Subj : Great Replacement Conspir To : Ron Lauzon From : Boraxman Date : Tue May 24 2022 11:06:00 -=> Ron Lauzon wrote to MRO <=- RL> @MSGID: <628B877F.35972.dove-deb@nix.synchro.net> RL> @REPLY: <628AAF63.3749.dove-deb@bbses.info> -=> 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. RL> If you were to check the people there, most are probably not born in RL> the U.S. or are first generation. RL> Over time (sometimes generations), this type of thing fades. RL> In the large city near me, there are areas that are heavily korean, for RL> example. They have stored that cater to korean food and have people RL> who offer services that speak korean. RL> The next generation, though, will speak english fluently and won't need RL> those services. Ethnic food that is popular will start being sold in RL> the "normal" grocery stores, and the specity food stores will not be RL> needed. RL> It may take a generation or 2, but those highly ethnic concentrated RL> areas will simply fade away. In practice, the "ethnic" areas end up changing hands to another group. Australia has very high immigration rates, per capita, higher than the US. These concentrated areas are growing, overall. If you go to Melbourne city centre, it is very Asian in flavour with most shopfronts catering to this demographic. --- MultiMail/Linux v0.52 þ Synchronet þ MS & RD BBs - bbs.mozysswamp.org .