Day 2 - Saturday -
Part 1 - Reflections : York Station
The hotel was comfortable and clean but my sleep was interrupted at 2am and again at 3am by the sounds of drunks shouting. After breakfast, I spent some time sitting in front of the station. This enabled me to get my bearings on the significant social change that is the Far Easting of York. It transpired that the numbers of Chinese people I had seen on my arrival were not coincidental. In the streets of York on Friday afternoon there was an extraordinary number. Of the few people I saw later on the main campus, perhaps one in three were Chinese. The same ratio applied to the people I saw back at the station on this the Saturday morning. And Rougier Street/George Hudson Street is effectively now York's Chinatown.
This is a difficult topic to address without causing offence.
I have to admit to having some problems with it. Mostly, those are about the manner in which it has happened, not least because all one is permitted to do is make an educated guess. My guess is that Chinese money has gone directly into the expanding of the university infrastructure and that a part of the arrangement is to admit that country's youth in very large numbers. While I recognise that I left university in 1985 and that this is a long, long time ago now, the number of Chinese people then would have represented about 0.1% of the population. The change does not feel organic to me as it has been with people from other ethnic groups in most other places but rather heavily business driven. One can, of course, tell simply by appearances that most of these people are decent types and they are fortunately a world away from the chavs who arrive to boost the local economy by destroying the nights.
They sit comfortably alongside the average British student who increasingly looks and sounds like a junior doctor, lawyer, financier or computer scientist but the lower middle class has probably dropped out into lesser places. As for verbal style, which as with almost everywhere is often disappointingly crass, few students of any background I heard had the words to go with their very clipped accents and old-before-their-time professional demeanours. Consequently, there is a case for saying that most of them have English as their second language. I write this with sadness and not from a sense of superiority. I know my English isn't especially good but in most others today English is poor. I also question how modern money making is allowed to drive social change rapidly and insidiously. Populations are not made to stay the same but natural growth is as obvious as its capitalist opposite, a forced assimilation.
Part 1 - Reflections : York Station
The hotel was comfortable and clean but my sleep was interrupted at 2am and again at 3am by the sounds of drunks shouting. After breakfast, I spent some time sitting in front of the station. This enabled me to get my bearings on the significant social change that is the Far Easting of York. It transpired that the numbers of Chinese people I had seen on my arrival were not coincidental. In the streets of York on Friday afternoon there was an extraordinary number. Of the few people I saw later on the main campus, perhaps one in three were Chinese. The same ratio applied to the people I saw back at the station on this the Saturday morning. And Rougier Street/George Hudson Street is effectively now York's Chinatown.
This is a difficult topic to address without causing offence.
I have to admit to having some problems with it. Mostly, those are about the manner in which it has happened, not least because all one is permitted to do is make an educated guess. My guess is that Chinese money has gone directly into the expanding of the university infrastructure and that a part of the arrangement is to admit that country's youth in very large numbers. While I recognise that I left university in 1985 and that this is a long, long time ago now, the number of Chinese people then would have represented about 0.1% of the population. The change does not feel organic to me as it has been with people from other ethnic groups in most other places but rather heavily business driven. One can, of course, tell simply by appearances that most of these people are decent types and they are fortunately a world away from the chavs who arrive to boost the local economy by destroying the nights.
They sit comfortably alongside the average British student who increasingly looks and sounds like a junior doctor, lawyer, financier or computer scientist but the lower middle class has probably dropped out into lesser places. As for verbal style, which as with almost everywhere is often disappointingly crass, few students of any background I heard had the words to go with their very clipped accents and old-before-their-time professional demeanours. Consequently, there is a case for saying that most of them have English as their second language. I write this with sadness and not from a sense of superiority. I know my English isn't especially good but in most others today English is poor. I also question how modern money making is allowed to drive social change rapidly and insidiously. Populations are not made to stay the same but natural growth is as obvious as its capitalist opposite, a forced assimilation.
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