Subj : Great Replacement Conspir To : Arelor From : Moondog Date : Mon May 23 2022 20:27:00 Re: Great Replacement Conspir By: Arelor to Ron Lauzon on Mon May 23 2022 02:05 pm > Re: Great Replacement Conspir > By: Ron Lauzon to MRO on Mon May 23 2022 08:24 am > > > -=> MRO wrote to Moondog <=- > > > > MR> the woman i live with is arab and when we go to her home town in > > MR> illinois it's like going into another dimension. all of a sudden all > > MR> the stores, the people in the cars and how everything looks is 100% > > MR> arab. > > > > If you were to check the people there, most are probably not born in the > > or are first generation. > > > > Over time (sometimes generations), this type of thing fades. > > > > In the large city near me, there are areas that are heavily korean, for > > example. They have stored that cater to korean food and have people who > > services that speak korean. > > > > The next generation, though, will speak english fluently and won't need t > > services. Ethnic food that is popular will start being sold in the "norm > > grocery stores, and the specity food stores will not be needed. > > > > It may take a generation or 2, but those highly ethnic concentrated areas > > simply fade away. > > > > > > ... My other computer is a TRS-80 Model 4P > > I think that may be true for some ethnic groups but not for others. > > Certain cultures actively discourage their members from getting away from th > mothership. I have a gypsy customer who wanted to open a store in a non gyps > area and his clan fell on him like a ton of bricks for daring thinking of th > He was eventually offered in an arranged marriage to set an alliance with > another clan. > > Halal and Kosher are ideas which seem to me engineered so members of their > asociated cultures don t buy food from outsiders to that culture. > > Most Eastern Europeans seem to mix well with natives. I have an Ukranian > customer (actually, she is from the Donbas area and considers herself to be > Russian) who has adapted perfectly, as well as some Romanian teachers of min > and some Hungarian workers I know. Muslim immigrants, on the other hand, ten > to stay more tightly within their cultural pockets and seem to despise the > Western culture as weak. My experience is that even 2nd or further generatio > tend not to take Western culture very seriously (and if political discussion > regarding some conflic comes up, they always side with muslim-like countries > > -- > gopher://gopher.richardfalken.com/1/richardfalken > I've noticed when new Indian employees start, their first question is where do all the other Indian people live in the area? I attribute this to them being homesick, or they're more comfortable with people who share history or culture. If I was in the same boat, I would probably hang with people of common faith,share a language as well if I went overseas. --- þ Synchronet þ The Cave BBS - Since 1992 - cavebbs.homeip.net .