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See, that’s what the app is perfect for.

Sounds perfect Wahhhh, I don’t wanna
blackjackgabbiani
mitigatedchaos

Just want to point out here that the ethnic majorities of most territories would not like becoming ethnic minorities in those territories.  This isn’t some weird phenomenon limited to only Trump voters.

Those who control the culture control the laws, after all.  Also the availability (and thus ease of access) of cultural communal goods.

mitigatedchaos

Now some of you reading this are probably thinking this doesn’t apply to you, because you love diversity.

If you are one of those people, I want you to imagine the area you live in going from 5% redneck to 60% redneck over 10 years.

Most stores cater to redneck wants/needs. A statue of confederate general Robert E. Lee has been built in the public square. Serving alcohol has been made illegal on Sundays, and the churches are all redneck churches. Most bars play only country music.

The rednecks have not threatened anybody. But as the dominant local source of money, the businesses shift to accomodate - and businesses of your favored culture(s) close as they fall below the necessary density of customers.

You might believe that this is a necessary sacrifice for freedom of movement and commerce, but that doesn’t mean you’ll enjoy it.

blackjackgabbiani

“And the churches are all redneck churches” may be a threatening thing depending on what you mean by that. The statue of Lee absolutely is.

But your example also hinges on all rednecks having identical tastes and only wanting to stick with their own culture instead of broadening. You’re talking about a stagnant population and frankly it doesn’t work that way in real life. Groups grow and change, both the people who move to a new area and the people who already lived there.

Provided that you didn’t mean what seems to be implied by the church example (since it would also assume them to all be bigots, which again isn’t realistic but to my knowledge rednecks don’t have any different churches than the rest of their natural areas) and kept the damn statue out of it, then the rest of it just sounds like natural cultural shifts. I don’t get what the problems would be there.

mitigatedchaos

Oh, since you’re trying to wriggle out of the implications, let’s say then those churches are voting to suppress gays (and others) and that the Robert E. Lee statue stays.

If you think cultures are only aesthetic, you’re going to have trouble. And belief in “human rights” is cultural, so using “but it’s a human right!” is a dodge.

However, the post you responded to just says you won’t like it, which, given your feelings about the statue, is true. It’s not even unusual.

The other stuff may require a sort of cultural awareness to deal with, by new legislation (in the case of certain Robert E Lee statues, things like hate crime laws would be an example), but that’s a discussion for another time.

Source: mitigatedchaos