ChatterBank1 min ago
He Is Not Being Racist, It's All A Matter Of Culture.
7 Answers
http:// www.dai lymail. co.uk/n ews/art icle-28 94905/B ritish- girls-n oisy-dr unk-t-w ait-hom e-Roman ia-eye- opening -interv iew-Rom anian-a rrive-B ritain- year-ag o-revea ls-s-s- earning -60-000 .html
So this chap is going back from wence he came, why? Because he can't get on with our culture in this case "Our Girls".
/// For a start, he has formed some rather firm opinions about our conduct, which, he sternly points out, is not the way civilised people behave back in Bucharest. ///
/// 'People are so loud in Britain. I go on the Tube and you get these girls talking. Wow! The noise they make! ///
/// 'And girls, they drink so much here. On a Friday night, the girls are so drunk and I don't agree with that. You don't see that in Romania. I am scared of the English girls. I miss the culture of Romania, the traditions.' ///
/// He wistfully shows me photographs of his mother wearing heavy, knee-length traditional dress. It is certainly not the sort of outfit one spots on a Friday evening in the bars of Cardiff or Manchester. ///
But he does have a point,
http:// i.daily mail.co .uk/i/p ix/2015 /01/01/ 245B42C 3000005 78-2893 153-A_w oman_is _helped _from_t he_pave ment_on _Broad_ Street_ in_Birm ingha-m -103_14 2011696 0369.jp g
Then again it is not many elderly mothers who go to the bars of Cardiff or Manchester on a Friday evening.
So this chap is going back from wence he came, why? Because he can't get on with our culture in this case "Our Girls".
/// For a start, he has formed some rather firm opinions about our conduct, which, he sternly points out, is not the way civilised people behave back in Bucharest. ///
/// 'People are so loud in Britain. I go on the Tube and you get these girls talking. Wow! The noise they make! ///
/// 'And girls, they drink so much here. On a Friday night, the girls are so drunk and I don't agree with that. You don't see that in Romania. I am scared of the English girls. I miss the culture of Romania, the traditions.' ///
/// He wistfully shows me photographs of his mother wearing heavy, knee-length traditional dress. It is certainly not the sort of outfit one spots on a Friday evening in the bars of Cardiff or Manchester. ///
But he does have a point,
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Then again it is not many elderly mothers who go to the bars of Cardiff or Manchester on a Friday evening.
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No best answer has yet been selected by anotheoldgit. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.He's simply mixing with the wrong type of demographic.
Women in their thirties, and those who have responsible jobs or who are busy clambering up the career ladder, are less likely to be seen at 4am on a Sunday morning with their skirts hitched up, urinating into the gutter.
But one thing that I find particularly pernicious about these reports...the idea that women should behave like young ladies, lest they find themselves plastered all over the papers.
The same behaviour is exhibited by men in their teens and twenties and they don't receive anywhere near the same level of criticism.
Women in their thirties, and those who have responsible jobs or who are busy clambering up the career ladder, are less likely to be seen at 4am on a Sunday morning with their skirts hitched up, urinating into the gutter.
But one thing that I find particularly pernicious about these reports...the idea that women should behave like young ladies, lest they find themselves plastered all over the papers.
The same behaviour is exhibited by men in their teens and twenties and they don't receive anywhere near the same level of criticism.
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