Frank wrote on Jul 12
th, 2024 at 1:54pm:
ProudKangaroo wrote on Jul 12
th, 2024 at 12:18pm:
The problem with those like Frank, they demand immigrants shed their culture and assimilate by replacing it with Australian culture, but we can't really define what that is, and the moment Australians do things to adopt elements of other cultures we get thinly veiled versions of the great replacement fears.
So it's difficult to have a genuine conversation about this.
Well, can YOU define what any of those other, non Australian cultures are?
I have a mixed family so yes I do.
Would I otherwise?
Probably not as much. I've had to go out of my way to educate myself since our school system let my generation down in many ways.
I grew up with a diverse group of friends and 30+ years later we're all still friends. But those from immigrant backgrounds sound and act more Australian than I do due to the bullying over the years. It was a necessity for them, sadly.
It wasn't until they started having children of their own that they started to embrace their heritage because they wanted to keep it alive in their children, so they knew their history and where they came from.
It was then, from them, that I started to learn more about mainland Chinese culture, Filipino culture and some Slovakian culture. But it's a very upper-level understanding and only from their regions point of view. China and even the Fills are very diverse within themselves.
It all depends on the people you mix with. It's easy to dismiss, discriminate or hate what you don't understand.
I grew up in a time and a place that fostered mixing with people from different backgrounds in school and celebrating our differences, without it being overboard and over-correcting into wokeville.