>Is it immoral to feel at "home" in a society where things, people
>look like what you are used to?
no. it isn't immoral to feel at home in a society.
it is immoral to segregate people and society on the basis of race
, or color, or religion, or sexuality.
>Or is a person racist because they marry
>someone of their own race?
no, it isn't. unless that person would only consider marring a
person of their own race...
>Should people have a right to make decisions in a democracy which effect
>the racial make-up of their society?
not when they restrict the liberties and happiness and freedoms of
other people solely because of their skin color/religion/etc... that
type of decision goes against everything the bill of rights stands for.
>Then lets talk about what America is.
>It is a piece of ground. A part of the earth however that is not that much different in essentials from other places. What makes it different is the culture,
>the traditions, and the people. Anyone will say that those people, and that culture is, has been, basically, European.
i would say that the culture of America is now mostly a mix of other
cultures to the point that America is its own culture (not Eurpoean,
not Chinese, not Mexican, not Japanese, not Martian, etc). America used
to be a land where the culture was entirely Native American. As a
culture,
>The Chinese, the Mexicans, and all the others from basically foreign cultures
>who are coming here, are coming because it is different from their culture.
>If they wanted their own culture, the products of their own culture you might
>say, they would have saved the effort and stayed in their native land.
therefore, the settlers who came to America back in the 1600s should
have been totally willing to abandon their European culture and fully
embrace the culture of the Native Americans, right? Tell you what...
why don't you start first.
>I believe the principles, the moral principles in the foundation of our civil culture are being lost, or at least, are not being actualized. I would like to see those principles taught and strengthened. That we try to instate that libertyand justice by getting to the basics of the founding (stated in the founding documents) ideals.
i had always thought that the founding documents of this country were
a plea for tolerence and human rights for people from all cultures.
>I may be wrong.
you are wrong.
>The adherents of politicaly "correct" ideals wouldn't want us to impinge
>on the aborigines in the Amazon with "correct" culture, but it seems they don't
>want to give "traditional American society" the same option.
fuck being politicaly correct. how bout just treating people like
people and letting them do whatever the fuck they want, as long as
they dont hurt or infringe on the rights of other people. is that a
novel concept or what?
>The Decendents of the Enslaved Africans, and those of the decimated native
>tribes, did not have a choice whether to join our society, we have to give them
>the option, I think, before we give it to everyone else, or anyone else perhaps
>in the world. They , the Blacks and Indians, have never really been let in ,
>as a people.
are you that dense to think that blacks and indians are not a part
of American society now?! maybe you should learn a bit about the
contrabutions other cultures have made to this country before you
"give them the option" of joining your Aryan society.