Previous migrant waves worked well, as there was a strong emphasis on the now looked down upon assimilation. When my dad's family moved to Australia in the early 50's he Anglicised his name (he was Dutch), didn't speak Dutch in public around non-Dutch, very much expected they'd become Australian's first, Dutch still to be celebrated and important, but second to now being an Aussie. All of them certainly expected to learn English if they didn't already know (in their cases they did). The kids coming across, or those born to those who came to Australia were expected by their parents to be a part of the broader Australian community.I do know the Italians worked hard when they started coming here in the 60’-70’. They knew how to build houses properly in those days not like the shit you get now.
Also the Greeks and Eastern Europeans worked hard,as they are the ones that worked in the factories because that sort of work was considered the pits to your average Australian.
Working in a factory in Australia was considered worse than being unemployed in the 70’s.
Yes there has been trouble with something’s with there coming here but nothing like the crazy shit we now see unfolding on our doorsteps.
This has been building for sometime now with protesters on both sides throughout the city’s at a regular occurrence with some violent clashes.
Each side believes they’ve right and we as a nation is stuck between all of this.
What happened last week was inevitable, it was only a matter of time.
Things need to change now as there’s more guns in Australia now than before Port Arthur.
Hopefully the government will adopt more strick gun laws like what has been done in Western Australia.
It’s fking ridiculous that person living in a Sydney Suburb can legally own six guns.
We can’t as a nation just sit on our hands and say well maybe it won’t happen again if we say nothing and don’t upset anyone.
You can see that in the reason we're here, football. How many Southern European kids of migrants took up the game from the 50's onwards. This Australian first, home country second, continued through the 60's, 70's, 80's, but started turning in the 90's to multiculturism. As if we weren't already getting this happening. The time I was at school during the late 70's through finishing start of 90's, it'd long since passed the point anyone looked twice at anyone who wasn't as pasty white as me.
What Multiculturism did, that, IMO, has been a contributing factor to tension in Australia, is flip it from Aussie first, origin second, to origin first, Aussie (if at all beyond where they happen to live) second. There's much more 'sticking to their own' amongst the latest immigrant waves, than earlier ones, and less of their kids going into the Australian sports and past times. You look at Houli, Aliir for AFL or Khawaji for Cricket, how few in comparison to (especially with Aussie Rules), the large numbers of earlier wave immigrant kids who took up the sport and became part of their local broader Australian community. The, if not encouragement, then certainly lack of pressure, to join the broader community that Multiculturism has enabled has been a negative for both those who've immigrated here and those who were already here. In case it's not clear from that, I'm pro-immigration (to the level to have population stability), but the good intentions to improve what was working for 30 or 40 years has made too many parts of it dysfunctional.




