Your 'usually' may be correct. I don't know the statistics of the case. But there are some interesting examples in the opposite direction - the Jews and the French.When people rise up to protect a cultural identity, that usually means that identity is headed for the identity-graveyard. — frank
That reminded me of the TV series The Indian Doctor, which I greatly enjoyed. I expect you've seen it. I thought it portrayed the issues involved in a thoughtful and sensitive way. It was also interesting to see Sanjeev Bhaskar play a non-comedic role (I'd only seen him in The Kumars before that).Here, unquestionably, is an immigrant having problems with natives and native government. — unenlightened
From what the writer says, it sounds like that is not happening, and language skills are just being used as a cloak for racism. — andrewk
Right, I think this expresses the beginning of my argument very nicely. But there is a follow-up challenge. What is the difference between a sheep, and a wolf in sheep's clothing? An answer has to avoid essentialism, and your 'just' is doing all the work for you. It's not just a cloak for racism, it's that and also a legitimate nativism. — unenlightened
So we are supporters of oppressed minorities, of black folks, the disabled, women, etc etc. And thus supporters of the Sentinelese, in so far as we interpret their murderous treatment of immigrants as a legitimate demand for privacy.
And there is the beginning of the problem. Because we do not, elsewhere, at the Israeli-Palestinian border, or the US -Mexican border, or the European-African border, take the same respectful understanding view of those cultures that want to maintain their own privacy/purity/security/cultural integrity.
We can fix this problem ad hoc, with an appropriate distinction between refugees and colonials,
even if there are hard cases, but the problem is wider. — unenlightened
There's the Paradox: nativism gives a premise to racism (and xenophobia), yet is also the cornerstone of any ethnical or cultural identity. — ssu
The illogical attitudes basically comes from hypocrisy, that we want to be far more good and benevolent than we are and get tangled up in our so righteous reasoning. — ssu
I agree, the problem is far wider. It is not just a matter of cultural identity, because there is also the matter of land ownership thrown into the mix. — Metaphysician Undercover
so I need a moral reasoning that does not get tangled. — unenlightened
Cultural Jews seem to be very protective of their cultural identity, and it is flourishing. — andrewk
Jews
— andrewk
Zionism
— frank
Well, that certainly didn't take long. — Bitter Crank
identity
politics — op
But the Jewish identity is an example of one that's based on a long-standing grudge
— frank
Surely this broad-brush stroke of stereotyping should not be allowed to stand without objection. I object. — Bitter Crank
I feel that if the nativism is applied selectively then it is nativism mixed with bigotry. Arguing against myself, I concede that a dark skin is the most easily detected indicator of not being indigenous in Wales. An accent is another easy indicator. If the author was raised in India, I presume she has an accent that is easily identified as non-welsh. My first wondering from that is whether equal discrimination would be applied against a white person with an RP voice, a cockney or a scouser. Possibly it would be. I have heard tales of Welsh having resentment against English visitors, especially when they are only there for long weekends and holidays, in their seaside cottage that is empty the rest of the time.It's not just a cloak for racism, it's that and also a legitimate nativism. — unenlightened
Suppose one says,"I belong to the tribe, and the tribe belongs to the land." This is a very different inverse form of identification from one who identifies as a 'land owner'. The sovereignty of the individual over his tribe and environment is a very modern fantasy, although in a sense identity has always ranged from complete subsumption into Nature, the drop in the ocean, to the Almighty alienated Solipsist God. — unenlightened
What the citizenship does is take away my individual identity, making me a member of the tribe. — Metaphysician Undercover
How about looking at it from the standpoint of an individual in a community. — TheMadFool
Morality is a tool of identity. — frank
There is way of excluding others, quietly, through quiet signs. — csalisbury
It seems to me (caveat: no studies conducted, or even consulted) that pro or anti immigration views usually correspond less to income than to social security. For those who have it, its often invisible, taken for granted. — csalisbury
I wonder what you mean by this? Identity always does this - subsumes the individual to a group - I am a doctor, or I am a melancholic - or whatever. And curiously, unique identifiers are the worst of the lot for it, one is reduced to a number. — unenlightened
Identifying myself as MU, born at such a place, at such time, of such mother, and father, does not place me into a group. — Metaphysician Undercover
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