Monday, February 07, 2011

Memo To UK PM, David Cameron: (Eyes Only) Multicultarism In Sports & Politics!

Isoa Damu of England races away in the semi final match against Samoa during the IRB Sevens tournament at the Dubai Sevens Stadium on December 5, 2009 in Dubai, United Arab Emirates.
Isoa Damu of England races away in the semi final match
against Samoa during the IRB Sevens tournament at the Dubai Sevens Stadium on December 5, 2009 in Dubai, United Arab Emirates.
(December 4, 2009 - Photo by David Rogers/Getty Images Europe)Isoa Damu of England races away in the semi final match against Samoa during the IRB Sevens tournament at the Dubai Sevens Stadium on December 5, 2009 in Dubai, United Arab Emirates.






British P.M, David Cameron's speech recently in Munich, Germany that bad-mouthed multiculturalism,
has ignited the forums of discourse far and wide among the inner and outer spans of the internet.

David Cameron's speech (video posted below).



A careful scan of the audience race quotients during that particular speech in Munich, really does portray a single thimble, aside from others from the entire color spectrum.



What does the word 'multiculturalism' mean?

Man walking with Union flag umbrellaThe multiculturalism debate is guaranteed to whip up a storm

Pundits have been reacting to a speech by David Cameron in which the prime minister argued multiculturalism had "failed". But what do commentators actually mean by the term?

It is one of the most emotive and sensitive subjects in British politics.

But at times it seems there are as many definitions of multiculturalism as there are columnists, experts and intellectuals prepared to weigh into the debate.

The subject has become the focus of renewed scrutiny in the wake of a speech by prime minister David Cameron, in which he told a security conference in Germany that the UK needed a stronger national identity to prevent extremism.

In his speech, which has provoked a political storm, Mr Cameron defines "the doctrine of state multiculturalism" as a strategy which has "encouraged different cultures to live separate lives, apart from each other and apart from the mainstream".

This characterisation is not new. In 2004 Trevor Phillips, chairman of the the Commission for Racial Equality - now the Equality and Human Rights Commission - told the Times that multiculturalism was out of datebecause it "suggests separateness" and should be replaced with policies which promote integration and "assert a core of Britishness".

But is everyone who uses the term referring to the same phenomenon?

Academics' definitions of multiculturalism refer to anything from people of different communities living alongside each other to ethnic or religious groups leading completely separate lives.

Likewise, columnists who write about multiculturalism don't often define what they mean by the term, looking instead at what it is not.

The Oxford English Dictionary offers a broad definition of multiculturalism as the "characteristics of a multicultural society" and "the policy or process whereby the distinctive identities of the cultural groups within such a society are maintained or supported".

Click to play

David Cameron said Britain had encouraged different cultures to live separate lives

Lord Sacks, Chief Rabbi of the United Hebrew Congregations of the Commonwealth says in the Times that multiculturalism was intended to create a more tolerant society, one in which everyone, regardless of colour, creed or culture, felt at home. But, he says, multiculturalism's message is "there is no need to integrate".

He distinguishes between tolerance and multiculturalism - using the Netherlands as an example of a tolerant, rather than multicultural, society.

Additionally, he says the current meaning of multiculturalism is part of the wider European phenomenon of moral relativism and talks of multiculturalism as dissolving national identity, shared values and collective identity which "makes it impossible for groups to integrate because there is nothing to integrate into".

Others, however, see the term as offering a range of meanings. In theObserver, the editor of Prospect magazine, David Goodhart, insists the strategy has taken on different forms within the UK over the years.

He distinguishes between the "live and let live" multiculturalism of the 1950s, which "assumed that if people could keep significant aspects of their culture they would choose to integrate in their own way"; the 1980s "'soft' multiculturalism of tolerance and equal rights"; and the more recent "hard" multiculturalism "of positive promotion of religious and ethnic identities".

Rod Liddle says in the Spectator that multiculturalism is a notion that cultures, no matter how antithetical to the norm, or anti-social, should be allowed to develop unhindered, without criticism.

Melanie Phillips takes this argument further in the Daily Mail, arguing that multiculturalism is a form of reverse-racism and "sickeningly hypocritical".

