by Ingenuity_Gap » Mon 01 May 2006, 12:57:49
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('PrairieMule', 'I')'m in the Texas just like Aaron. Honestly I can't imagine Texas w/o the hispanic influence. I wouldn't want to live w/o them. I do believe we citizens have legitimate right to have some control in separating the good ones from the bad ones. You know simple yardsticks like violent criminals, welfare sponges, and folks who refuse to carry insurance on their trucks that speed up on red lights and such.
BTW-Paypay for some folks who work off the books is today. I wonder if their outrage will extend to boycotting check cashing
ponga su dinero donde está su boca !
I can't imagine Texas w/o the hispanic influence either. But the way things are going in the illegal immigration business, you'll soon have more than hispanic influence, you'll have hispanic dominance. But your Texas example is a bad one. Mexicans and Americans are living close to each other for a long time, and it's perfectly normal to have a colorful community near a border.
Come to Canada. There are parts of cities or entire cities becoming completely Chinese, or Sikh, or Pakistani, when only 20-30 years ago they were totally white. Not very funny to send your son to a school where everybody wears turbans and worships Hare Krishna.
Don't get me wrong, I'm not saying that Europeans are
better than Asians or Hispanics or African-Americans. But they are
different in many respects and mixing them at will is just another failed social experiment like communism. Oil doesn't blend well with water. Both of them are useful, but ...
I can live with small doses of immigrants, but when they become the majority and most of them don't even try to speak the official language, it starts to annoy me. And let's not think about the difference in cooking, dressing, religion, manners. Toronto has become a much dirtier city in the last 20 years solely because of so many different immigrants that have totally different habits.
There's an upside to this though: I don't have to buy a plane ticket to Bombay or New Delhi to see the great Indian culture in action, I just drive 30 min to Brampton, Ontario.
"The world is becoming too complex and too fast-paced to manage." - Thomas Homer-Dixon