Are you speaking from personal experience?I would like to see see white Americans not reling on Chinese or Indians. We will see how North America runs... Lol... They are dependent on them naturally.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature currently requires accessing the site using the built-in Safari browser.
Are you speaking from personal experience?I would like to see see white Americans not reling on Chinese or Indians. We will see how North America runs... Lol... They are dependent on them naturally.
Joke's on you op. if you didn't understand, these are ads to prevent the subtle racism that exist in US. The west is a million times more tolerant than us south Asians. Don't be a hypocrite.
You cannot say anything bad about blacks or Jews in the US, but Asians are open hunting. To say that "Mexicans are taking our jobs" for a white is offensive, but to say that Chinese and Indians are taking our jobs, for a white, is completely welcomed and is the state approved ideology as per President Obama himself.
I think that has less to do with racism and more to do with some people preferring goods made in their own country. Or apprehension about quality of product.Racism towards any group is absolutely wrong, however, I have noticed it is open season on Asians, especially Chinese people and not so much Indians.
I work in retail sales and many customers specifically tell me they don't want something made in China. Anti-Chinese sentiment is quite prevalent even in liberal parts of the US.
I think that has less to do with racism and more to do with some people preferring goods made in their own country. Or apprehension about quality of product.
When I talk about racism, I am talking about discrimination and abuse against other humans based on their race.
Why is China targetted for this? US goods, even non-military ones, kill more people per year than Chinese goods.
20% of railroad accidents in the world of the last decade in the US, 4% in China.
One listeria outbreak in cantelope melon killed more people than all the food scandals of the past decade in China combined.
A defective dance floor in Indiana killed 6 people.
Why are people not apprehensive about the quality of US goods?
Are you speaking from personal experience?
I think that has less to do with racism and more to do with some people preferring goods made in their own country. Or apprehension about quality of product.
When I talk about racism, I am talking about discrimination and abuse against other humans based on their race.
I am not fair and unbiased, just pointing out that discriminating against Chinese goods does not amount to racism.It may be too much to ask, but for once can you be fair, just and unbiased?
From my experience, whenever I have inquired as to why they don't want Chinese made products, it has never been due to quality issues. In fact, I own several Chinese made products which work just fine.
Moreover, I would argue that the level of anti-Chinese sentiment is on par with anti-Muslim sentiment in the US
reporting from southern california; rare (if any) racism issues seen, none experienced.
----At least racism existed not too long ago.Americans Claim to Like Diverse Communities but Do They Really? - Pew Research Center
...these survey findings raise an obvious question: Is the public's generally strong preference for diverse communities to be taken at face value, or might it be based in part on respondents choosing the answers they deem to be socially desirable?
While it's impossible to know for sure, it is worth noting that residential segregation has long been a fact of life in America, and that, at least by certain measures, some varieties of segregation appear to be on the rise.
The most pervasive forms of residential segregation, by far, are racial and ethnic. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, while blacks comprise just 12% of the U.S. population, about half of all blacks in 2000 lived in majority-black neighborhoods.2 Hispanics also tend to be clustered into segregated enclaves, though not quite to the same degree as are blacks. Latinos made up 12.5% of the U.S. population and 43% lived in majority-Latino neighborhoods as of 2000. (The table below ranks the nation's most populous multi-racial and multi-ethnic metropolitan areas by their levels of black/non-black and Hispanic/non-Hispanic residential segregation.)
Trends in residential segregation have been mixed over the past several decades. Black/white segregation has declined significantly since 1960, when fully 70% of blacks lived in majority black neighborhoods.3 But immigrant segregation as well as Hispanic and Asian segregation has increased in recent decades,4 as has overall economic segregation. From 1970 to 2000, there was a 32% increase in the residential separation of high-income Americans (those in the top income quintile) from all other Americans, according to one analysis of Census data.5 Even with this increasing spatial isolation of the well-to-do, however, blacks are still nearly three times as segregated from whites as are affluent Americans from those who are less well off.
Some Asians' college strategy: Don't check 'Asian' - Yahoo! News
For years, many Asian-Americans have been convinced that it's harder for them to gain admission to the nation's top colleges.
Studies show that Asian-Americans meet these colleges' admissions standards far out of proportion to their 6 percent representation in the U.S. population, and that they often need test scores hundreds of points higher than applicants from other ethnic groups to have an equal chance of admission. Critics say these numbers, along with the fact that some top colleges with race-blind admissions have double the Asian percentage of Ivy League schools, prove the existence of discrimination.
The way it works, the critics believe, is that Asian-Americans are evaluated not as individuals, but against the thousands of other ultra-achieving Asians who are stereotyped as boring academic robots.
Now, an unknown number of students are responding to this concern by declining to identify themselves as Asian on their applications.