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 Originally Posted by Warpe
It works great there because it's been handled differently. That's not multiculturalism in the sense of what's going on in Europe right now. It's more of a slow assimilation into a single overriding culture, which would be possible in Europe as well if the numbers of people being brought in weren't so large. I'd say that the greater the differences between two (or more) cultures, the longer it takes to assimilate people to the degree that those cultures can mesh into one overriding culture.
Edit: This post has a list of studies related to multiculturalism and its effects on social trust and other factors that are neat and worth reading on their own outside of this discussion - https://heartiste.wordpress.com/2016...eference-list/
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