encore sur ce train?!?
Way to hijack a perfectly good thread, guys! can one of the mods split the last few posts onto another of countless other threads dealing with this same old TIRED subject...The actual topic started by General G. deserves a lot more than to be shanghaied down this petty road...
A Cosmo et tout les autres qui discutent ce sujet épuisé datant déja de plus de 10 ans: Bien que je n'y crois pas du tout personnellement au concept de la souveraineté, veuillez réflechir sur ceci:...Même si finalement la souveraineté puisse être acquise dans les temps prochains, le Quebec sera irrévoquablement transformé dans moins de 20 ans, lorsque la génération boomer sera pour la plupart éteinte. A moins de gains incroyables dans l'immigration, la population risque de se réduire d'au moins 30% et personne ne peut prédire les changements fondamentaux a venir.
Ceci dit, je ne tiens pas a me joindre aux arguments bouillonnant dans ce thread, j'ai déja trop donne en '95...
Now returning to a more deserving topic, the one dealing with black unemployment...There are many reasons for this problem, some mentioned previously such as tribalism, fear and ignorance on the part of some employers. Lack of education is a cross-the-board problem amongst all ethnicities, forcing many to move to friendlier climes (I have many black anglophone friends that moved to Ontario and western Canada).
the new generation of young Quebec blacks from Haitian /Dominican/etc. parents seem to be benefiting from integration into the general french-speaking populace in the last 15 years or so, resulting in their being more accepted overall in all aspects of life (it may take a few more years before the full impact is learned though...).
a more varied media image for blacks (especially the U.S.) could only help i feel, showing people of colour in roles other than the surly gangbanger so prevalent in music videos and movies these days. I wish in Quebec that we also have a Spike Lee, or a John Singleton to shake things up...