▲ | jajahabav 6 hours ago | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
I don’t really understand the authors point of view. If I moved to Japan and got citizenship, I’d know full well I’m not Japanese and never will be. I’d behave like a guest for the rest of my life (though obviously be grateful for any kindness the locals show me). I certainly would not make posts about how the locals are the real problem and they’re evil for not accommodating me. It’s also odd the article is trying to paint Tommy Robinson as “far right”. He’s deeply in bed with the Israelis, who last I checked don’t get along with the “far right”. He’s pushing anti Muslim sentiment to garner support for the genocide in Gaza. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
▲ | triceratops 5 hours ago | parent [-] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
> I’d behave like a guest [If I moved to Japan and got citizenship] for the rest of my life Why would you want to be a guest in your own country for the rest of your life? > I certainly would not make posts about how the locals are the real problem That's not what the post said. > they’re evil for not accommodating me. What does "accommodating" mean? From what I can tell they just want to not be treated like a guest in their own country. Not a crazy request. Taking citizenship in another country is comparable to being a new convert to a religion. Is it acceptable for people born and raised in the faith to treat new converts differently? | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|