Menagerie of Multiculturalism Can only Give Rise to Internal Conflict
By Con George-Kotzabasis
The writer of this article does not make a distinction between perceived and real threats. And like an alchemist he transforms real threats into perceived ones. The Muslim internal fundamentalist threat is not imaginary but a real one. And as such, it inevitably raises the hackles of hostility of most Australians.
One should give therefore “the good old Aussie finger” to all the shallow cultural and political analysts, like Professor Robert Manne, who are unable to make a serious contribution to the complexities that rise in a society that has a “menagerie” of different cultures in its midst, that ultimately are bound to clash with each other.
By Con George-Kotzabasis
The writer of this article does not make a distinction between perceived and real threats. And like an alchemist he transforms real threats into perceived ones. The Muslim internal fundamentalist threat is not imaginary but a real one. And as such, it inevitably raises the hackles of hostility of most Australians.
One should give therefore “the good old Aussie finger” to all the shallow cultural and political analysts, like Professor Robert Manne, who are unable to make a serious contribution to the complexities that rise in a society that has a “menagerie” of different cultures in its midst, that ultimately are bound to clash with each other.