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That's just sad and alarming for people that came from a different origin, but in reality, it's difficult to completely eliminate racism in all areas from any country. You can't single out on just Britain on a wider sense. As showed in that documentary, it was filmed in a poorly educated area like a council estate in Britain where so-called adults never actually grow up from beyond primary education and they can't teach their kids anything better except abusing the national system that's too lenient on people like them. Kids mostly looked up to their parents to begin with in all places and those without self-realisation will just copy their habits and beliefs whether it's right or wrong. So, there you go. A bad start and likely repeating itself in a cycle. They lacked the foundations to become better individuals that can tolerate differences and that just gets worse over time when they get too old. Attackers were teenagers that doesn't fear the authorities because they have a weak resolve in their violent behaviour and crimes.
It's a shame to those who are trying so hard to fight for a better society.
What's worse if you can reflect on this issue, from the other end, certain victims will hold resentment and that hatred will just continue from both sides. Matters like that can be quite complicated if there's no concrete resolve especially if the upper end of the society doesn't run or act properly. Imagine victims that cannot think better than those racists, they might think along the lines of 'wait until you get to places where we have more of our own kind' and such mindset clearly shows the situation won't change unless those within part of the authorities can make things right. Education and the Law. Aggressors should be severely punished in this issue to show that such crimes cannot be tolerated from a wider perspective if British communities were to move beyond barbaric way of life. Which is always a diffcult case when parts of the Law doesn't see justice anymore.
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Mua ha ha ha ha...
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