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Originally Posted by Cherie
I literally don't see that, diversity is very much encouraged, it is taught in schools, they celebrate Eid and other religious festivals, the kids get days off to celebrate while the schools remain open to other kids (only for Eid and Diwali), I think London at any rate bends over backwards to integrate minorities, these guys were British born, they would have gone to same type of school as my kids where 95 per cent of the school community were black or Asian so how can you say they feel isolated? my kids who were in the minority and I could upload school photos of their secondary school year groups where they were one of the few white faces, they didn't have an issue with being white in an practically all Asian school and neither did I or their Dad, my community is probably 70/30 Asian, once again and I agree with Brillo here you are blaming society when you should be blaming evil and desire to be in control from a minority.
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All I can do is ask you the same question I just asked Brillo;
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So if it's the same people, from the same countries, and there are more of them in the US than there are in the UK, and yet (by your own statement) they don't seem to have the same problems with radical Islam... But you claim that this has nothing to do with actions and attitudes in the host nation... Then pray tell Brillo - what is it? What is the difference?
I know what you WANT to be able to say, and that's "they don't let them in". But that is simply false. The numbers are available, and it is just quite simply not correct. So... If you will take a second away from your busy schedule of poo-pooing other people's suggestions, I would love to hear your own, personal, original thoughts on why you think there is a difference.
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You have plenty to say when it comes to reading posts and saying "that's not the case", but the question I've been attempting to address is "Why is there a difference between Muslims in certain other countries and Muslims in the UK; why doe some seem to have fewer problems".
Your answer, that it's just an inherent problem with a random minority taking control of others, doesn't make sense as an answer to that question. So in your opinion; why is there a difference?
To be fair I'm not sure if you've said that you think there is one, you might think that all countries are having the same issues. But Brillo did outright state that not all countries are having the problems the UK is having.
IF that is true - there is only ONE variable. The country itself. That is literally the only answer there can be, in my opinion, and by the rules of formal logic.