Ignoring the whole character attacks in this thread, the game hans played as ost against usf mentioned in the OP had everything to do with hans making bad decisions in the early mid. He got over aggressive with the 222 to finish the M20, didn't retreat his MG in the face of approaching rifle squads, and just generally tilted after all that.
Would have benefited from working in some grens or pgrens in his build. Yes USF is OP in 1v1 currently but that game was a poor example of it. |
Dis gon b Gud.
Ill give my two cents from a Canadian perspective.
We have countries that are essentially homogeneous in their culture and have faced truly existential crises less than a century ago (World Wars), now being forced to jeopardize what they bled for. Take Poland for example, its a nation with a history of being on the brink of elimination, as recent as WW2. Something like 95% ethnic homogeneity.
Just because where I live has embraced multiculturalism, and it has worked to a large extent when looking at people like Harjit Sajjan (an Indian immigrant who is now the Canadian Minister of National Defense after serving a decade and a half in the police, and 25 years in the Army), doesn't mean that these European nations should follow suit. Canada as a nation is so young that even the Canadian "identity" has never really been as strong, or even valid, as that of most European nations, which is why the cultural mosaic has worked here for the most part. "White Man's Canada" lasted for a few centuries tops (and consisted of French and English immigrants, not just one ethnicity), and Western Canada is what it is today on the backs of Asian immigrants (see, CPR.)
I'm no expert on Polish history, but I'd wager that Poland as a cultural and ethnic identity is a MUCH stronger sentiment than what Canadian or American national identities are. As such, forcing countries like Poland into accommodating peoples that don't fit their culture isn't exactly a good thing. European countries spent hundreds of years fighting crusades and wars against Muslim countries, its not a huge surprise that many of them aren't receptive to Muslim migrants.
Call it what you want, but I definitely won't think less of European nations that take the needs of their people over those of migrants. Forcible integration doesn't work, and multi-culturalism has its own issues (see, France, Southall in the UK, etc.). IMO, just because Canada has been successful with it, and to an extent the US, doesn't mean that the same model works in largely ethnically homogeneous nations.
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