brian ross wrote: ↑Wed Sep 19, 2018 2:42 pm
sprintcyclist wrote: ↑Wed Sep 19, 2018 9:50 am
Rorschach wrote: ↑Fri Sep 14, 2018 11:43 am
93 percent of people in a poll on A Current Affair with 35,000 responses voted to abandon Multiculturalism .....
We were never asked if we wanted it.
We were never allowed to vote on it.
The Government continually tweaks it but never gets it right.
It is a failed social policy where ever it is implemented.
Good.
Except there is no link to the claimed Survey - never has been in fact - and so he cannot prove it actually occurred. He never accepts that such phone-in surveys were and still are apt to be fooled by multiple phone-ups from a single number.
The Survey here from the Scanlon Foundation - has 85% of Australians support Multiculturalism -
https://www.monash.edu/__data/assets/pd ... t-2017.pdf. He hates such a viewpoint for some reason. To him, Multiculturalism must be, is a complete and total failure 'cause he appears to hate the idea that migrant citizens have the same rights as natural born citizens. Tut, tut.
In reality, any Government policy to be measured a success must be successful for the overwhelming majority of citizens, most of the time and Multiculturalism in Australia answers that criteria.
From the Scanlon Survey and I believe we have flogged this horse before ...
There is, however, the possibility to develop a second interpretation of the survey and demographic data presented in this report. This second perspective indicatesthat the Australia of 2017 isless resilient than the Australia of ten years earlier, less able to deal with economic and other crises that may eventuate in coming years.
First, there is an increasing geographical concentration of the overseas‐born populations, as indicated by the census analysis reported here. This increased concentration, particularly in Sydney and Melbourne, questions whether past patterns of integration are continuing, or whether new norms are being established whose consequences need to be better understood.
Second, the relatively high level of negative feeling towards Muslims is a factor that enters into evaluation of future risk. Questions in the Life in Australia survey conducted for the Scanlon Foundation indicate that 41% of respondents are negative towards Muslims, compared to 6% towards Buddhists. Focus group discussions undertaken for the Scanlon Foundation’s Australia@2015, and other projects, indicates that this negativity is in part fed by the reality – and the heightened perception – of radical rejectionism of Australia’s secular democratic values and institutions within segments of the Muslim population, which in 2016 was the largest of the non‐Christian faith groups.
Third, a closer examination of the ten years of Scanlon Foundation surveys indicate a potential weakness of interpretation based on aggregated data, in which the two levels of positive (‘strongly agree’ and ‘disagree’) or negative (‘strongly disagree’ and ‘disagree’) response are treated as one. The risk is that deteriorating results at the ‘strongly’ held level may be masked by such
aggregation.
Then we have this ...
. In addition to English, respondents had the option of completing the survey in one of the six most commonly spoken
community languages: Vietnamese, Chinese (Cantonese and Mandarin), Italian, Greek and Arabic.
This is like someone walking down the main street of Auburn/Lidcombe or Bankstown and asking people "
Should we have more mosques and/or Islamic prayer halls in Sydney?" (Of which we have around 100 already) and then flapping around and saying oh guess what? "
98% of Australian respondents want more mosques in Sydney!"
Rule 1 - of any survey on immigration! The respondents should at LEAST speak the language of the country that is hosting them.
Rule 2 - Respondents should NOT be paid to do said survey.
Rule 3 - All respondents should be at least 3 generations Australian (or whichever host country) as they are the ones most affected.
The results are skewed as the demographic was skewed. What do you think someone who can't even speak English will say in a survey on immigration? DUHH!!
No soup for you or Scanlon.