Part One: Adversarial Cultures
Multiculturalism is the state of being made up of different elements. Multiculturalism focuses on the growth of a better understanding of how authority in the community can be unequal due to skin colour and sex. People tend to go to extreme ends as far as accepting different cultures. Different people perceive different cultures existing in society. However, there is a different setting that mainly opposes the current social, political or even cultural mainstream. The early multiculturalists braced their appeal greatly by referring to the communitarian agenda. Then, they started claiming recognition and support for the minority groups and cultures in the liberal agenda. Later the rights of the multicultural were defended as rewards for the state-building of the majority groups. According to Parekh and Taylor, a culture does not helps people to improve their dimensions of independence which then surpasses it and looks at it and the broader world undamaged by its origin. They both agree that there is no such displaced or superior beings and thus ther is need for some protection. It is essential to respect the various cultures since they have all improved. Furthermore, cultures need to thrive and have their values acknowledged. Taylor thinks the government must impose restrictions on the citizens of Quebec.although the limits might be invalid in other parts of Canada; he defends them by saying they should be shared determinations for culture survival in Quebec.