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Comment by oceanplexian

1 day ago

What are you even talking about? My family is Argentine and 100% assimilated, speak English, love and embrace American culture and values. No one has ever treated us any differently in any context both in middle America and on the coasts.

It’s not a racial issue either, because my friends who are first generation Asian, Indian, etc, would all share the same sentiment. America is the most welcoming place on Earth for immigrants who are willing to put up even the smallest effort to assimilate into the culture.

So racism has been (more or less) eradicated in the US? Just trying to understand your comment before I respond more substantively because that’s a very striking claim and I want to be sure that’s actually what you mean.

  • Not OP, but I don’t think it’s accurate to say racism is “more or less eradicated” in the US. People’s experiences vary a lot by region, by urban vs rural areas, and even by neighbourhood and institution within the same city. Some places are clearly more inclusive than others, and disparities still show up in things like housing, policing, and employment within the city. So it’s hard to generalize.

    • Totally agree with you. My question is if they think it is largely not a problem in the US anymore, because their comment heavily suggests otherwise.

  • This will shock people, but America is not all that racist by world standards. Talk to someone from Asia for starters.

    I’m not aware of anywhere with no racism. Humans are tribal and broad stereotypes are intellectually lazy but easy.

    • > This will shock people, but America is not all that racist by world standards. Talk to someone from Asia for starters.

      I’m not shocked. I also don’t believe that “not as bad as…” is the same as “not a real problem.”

      Getting stabbed twice in the side missing a major organ/artery isn’t as bad as getting shot twice in the heart, but both are very serious and painful.

I'm not making a normative judgement here, it's just my observation as the child of immigrants myself. There are of course exceptions to the rule. I'm making an argument in the context of political economy, please don't take it personally.

  • No, you’re not making an argument in the context of political economy. You’re making an argument based on nothing: no data, no studies, just anecdote and personal opinion.

    I don’t take seriously your attempt to hide it behind a supposed “observed factual reality.” This is similar to how eugenicists made up their own fake science to try to justify racism.

    People are well within their rights to take xenophobic hate personally.