Sand wrote: » In fairness, they cant integrate. The Irish are a European, broadly Christian people. How are non-Europeans supposed to integrate? By abandoning their own culture and beliefs? That's never going to happen. Countless countries have attempted multiculturalism under the guise of imperialism, or communism or neoliberalism and all have failed. It can be temporarily held together by top down tyranny as practiced by the imperialists, communists and increasingly neo-liberalism as in the UK. But it has always ended up with the country splitting apart into much more segregated successor states The failure of multiculturalism is not that its a good idea poorly executed, or that it could work with the right migrants, or it could work if they arrived legally, or it could work under some imagined set of conditions. It's just a bad idea.
shootermacg wrote: » The only real way to increase the standard of living in Ireland is to increase the population.
Sand wrote: » In fairness, they cant integrate. The Irish are a European, broadly Christian people. How are non-Europeans supposed to integrate? By abandoning their own culture and beliefs? That's never going to happen.
stefanovich wrote: » Hindus and Sikhs in the UK have integrated beautifully
Justin Credible Darts wrote: » as have buddists, jews, atheists etc. odd how its only the muslims
KevRossi wrote: » Pay people better, ensure that they have a decent disposable income, and the standard of living goes up. Look at the mean disposable income wage in Ireland in 1990 and compare it to 2000 or 2005. Big difference and no coincidence that our economy took off at the same time.
biko wrote: » Why is it always the pro-immigration lads that post sweeping generalisations and never post sources. It's like it's it always feels and guesses with these guys.
gormdubhgorm wrote: » I watched a few things based in the past on Ireland and Irish emigration/Replace Cork person with ‘Asylum seeker’ or ‘ Nigerian’ or foreigner’ and not much has changed.
I was also struck by how a couple of the lads in it seemed like asylum seekers of today running away from pain and sorrow. Wanting to start a new life, because they were sexually abused in Irish industrial schools.
I saw other items which is the nub of the Irish fear of multiculturalism. As a group which are most against multiculturalism are normally white Irish working classes, with low education. In Britain/England it is white working-class people (males in particular) left behind in education and status.
But of course it is much easier for some Irish working class to blame migrants, rather than looking how they contributed to their own problems. Leaving school early and so on.
gormdubhgorm wrote: » I watched a few things based in the past on Ireland and Irish emigration. Years ago, in Dublin people even had the same attitudes to migrants as today. The only difference was they were asked what they thought of Cork people not asylum seekers / foreigners.
Justin Credible Darts wrote: » Enlighten me, if the Irish are like what you claim, how does bringing in thousands more poor immigrants change things ?
gormdubhgorm wrote: » It makes Ireland a cosmopolitan society. Economic migrants on the whole work harder than those at the lowest rung of the native population. More open to innovation and adaption. History has proven this time and time again. The French Huguenots in Ireland, the Jewish community in Ireland etc. Portobello in Dublin was once known as little Jerusalem as Jews from Eastern Europe came to Ireland.
Wibbs wrote: » So you've basically illustrated the clannish nature of human beings in general and that "not much has changed" and you reckon bringing in people who are even more different is going to magically go well?
and here come the violins and the near constantly regurgitated "the Irish were immigrants once". Fine for the feels, not so much for the observable and demonstrable realities.
And here comes another revisited trope: Yep, only the undereducated thick working class Whites tend to have a problem and the oh so erudite middle class and educated tend not to. Firstly; for a start the middle classes aren't nearly so exposed to the problems and divisions that multiculturalism brings beyond tut tutting in leafy suburbia. A large proportion of migrants, some demographics more than others, tend to move into the same working class areas.
Secondly; you talk about a lack of education keeping some of the White working class down, but you want to risk importing more undereducated people because they're Brown? Even though in every single multicultural society on the planet those folks are more likely to be under educated and under employed? And yes for those in the cheap seats a lot of that is racism, but that's not exactly going away. You're basically saying let's import a more diverse underclass. Yeah that's logical alright.
Thirdly; if the pro diversity folks are so well educated and erudite how come vanishingly few have debated on this thread putting forward a halfway convincing argument? How come the same well educated types are far more quick to double down on insult and deflection because their arguments fail, and they know it?
Wibbs wrote: » "Cosmopolitan" sounds great, but it actually means little enough and we can be cosmopolitan without importing large numbers of non EU people into this country. Do you think Japan is lacking in "cosmopolitan", or China, or Cameroon? Or are the over 100,000 French, Spanish, German, Dutch, English, Scottish, Polish, Latvian, Swedish etc living in this country not the right kind of cosmopolitan? It does seem so and again we're back to this need for the more "exotic".
Yellow_Fern wrote: » Odd that you cite two groups that probably had higher levels of education than local Irish and then assumes a vastly larger group with less education will work fine here. It was more like Indians in Kenya than Algerians in France.
gormdubhgorm wrote: » It's a mixture some will be educated some won't. But many will have drive to succeed and better themselves. I have no problem with anyone who has a bit of 'go' in them.
Hamachi wrote: » Can you quantify ‘many’? It’s certainly not the case across Western Europe. Look at the demographic who occupy the very bottom of the socioeconomic pyramids in Germany, France, Italy, Netherlands, Belgium etc... Hint: It’s not the indigenous white working class, a group that you seem absolutely determined to vilify.
Gervais08 wrote: » You are either on w wind up or the most chronically naive and gullible person ever. We have refugees that are not fleeing anything but lawful deportation from safe countries; vile mediaeval practices being carried out on tiny kids in small Irish towns and our own people expected to live hours away from work but there’s a plan to hand our housing to anyone here a wet weekend. But you fall for the “they’re here to work and to pay our pensions” drivel. It’s only beaten to being the most completely pathetic view by the “lovely samosas in Castlebar tho ..”
"refugees that are not fleeing anything but lawful deportation from safe countries; vile mediaeval practices being carried out on tiny kids in small Irish towns and our own people expected to live hours away from work but there’s a plan to hand our housing to anyone here a wet weekend."
gormdubhgorm wrote: » Never said that.
But on the whole migrants want to work and come to Ireland for opportunity or escaping misery.
It is not a trope it is back up by a myriad of statistical facts in the UK. A quick internet search will enlighten you. Whether you like it or not that is the way Ireland will end up similar to the UK. Particularly as most in Ireland speak English it is yet another attraction
Plenty have however you seem to have your mind made up and do not wish to even countenance the prospect of a multicultural Ireland. I suppose you have to ask yourself what are you afraid of?
Because as I already said on this thread many who shout the loudest against multiculturalism in Ireland. Already voluntarily lost, or are blaise, or don't care about a major part of thier Irish culture - namely the Irish language. Yet I am just supposed to ignore the major contradiction, and cognitive dissonance?
Ironically as I have I already said it is migrants I have found who are more open to the Irish language. What does this say about the Irish people?
It's a mixture some will be educated some won't. But many will have drive to succeed and better themselves.
Japan is not cosmopolitan for a main reason a difficult language to learn, same with Chinese.
gormdubhgorm wrote: » Namely, the white working class at the bottom of the social ladder are gradually overtaken by motivated migrants. I have no issue with that.