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Notes -
That particular prediction was from a constituent, whom Powell was quoting in his speech. Powell's predictions tended to be more that the UK would see US-style racial animus (riots, terrorist groups, lynch mobs etc.) if immigration continued to go unchecked.
Interestingly, Powell's position was not so much that different races couldn't live together (he wasn't even a realist about race) but that, in practice, the rapid influx of ethnic groups would create social conflicts. My impression is that this was a consequence of Powell's Romanticist views about politics: a successful, harmonious country is one where people feel bonded together by history, common culture, and a sense of united destiny. At least in the UK, many of Powell's ideas have become the mainstream position, accepted by much of the left and all of the centre-right. Their only quibbles could be over the numbers, i.e. whether Powell was right about the particular proportions that could be assimilated in Britain without leading to US-style social conflicts. Unfortunately, quibbling about the numbers was enough for e.g. the post-1997 period to feature immigration on an unprecedented scale, though this was initially because of a deliberate effort by Labour to change UK demographics to destroy the cultural basis of Conservativism (cultural unity, historical connectedness etc.).
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