplayer111
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PostPosted: Thu 26 Feb 2009 00:33    Post subject: Reply with quote

I disagree, Caribj.
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caribj
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PostPosted: Thu 26 Feb 2009 01:39    Post subject: Reply with quote

pianoplayer111 wrote:
I disagree, Caribj.



Are you suggesting that immigrants and their kids do worse in the USA than in France? Interesting that Muslims can wear what they want here but yet we do not have periodic riots as they have in France. What might indeed be ironic is while the French make a big deal of assimilation it may well be easier for immigrants to assimilate in the USA where people do not care one way or the other about what they do.
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erasmusinfinity
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PostPosted: Thu 26 Feb 2009 12:37    Post subject: Reply with quote

Do immigrant groups in America assimilate?

I have always thought that the predominant trend was to for immigrant groups to establish separate communities within the United States that were defined by their cultural differences. And that it is the ideal of multiculturalism that these communities be "separate but equal."

I will admit that I have also observed a more firmly grounded aristocratic class in France that strikes me as a greater obstacle to social mobility than does any sort of inheritance in the US. In the US, it helps to come from a family that is well connected and affluent, but the bottom line in determining social standing in contemporary America is almost always the dollar. And poor people do sometimes do get rich here which changes their social standing. In France, as in much of Europe, one can be dirt poor and still be regarded as belonging to a higher social class than an outsider who has made a lot of money, and this is based solely on having come from the right family.

I think very highly of the less feudal nature of US society, but I am skeptical that the sense of multiculturalism that we are talking about has anything to do with this. I would like to see America become more global and less multicultural, defining the difference as a recognition that there are certain common human values that ought be regarded to supersede subjective cultural differences and the special interests of divergent cultures. For example, French may be no better a language than Arabic, but liberté, egalité and fraternité are basic values that should be ascribed to all human cultures, regardless of how pronounced they are amongst a given population.
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Dragon Horse
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PostPosted: Thu 26 Feb 2009 15:42    Post subject: Reply with quote

erasmusinfinity wrote:
Do immigrant groups in America assimilate?

I have always thought that the predominant trend was to for immigrant groups to establish separate communities within the United States that were defined by their cultural differences. And that it is the ideal of multiculturalism that these communities be "separate but equal."

I will admit that I have also observed a more firmly grounded aristocratic class in France that strikes me as a greater obstacle to social mobility than does any sort of inheritance in the US. In the US, it helps to come from a family that is well connected and affluent, but the bottom line in determining social standing in contemporary America is almost always the dollar. And poor people do sometimes do get rich here which changes their social standing. In France, as in much of Europe, one can be dirt poor and still be regarded as belonging to a higher social class than an outsider who has made a lot of money, and this is based solely on having come from the right family.

I think very highly of the less feudal nature of US society, but I am skeptical that the sense of multiculturalism that we are talking about has anything to do with this. I would like to see America become more global and less multicultural, defining the difference as a recognition that there are certain common human values that ought be regarded to supersede subjective cultural differences and the special interests of divergent cultures. For example, French may be no better a language than Arabic, but liberté, egalité and fraternité are basic values that should be ascribed to all human cultures, regardless of how pronounced they are amongst a given population.


Historically after the 2nd or 3rd generation, European ethnic groups do largely assimilate into the "white masses" but for some ethnic holdouts in some neighborhoods in the Northeast, you don't see that in the Midwest (much) or the West Coast.

Nonwhite immigrants who come assimilate to varying extents but if you are talking about "full assimilation" as "disappearing as a separate group" that has not occurred. If it does occur it is likely to happen with Asians I would assume, but then again, it likely won't happen as long as Asian immigration continues. I know G-man and I have posted on this site that interracial marriage has actually somewhat stagnated among some groups and the reason argued is that continued immigration. Basically, Carribean black immigrants are more likely to marry African Americans, Asian immigrants are more likely to marry other Asians...so where as people born here have a higher rate of outmarriage...

In the past, for over a generation, immigration from Easter and Southern Europe was curtailed, until 1965 (???) giving those European ethnic groups time to assimilate...some of them took a long time though...like the Irish and there are still pockets of them in the Northeast of America but for the most part I don't believe "Irish" is considered a "separate people" in America as they once were, they are usually considered just a mainstream white sub-group...not a group separate from whites...
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erasmusinfinity
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PostPosted: Thu 26 Feb 2009 16:50    Post subject: Reply with quote

Dragon Horse wrote:
Nonwhite immigrants who come assimilate to varying extents but if you are talking about "full assimilation" as "disappearing as a separate group" that has not occurred.


I don't disagree with your points. My last paragraph was not simply meant as a description of my observations. For example, that such a disappearing of separate groups has or has not occurred. But rather, I was expressing something that I would like to see happen.

Just to be clear, I am not particularly interested in a "complete assimilation" of immigrant or minority groups in America or France or anywhere else. I am only interested in a shared acceptance of basic enlightenment principles across cultural lines - the sort that are prerequisite to meaningful coexistence.
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caribj
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PostPosted: Fri 27 Feb 2009 01:03    Post subject: Reply with quote

erasmusinfinity wrote:
Do immigrant groups in America assimilate?

.


Yes. The USA is a country which allows people to maintain their own entities to a greater extent than say France, while still participating in the benefits of this society, hence there is much less tension among immigrantsand their kids than what we see in France?
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caribj
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PostPosted: Fri 27 Feb 2009 01:09    Post subject: Reply with quote

erasmusinfinity wrote:
[ For example, that such a disappearing of separate groups has or has not occurred. But rather, I was expressing something that I would like to see happen.

.


Why? There are those who argue that its America's diversity that is its strength making it easier for new arrivals to improve their socio-economic status in the first generation. Its much harder in Europe, especially France, where total submission seems vital to acheive success. Its unreasonable to expect an adult arriving in a country to totally eradicate who he is culturally and it fact some argue that, provided that they have the necessary tools, command of the English language clearly being one, it should not matter whether they become culturally indistinguishable from an American or not. It is also interesting to see what indeed makes some one American given the diversity of this nation, a feature since its creation.
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