Sunday 21 March 2010

Across Borders

I have to deal with groups that include many nationalities. The more nationalities, the more interpretations I run into as to what is fair. A group that is mainly North Americans and Japanese is relatively easy to deal with. The groups have different ideas as to what is right but with only two ideas to deal with, you have few unsolvable problems. Now take that same group and add northern Europeans. Diversity has entered in although they do come close on the level of argumentation that is expected. You can work it out if you take time. Time is a key ingredient -- this is not a fast paced operation.

It now can become really rough when you add Mediterranian people to the flux. They are more likely to let their tempers flare and to take that flaring as just an accepted, everyday procedure. What the person in charge or the parliamentarian says and does will vary upon the background of the person.

And Asians, Sub-Asians (Indians, Bengalese, Thais, etc. to the mix and it now more complicated. Simple rules are not simple rules as culture comes into the mix. Common sense is really based on culture and not logic (it actually never was based on logic!!) Now add Africans keeping North and South apart, Australian, Islanders -- oh my gosh, you have a lot of different cultures to deal with. Oh, there are also the interactions between the various cultures just to multiply the parliamentarian's problems.

I hope that this begins to get you thinking of all the different problems that exist in the "real" world.

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