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Matt P
tranceaddict
Registered: Nov 2003
Location:
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Re: Question for the Aussies
| quote: | Originally posted by Jayx1
This is a question i'm asking of other countries just to get a comparison.
In Australia would you ever get a group of 1st generation Australians claiming to be another nationality just because one or more parents were born there? Would they ever feel "closer" to that heritage than they do to Australian heritage even though they were born in Australia and have never set foot in that country they claim? |
Personally i belive this is a massive problem we have here in sydney. As you may or may not know, we have a massive multicultural society, but many of the people who are in this situation, claim to be greek/italian/lebanese/macedonian/etc.... and display this every way they can (ie internet nicknames, flags hanging from their cars etc..) and in some cases keep to those groups.
As far as im concerned, anyone born here, is Australian. No debate can be entered into. You have parents that are of XXXXX heritage but you my friend are Australian.
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Feb-26-2005 23:07
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Paulie
Losing My Religion

Registered: Aug 2002
Location: NomansLand
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Roots are roots you cant deny them, but the only people that have problem with this sort of identity, are the people from the middle east, the lebanese, and people from the Balkans. This is an inherant problem as really their have no real country, either over tehre or over here. No one made more of an effort in AUstralian society than the asians, greeks or the Italians did.
___________________
Oh, life is bigger ,It's bigger than you,And you are not me,The lengths that I will go to, The distance in your eyes ,Oh no, I've said too much, I set it up
That's me in the corner, That's me in the spotlight, I'm Losing my religion, Trying to keep up with you ,And I don't know if I can do it, Oh no, I've said too much,I haven't said enough, I thought that I heard you laughing, I thought that I heard you sing, I think I thought I saw you try.
But that was just a dream, That was just a dream, But that was just a dream, Try, cry, why try? That was just a dream ,Just a dream, just a dream, Dream
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Feb-27-2005 02:25
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stamper
The Accountant

Registered: Mar 2001
Location: Adelaide, AUSTRALIA
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| quote: | Originally posted by gumble
Multiculturalism is what makes Australia, but i think you should take pride in your cultural heritage - the main reason im a monarchist? - and also honour the country that holds you.
There is nothing wrong (and indeed, it should be preserved) with remaining in community groups and keeping traditions that have been in your native society for thousands of years. This provides identity and overall Australian diversity, which welcomes a rich variety of thoughts, ideas, philosophies and talents; which overall, progress our nation.
It's just a shame that some migrant groups (moreso in recent years) beleive that thier cultural identity makes them superior and gives them a free ticket to do what they like.
When I come to power, and impose my Radinist regime, I will fix this |
Gumbles most intelligent post ever? Seriously I agree with Gumble, but I think sometimes some people try too hard NOT to be Australian. I mean they will go out their way to act / dress like people of their heritage.
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Feb-27-2005 11:06
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Nyquist_Theorem
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Registered: Jan 2005
Location: back in Melbourne, Australia
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wow, interesting thread here. im a canadian thats been living in melb for the past three years (and the next thirty if i can convince the nice girl behind the counter at DIMIA to let me stay), having previously lived in downtown toronto (queen & leslie, but worked at queen & spadina).
in answer to your question, the answer is 'of course' - in both/any country. canada and australia (which, incidentally, are the two most sociopolitically similar non-geographically-proximate countries in the world according to a recent study that came out of melb uni's politics dept) are both nations of imimgrants; while canada is 'more multicultural' in terms of numbers of foreign-born residents (from memory toronto has the 2nd highest % of foreign-born residents behind miami, which has a zillion cuban-born residents), there is also within canada a large base of 5+ generation canadians as a result of canada's having been settled ~200 years prior to australia. in other words, canada's got more immigrants, but a LOT of australians are only 1-2 generations away from a foreign-born relative, compared to many less in canada. (still on first coffee sorry if this is crap)
that said, there appears to be much greater pressure on immigrants here in australia to 'conform', much like the US 'melting pot' multicultural policy; the fact that australia handles multicultural affairs (and indeed even indigenous issues!) through its immigration dept is interesting to note, as was its post sept-11 citizenship-promotion slogan, which ominously claimed "there's never been a better time to be an australian citizen!" some cultures have acheived a critical mass enough to have their own identity (italian specifically comes to mind, esp for me living just off lygon) but otherwise, i'd say there is much greater cultural homogeneity in melbourne than there is in toronto.
look at the number of chinese-born residents in both cities, for example, and compare that to the size of the 'chinatown' in both; toronto's is MASSIVE, whereas melb's got a couple little lumps here and there but nothing remotely similar; also look at the popularity of foriegn-signage in both cities: in toronto, major corporations such as mcdonalds, royal bank, etc all have their signage in chinese, whereas in melb i'd imagine there would be a civil war if such were to appear.
also of interest (and perhaps one of the catalysts for the more rapid absorbtion of foreign culture here) is the latent xenophobia that seems to permeate so much of australian culture and society... i don't mean to insult any of the aussies on here (as do not get me wrong i freaking love this country) but australia really is a country that, at least compared to the others in which ive lived, looks at visibly-foreign people as 'outsiders' regardless of their citizenship.
i could crap on endlessly about this but doubt anyone's read this far as it is. if this is for a school assignment or if you want any other ideas / sources / whatever let me know, its an area with which i'm pretty familiar bc of my work. 
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Feb-27-2005 23:43
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