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40pc believe others don’t belong here

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The Advertiser | September 28, 2008

http://www.news.com.au/adelaidenow/story/0,22606,24415273-5005962,00.html

FORTY per cent of Australians believe some ethnic groups do not belong in the country with one in 10 having outwardly racist views, a new study shows.

New South Wales tops the list with racist views, but lead researcher on the project Kevin Dunn puts it down to Sydney being the focus of international migration to Australia.

The study, led by human geography and urban studies Professor Dunn and his team from the University of Western Sydney, reveals racism in Australia has waned over the years but the figures remain high.

He will unveil the state-by-state statistics on Friday at the 4Rs international conference – Rights, Reconciliation, Respect and Responsibility – at Sydney’s University of Technology.

Challenging Racism: The Anti-Racism Research Project has randomly surveyed about 12,500 people in different studies during the past eight years.

Prof Dunn attributes the results to people’s overarching views.

“It’s an indicator of a narrow view of what constitutes Australianism,” he told AAP.

People were asked which cultural/ethnic groups do not fit into Australian society. NSW topped the list with 46 per cent of survey respondents saying some ethnic groups should not be in the country. The ACT had the lowest such response with 28 per cent.

Prof Dunn said people also revealed who they singled out the most.

“The most often-mentioned groups were Muslims or people from the Middle East.”

The overall figures surge to 65 per cent for people over 65 but drop to 31 per cent for those aged 18 to 34.

“It’s too high, isn’t it,” Prof Dunn said.

“We’ve got to bring that down.”

On average, about one in 10 people said it was not good for people of different cultures to marry and about the same number said not all races are equal.

“It’s only about one in 10 people now in Australia across the different states that would have that sort of view – the racial supremacists for instance,” Prof Dunn said.

“That’s still quite high I suppose – there’s a lot of concern that comes out of that.”

He said NSW ranked highest in most categories but attributed that to Sydney being the country’s focus for immigration.

“There’s just more cultural diversity here – there’s more opportunity for cross-cultural contact and that means some of them will not be positive ones.”

Prof Dunn and his team will release regional results within each state sometime early next year.

They will also recommend strategies to lower Australia’s level of racist views, which he said remain low by international standards.


Comment:
This report could show a number things. Amongst them it reveals that Australians are less impacted by the politically correct efforts of successive governments and media agencies than previously thought by politically incorrect disidents such as myself, and are quite capable of separating the truth from politically correct propaganda.

On the other hand, the report does not give racial based statistics of those surveyed. A casual reading of the report would lead the average reader to think that “The Anti-Racism Research Project has randomly surveyed about 12,500″ White Australian people. For all we know, a large percentage of those interviewed may be of at least four distinct racial and cultural groups. How many who claim to be/or claim descent from Australian Aboriginals and Arabs were interviewed? Out of those interviewed, how many declared that White people don’t belong here? How many “Jewish Australians” were interviewed who declared that “Muslims or people from the Middle East” don’t belong here? Ignoring any further potential impact on the survey by other racial groups, how many White Australians really were surveyed?

The real question left begging to be asked is: Which racially based group of people within Australia contains the highest percentage of racially biased thoughts, speech and behaviour?

Cailen.

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