
Well, thank goodness for that, anyway. But don't blame your lack of clarity on me.
I don't ignore the fact that there was cultural mixing in the UK for centuries. But never so pronounced as now, which is what you are complaining about. But if I seem to ignore it, I'm trying to keep the conversation here about US politics. I'm telling you, we come from different cultures, and yours was much more of a mono-culture. Ours has always been mixed, so what people are trying to "return" to is a lie, a myth and basically racist.
If you were actually clear, I wouldn't have to guess. Don't give me shit for guessing wrong.
I heard your bit about Sharia Law. As above, I'm saying let's discuss UK politics on the appropriate thread. But, for the record, I looked it up. There is NO Sharia Law in the UK. There are Sharia Councils, but they are not binding by law, and cannot supersede UK laws. Apparently, there are Sharia Councils in the US, but people don't seem to be freaking out about them as much here. Attempts to dissolve them have been denied under Freedom of Religion.
There is a way to read what these councils do as benign. They council believers on the way to follow their faith. One issue is about divorce. I'm not going to pretend to know much about the Islamic faith or what it dictates. But think of it this way: the Catholic Church doesn't allow divorce, as an example, although divorce is legal in the US. Divorced Catholics are divorced in the eyes of the law, but not in the eyes of the Church. Therefore, a Catholic can divorce, but no longer participate in the sacraments of the Church. Likewise, Catholics go through pre-Cana counseling before marriage. I don't see anyone objecting to any of this.
Similarly, same-sex marriage is legal in the US. (For now.) That doesn't mean that your Church, Temple or Mosque has to agree to marry you. If you break the bonds with your faith, that's your choice. You may lose privileges or status with your faith, but the contracts with the State, and rights and privileges thereof are binding. This is why separation of Church and State, as enshrined here in the US, (for now) is important. We are not governed by one religion. We are not of one religion. And atheists have rights, too. There is a freedom to have no religion.
As far as you warning us: Oh, wait until it happens to you. I don't so much buy it. This is why I say we've been multicultural, all along. It matters that we're more used to it, and have been absorbing it forever. Ours is a much more fluid society. If we can withstand the onslaught of demagoguery from Trump.