quinta-feira, 14 de outubro de 2010
BBC Blog Network "Is France's treatment of Roma too harsh?" There's more to it than meets the eye or hits the ear!
It is still early days in this ongoing row over Gypsies/Travellers/Roma between France, the EU and the street where opinion ranges from inflamed broad support to inflamed astonished outrage.
After all it is France of all nation-States!
After all it is a human problem most can connect to, triggering feelings from excitement to indignation.
Most often than not to hyped valuation according to own views on 'the other'.
Roma people have indeed been an unresolved social problem across most of Europe calling for targeted public policy.
Nothing that can be sorted out from one day or one year to the next.
Yet the nuisance created by these Roma - newly arrived from the far edges of Eastern Europe - pose everyday issues no organized State represented by the government of the day can simply overlook indefinitely.
It could be likened to social dumping whereby Romania and Bulgaria transfer thousands of their underclassed citizens to a wealthier EU State.
Gypsies/Travellers/Roma ought to be treated with respect everywhere but their case is much wider than emboldened statements of political correctness would let us believe.
Hopefully for Gypsies/Travellers/Roma some good will arise in the longer run out of the current uneasy situation.
I just wish Nicolas Sarkozy is not using 'the other' to prop up his popularity.That would be so utterly wrong!
After all it is France of all nation-States!
After all it is a human problem most can connect to, triggering feelings from excitement to indignation.
Most often than not to hyped valuation according to own views on 'the other'.
Roma people have indeed been an unresolved social problem across most of Europe calling for targeted public policy.
Nothing that can be sorted out from one day or one year to the next.
Yet the nuisance created by these Roma - newly arrived from the far edges of Eastern Europe - pose everyday issues no organized State represented by the government of the day can simply overlook indefinitely.
It could be likened to social dumping whereby Romania and Bulgaria transfer thousands of their underclassed citizens to a wealthier EU State.
Gypsies/Travellers/Roma ought to be treated with respect everywhere but their case is much wider than emboldened statements of political correctness would let us believe.
Hopefully for Gypsies/Travellers/Roma some good will arise in the longer run out of the current uneasy situation.
I just wish Nicolas Sarkozy is not using 'the other' to prop up his popularity.That would be so utterly wrong!
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