Message from @Horns
Discord ID: 429702171513061388
I think you kind of contradicted yourself.
How can one have a decent place to live AND have a whole bunch of foreigners running around?
That doesn't sound like what Hungary wants at all, either.
Foreigners aren't a problem of Hungary, gypsies are on the other hand
Though, if they are Westerners that don't trash the place like some English do on Holiday (assholes) it probably isn't that bad.
Aren't Gypsies foreigners?
Genetically at least?
They are walking bacterial infections.
Well since they come from no land, they are technically an invasive species
Like blue algae, only less pretty.
Some kind of brown algal bloom.
Nature's purpose with gypsies is to make them a barometer of tolerance. The more gypsies the more tolerant a society has been through history
Otherwise no militant, spartan society would tolerate them in their vicinity while they *struggle*
They are the poor Jews.
Well that isn't much of a comparison; Jews, as much as they are banal, are more subtle, way more intelligent, and way less vulgar, even though their vulgarity assumes different shape
It is incomparable really, gypsies are simply nature's supreme misfits
gypsies aren't really "nomads" as these dimwit historians like to claim, since nomads live *a nomadic life*
gypsies don't. they simply, being unfit for life in any society, seek out the most vulnerable ones to squat there
it's not like gypsies are herders and riders like Mongols
Fair enough.
The Mormon church has made history and injected diversity into a top leadership panel by selecting the first-ever Latin American apostle and the first-ever apostle of Asian ancestry.
They join a panel called the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles that before Saturday was made up entirely of white men from the U.S. with the exception of one German, Dieter Uchtdorf.
Actual language from cbs.
"injected diversity"
The selections of Soares and Gong are likely to trigger applause from a contingent of Mormons who were anxious to see the faith's global footprint represented in leadership. Soares and Gong were serving in a lower-level leadership panel for the church.
More than half of the religion's 16 million members live outside the United States.
The 59-year-old Ulisses Soares of Brazil was an accountant and auditor for multinational corporations in Brazil before joining church leadership, according to a church biography.
The 64-year-old Gerrit W. Gong, a Chinese-American, worked for the U.S. State Department, the Washington, DC-based Center for Strategic and International Studies and Mormon-owned Brigham Young University before being selected for the lower-tier church leadership panel, his church biography shows.
They're good guys
Your stupidity reaches new heights daily.
An accountant and a state operative.
Hired because they are not white.
devolved: "Sign me up! :)"
Soares was educated in Brazil, receiving a bachelor's degree in accounting and economics from Pontificia Catholic University and an MBA from the National Institute of Postgraduate Study.[1] Prior to his call as a general authority, Soares was employed as the director of temporal affairs for the LDS Church's Brazil South Area. He had worked for Pirelli Tire Company but was convinced by Donald L. Clark to take a job as a senior auditor for the church. After Clark was called as a mission president, Soares replaced him as director of temporal affairs.
Soares married Rosana Fernandes Morgado in the Sao Paulo Brazil Temple in 1982. They initially met when they were both missionaries in the Brazil Rio de Janeiro Mission. They have three children.
He served previously as a counselor in the Africa Southeast Area,
Sounds like this guy's career is "how to get more nonwhites into the faith"
Let's look at Gong next.
Gong was a professor at various times at Georgetown University and Johns Hopkins University. He later served as a special assistant in the United States State Department, as well as in the United States Embassy in China. He also served as China Chair and Asia Director of the Center for Strategic and International Studies.
Even before joining the administration at BYU, Gong was involved in educational policy issues. He served as a member of the United States Department of Education's National Advisory Committee on Institutional Quality and Integrity and participated in multiple national education summits
Gong is married to Susan Lindsay, a daughter of Richard P. Lindsay. They first met when Gong was a BYU student who would give presentations on Taiwan's culture to missionaries about to depart for Taiwan from the Missionary Training Center, among whom was Lindsay. They began dating a few years later, in the summer when Gong had returned from Oxford to spend a few weeks with his parents, during a time his father was a BYU professor. They continued their courtship after Gong returned to Oxford while Lindsay continued her studies at BYU, which has led to Gong humorously asserting that there is no question he got a degree in international relations
Tee Hee.
So a brazilian accountant who thinks it's good to have more Africans in the faith, and an asian racemixer federal government agent.