People from different cultures have different problems within their cultures which reflects through behaviours within their culture. This shouldn't be controversial. It's self evident.
Suggesting there's no problem with the treatment of young women in the South East Asian Muslim community is as blind as suggesting that there's no problem with binge drinking the white working classes in England.
I've got a family member who worked as a social worker specialising in Child Sexual Abuse at the time and is pretty socially aware when it comes to dogwhistles for racism. I once asked about how this BNP-like idea that you'd treat an Asian family different to a white family and how off the mark it was. She shocked me when she said that it was pretty close to reality. It's not as simple as "white = bad, asian = ok", it's a big misconception. But the core idea was correct in her (long) experience of practice. Correct enough that almost every single report into this matter has talked about worries of racism accusation/career suicide from social workers as a factor and the sector has taken numerous steps to ensure there are now safeguards in place.
The culture of social work in that field is about doing as much help as you can while attempting to navigate the difficult job. People FUCKING HATE social workers. They think they're either child snatchers, busy bodies or incompetent bureaucrats who do nothing while kids like Baby P suffer. And they're always the first ones to get the blame when there's a fuck up, usually costing them not just their job but their entire career. The lack of confidence that the British public have in the competence of the profession is a cultural reason why they unconsciously choose to be cautious. This cautious behaviour leads to this hyper-sensitivity to racism, compounded by various members of that community being vocal about how they're being racistly treated. Usually because in the past they've been racistly treated.
It's almost like people from different cultures have different problems within their cultures which reflects through behaviours within their culture.
Suggesting there's no problem with the treatment of young women in the South East Asian Muslim community is as blind as suggesting that there's no problem with binge drinking the white working classes in England.
I've got a family member who worked as a social worker specialising in Child Sexual Abuse at the time and is pretty socially aware when it comes to dogwhistles for racism. I once asked about how this BNP-like idea that you'd treat an Asian family different to a white family and how off the mark it was. She shocked me when she said that it was pretty close to reality. It's not as simple as "white = bad, asian = ok", it's a big misconception. But the core idea was correct in her (long) experience of practice. Correct enough that almost every single report into this matter has talked about worries of racism accusation/career suicide from social workers as a factor and the sector has taken numerous steps to ensure there are now safeguards in place.
The culture of social work in that field is about doing as much help as you can while attempting to navigate the difficult job. People FUCKING HATE social workers. They think they're either child snatchers, busy bodies or incompetent bureaucrats who do nothing while kids like Baby P suffer. And they're always the first ones to get the blame when there's a fuck up, usually costing them not just their job but their entire career. The lack of confidence that the British public have in the competence of the profession is a cultural reason why they unconsciously choose to be cautious. This cautious behaviour leads to this hyper-sensitivity to racism, compounded by various members of that community being vocal about how they're being racistly treated. Usually because in the past they've been racistly treated.
It's almost like people from different cultures have different problems within their cultures which reflects through behaviours within their culture.