Nibble
New member
- Jan 3, 2007
- 19,238
As all official documents recognise, identity is self-defined: a black man, when filling in the census form, for example, can describe himself as "white British" if he so wishes. It follows, then, that one can define one's identity as an English man or woman according to certain racial and cultural characteristics. An influx of people with different racial and cultural characteristics will cause unease within the host community, most of the members of which hold to a particular, established view of what it means to be English. The views of people who feel uneasy - threatened, even - by successive waves of uncontrolled immigration should be respected and not dismissed. Their views are as worthy of respect as are anyone else's. People who hold such views - on either side of the political spectrum: mass immigration concerns people on both Left and Right - simply want to keep their country recognisably the same, which is a perfectly natural impulse.
A well written but essentially flawed argument.