However, Madeleine Bunting of the Guardian says Mr Cameron has offered "a straw man version of multiculturalism". Instead of promoting segregation, she says, it is "a matter of pragmatism" - reaching out to organisations within ethnic communities who can help the government achieve its goals of maintaining good community relations.

In the same newspaper in March 2010, Antony Lerman, a former director of the Institute for Jewish Policy Research, pointed to some of theacademic work on multiculturalism to show it is the opposite of a philosophy of separateness. He cited Professor Bhikhu Parekh's definition which says, far from "putting people into ethnic boxes", multiculturalism is a "fusion in which a culture borrows bits of others and creatively transforms both itself and them".

Professor Tariq Modood is director of the Centre for Study of Ethnicity and Citizenship at the University of Bristol and wrote Still Not Easy Being British: Struggles for a Multicultural Citizenship. He says in a Runnymede Trust web chat that multiculturalism has many meanings, but the minimum is the need to politically identify groups, typically by ethnicity, and to work to remove stigmatisation, exclusion and domination in relation to such groups.

The debate around multiculturalism may be an important one. But while public discussion of the subject may have become more familiar, there remains little consensus about what the word actually means.



Comments

  • This comment is awaiting moderation. Explain.

  • This comment is awaiting moderation. Explain.

  • This comment is awaiting moderation. Explain.

  • This comment is awaiting moderation. Explain.

  • This comment is awaiting moderation. Explain.

  • In 2009, less than 1% of terrorist attack in Europe were carried out by Muslims (Source - Europol, TE-SAT 2010). Cameron talking about "Muslims do not become terrorists overnight..." is purely populist talk that taps into misplaced, developing prejudice among the electorate. We need genuine leadership from our Prime Minister, not political posturing.

  • Really this is David Cameroon's "rivers of blood" speech, which encourages newspapers columnists and others to spout blatant racism. "Failed Multiculturism" is "Political Correctness Gone Mad" for the 21st Century!

  • This comment was removed because the moderators found it broke theHouse Rules.

  • moral relativism is anti excellence. it is a pig philosophy that denies there is anything called the good. if human rights for all is good then why tolerate and promote cultures that are anti human rights for all as a 'good'? The bbc is promoting pig philosophy all the time as a good. The highest idea of humanity on 1 xtra seems to be some gang banging drug dealer who uses extreme violence?

  • The French have favoured "uniculturalism" over multiculturalism, believing that everyone who lives in France (or in the DOM/TOM) should basically adopt French culture. That does not preclude them from retaining elements of their own native culture in parallel, but it does mean that people are encouraged to integrate rather than remain totally separate. It is not 100% succesful but it works better.

  • I am all in favour of multicultureism in the UK and intergration but surely it shouldnt be forced on people of different ethnic backgrounds

  • Whatever the word multiculturalism means, if David Cameron and Melanie Phillips are against it, then it must be bad. So, let's have the opposite - monoculturalism. Let's all wear the same clothes, eat the same food, listen to the same music, read the same newspaper, believe the same ideas, and vote for the same politicians. Yes?

  • Very disappointing that the most senior politician in the country should come out with such an ill-advised and potentially inflammatory statement. You've not even been in office a year David but the majority of the electorate are already counting down the days until they can be rid of you, comments such as those about "failed" multiculturalism serve only to enhance your rap sheet!

  • It hasn't worked is because it was foisted on the population without consent or debate, and then we were lambasted for not liking it. The problems were always ours, never the fault of the immigrants. Political interference made it worse, promoting positive discrimination, hauling people into court, awarding huge damages for perceived racism, giving special "rights". It made minorities of natives

  • isn’t it the human condition for people to search out those who are similar? at the beginning of this article I thought that multiculturalism hasn’t failed we live largely at peace with one another, however the more you think about it, the less we actually integrate together, perhaps an introduction of the Dutch Citizenship test, where ppl need to be comfortable with the countrys ideals

Add to: Digg Add to: Del.icio.us Add to: Reddit Add to: StumbleUpon Add to: Furl Add to: Yahoo Add to: Spurl Add to: Google Add to: Technorati Add to: Newsvine
Translate
Recent Posts
Community
Share

No comments:

Post a Comment