bboy,
Kent, while in Norway I felt alot of prejudice against pakistani immigrants. In the US the prejudice is against mexicans. Every country seems to have a select 'undesirable' immigrant population.
That is true. And people from Latin American descent may also notice some hostility due to the influx of Chilean immigrants some years ago, and the inevitable conflicts.
This is a common problem all countries struggle with. It is very visible in western countries because we have generally taken action against racism, exposed it, and do discuss it (e.g. the Japanese, do not).
It is of course the case that many of the immigrants do not have "legitimate reasons" for coming, but want access to work (and sometimes the welfare systems) of richer nations. It is not hard to understand both sides of the issue. But I still feel Norwegians have a legitimate right to defend their resources, and in this I have no problems understanding the Australian position.
However, it's often too easy to reject legitimate concerns over nationalities as "racism". Some time back Kadra, a young girl of Somalian descent, went to the Islamic "spiritual leaders" and told them her parents demanded her to go back to Somalia for circumcition (female genital mutilation, more accurately). Publicly, those leaders said they were against it. She had a hidden camera and microphone. On the recording you could see those men encourage her to follow her parents' wishes.
Was the outcry of condemnation against the muslem leaders and their followers an expression of "racism"? Hardly, since the same people also praised the girl for her courage. To strongly criticize a perverted practice like genital mutilation is not, as some muslems and their spineless supporters on the far left (some, not all!) assert, an expression of cultural chauvinism. A girl from Somalia has the same human rights and civil rights and obligations under Norwegian law as anyone else here, and so does those Muslamic leaders and her parents who, I actually mean, should be kicked out of the country first chance.
Kadra still lives at a secret address somewhere in Norway.
- Jan
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"Doctor how can you diagnose someone with Obsessive Compulsive Disorder and then act like I had some choice about barging in here right now?" -- As Good As It Gets