Australia is Already Asianised and the British Australia of Eric Butler is Long Dead By James Reed
Explore the face of Asianisation outside of the comfort and relative protection of your quiet suburban home, or rural property. This is the racial profile of our major cities: http://cbdnews.com.au/the-face-of-the-cbd/
Look, I will quote for you, for full dramatic impact:
“Being a 28-year-old Chinese Australian with three tertiary degrees, CBD resident Wendy Liu could very well be the face of Melbourne’s CBD.
The latest census shows 38.4 per cent of Melbourne CBD residents have Chinese ancestry. The median age in the CBD is 26 and 57.8 per cent of residents are tertiary educated.
Ms Liu said the CBD’s Chinese population was growing so quickly that native Chinese-speakers did not have to speak English to survive.
“My parents don’t speak any English and when they came to visit me they were able to get around easily because there are many people speaking Mandarin here,” she said.
The 2016 census shows 30.7 per cent of CBD residents speak Mandarin at home.
She said the never-ending festivals and events in the CBD also made it easy for newcomers to adapt to the new culture.
“I’m settling down in the new culture quite well, even though I’m still finding my place,” she said.
“Here in the CBD I get to eat Chinese food and speak Mandarin a lot, so I remain very connected to the Chinese community.”
Ms Liu said the CBD has changed dramatically over the years she had been here.
“When I arrived here five years ago, there were not as many Chinese people as today. Now when I walk along Swanston St, it’s like walking in Wangfujing in Beijing,” she said, likening the bustling Swanston St to Beijing’s busiest shopping strip.
“It’s so busy in the CBD that I can easily bump into someone I know,” she said.
Ms Liu came to Melbourne from Beijing five years ago and studied engineering and management at the University of Melbourne and later MBA at RMIT University.
Having completed her undergraduate in engineering at Beijing Institute of Technology and played the piano and percussion professionally, Ms Liu is a high achiever.
After six rounds of competitive interviews, she won the 2017 Telstra Retail Graduate award, which comes with an 18-month program for graduates to explore and enhance skills in areas such as business, IT and engineering.
To Ms Liu, there is no better place to live or work other than the city.”
The Sydney CBD is probably more Asian. Even when the Americans occupied Japan, there was nothing like this. Japan was still Japan. Now traditional Australia is ceasing to even exist.
Sorry, but things have been left too late. We cannot save “Australia” now because it no longer exists. Our side should have fought harder and smarter, but brains and courage have always been lacking among conservatives. The 1960s were the time to really fight.
Now, there are only stark choices. Either we support our own tribe as a struggle group, like every other sane group does, embracing particularism and tribalism, so something survives, or we continue with our high moral stand with universalism, and just disappear. Review what is reported in all the articles at the blog this week, and ask yourself whether or not we can really win this on the “business as usual” scenario, inherited from the past? There needs to be a radical rethinking of our approach to things because day by day, everything is spiralling out of control. It is not rational to keep to the same game plan when the enemy troops continuously win and wipe out our side. It makes no sense to search for your lost keys/coin… in the light, if you lost it in the shadows (the streetlight effect):
A police officer sees a drunken man intently searching the ground near a lamppost and asks him the goal of his quest. The inebriate replies that he is looking for his car keys, and the officer helps for a few minutes without success then he asks whether the man is certain that he dropped the keys near the lamppost.
“No,” is the reply, “I lost the keys somewhere across the street.” “Why look here?” asks the surprised and irritated officer. “The light is much better here,” the intoxicated man responds with aplomb.
Comments