Channel72 wrote:A much higher percentage of blacks and Latinos end up incarcerated than whites or Asians.
Firstly, incarceration rates are not wholly due to discrimination; discrimination may be the cause of a portion of arrests, but there are also many other factors, ones that generally play out more often, such as common disobedience of the law. Secondly, you keep returning to this point on how there are higher incarceration rates of Latinos and Blacks in comparison to Asians. Not only is this to be expected, as the Asian population in the U.S. is significantly below either of those two populations you just mentioned, but higher incarceration rates do not automatically equate into higher levels of discrimination being faced by an ethnic group (incarceration itself is a very specific subset of effects that can stem from discrimination). High incarceration rates have shown to be heavily tied to the economic status of an area with more arrests being made in poorer areas. The point being is that incarceration rates are tied to many factors, the most salient of which has shown to be the overall poverty level in a given area, and so passing off incarceration rates as a point to highlight the incommensurate level of discrimination between Latinos/blacks and Asians, especially given that the very populations of each of those demographics is tremendously different, makes little sense at all.
Channel72 wrote:Blacks and Latinos measurably make way less money than whites and Asians.
Channel72, are you aware of the model minority stereotype surrounding Asians, a textbook concept in any american minority political science seminar, because you seem to be really doubling down on that stereotype right here. The model minority stereotype refers to the incidence of Asian success, particularly financially, being used to brush off any notions of discrimination/oppression against Asians occurring. As you are doing now, it points the finger towards the ends of financial success, and then retroactively works backwards, entirely incorrectly I might add, to assume that the starting point was optimal as well. Asians, like all of those other ethnic groups you mentioned, have historically faced discrimination as well, though less documented and represented, such as the Chinese Exclusion Act, Korematsu vs U.S. etc, and any success achieved has been
in spite of discrimination, not due to the absence of it... Now we can root these results in many reasons, such as a greater cultural stress on education and hard work in many Asian households, but to insinuate that Asians currently make more money than black and latinos because of reduced discrimination is entirely untrue. Currently, many Asians also face social discrimination, alongside the natural language and cultural barriers and the general unfamiliarity with many aspects of the protocol that makes up our bureaucracy.
And you really need to stop lumping in whites with Asians, Channel72, as I've repeatedly seen you link the two with a conjunction in opposition to the other minority groups you mention. The two are widely different, and especially for the sake of this discussion, should be separated. As many others in this thread have noted, the Asian demographic is truly an umbrella for many ethnic groups, all of which are presented with their own difficulties, and the label "Asian" is already quite eclectic to discuss. Loosely tying whites and Asians together out of data which shows that the two often do financially better is nonsensical, just as it is nonsensical to find some statistics which shows resemblance between any two ethnic groups, as anyone can be linked together this way. But perhaps you tie the two together out of ignorance of any discernible difference between the two monetarily speaking, which I suppose is why you brought up the topic of money. Let me dissuade you of that notion with the following passage conducted by the US federal Glass Ceiling Commission.
"In 1995, the US federal Glass Ceiling Commission found that Asian Americans are paid less than whites in most occupational categories—even after controlling for educational level, immigrant status and other variables. In strict social-science terms, the data is robust: Asian Americans and whites are not treated equally, and the difference can be attributed either to race or to nothing at all."
Interestingly, these are the same hardships I'd expect you to formulate on how blacks/Latinos have it far worse as they are repeatedly given less than their due, especially when having the same qualifications as their white counterparts. But this applies to Asians as well, and how even though Asians may be making more money when looking at the overall figures, they also face the same discriminatory practices that you have implied/expressed with blacks/Latinos.
Channel72 wrote:Jews are also very loud when it comes to combating discrimination, especially given the fact that the Holocaust is still a living memory for some. Well... I'm Jewish - I don't fucking feel discriminated at all. In fact, being Jewish has only been an advantage, both economically and socially.
Good for you, but I have no idea where you are going with your personal experience, other than to bring up the usage of an anecdotal fallacy. If you have not felt discrimination--if you consider yourself to not be plagued with this problem--then, kudos to you, but you are only speaking on your behalf. In fact, it's ironic you bring up some comments on the Holocaust for that was precisely where I was about to go next: if, to your admittance, the Holocaust is still "a living memory for some," then there are many in the Jewish community who would appear to not share your perspective on being both "economically and socially advantaged" and still live everyday feeling the sting of discrimination. Regardless, this digression into discussing the plight of Jews is exactly that: a digression, and a giant red herring, that moves the discussion away from what it was based on (Asians) which is also the subject which you have wanted me to respond to.
Channel72 wrote:But other than a couple of Seinfield gags and general racist humor (which applies to every ethnicity), I just don't see Asians facing anywhere near the kind of discrimination that blacks and Latinos do. For a visible minority, Asians seem to have it pretty good, socio-economically speaking. Discrimination against Asians is more like discrimination against Jews - you know, the funny kind of discrimination (A Jew walks into a bar, and then purchases the bar... ha! etc.), not the serious kind of discrimination where you actually fucking get passed over for a job because your last name is Lopez, or worse, profiled and harassed by the police. When is the last time a Wong, Li or Cohen got passed over for a high-paying job, let alone got arrested for being out too late? The fact that Harvard is apparently discriminating against Asians in their selection process is almost like the exception that proves the rule at this point. (Um... are you seriously complaining that the TOP fucking Ivy League school in the world won't let you in, when many blacks/Latinos are lucky if they can afford to go to their local community college in the Bronx ?? )
Here, you just fall apart completely, Channel72. Drawing conclusions from homogenized sitcoms and farces? Asking throwaway questions on if Asians have ever been declined a job due to an ethnically sounding last name? Wondering if Asians are angered by being declined from top colleges after grueling and tiresome work to achieve such qualifications, only to be turned down because of their ethnic group? Tonally, you just shifted from posting some valid inquiries into devolving into spouting a bunch of stereotypes that you've witnessed on TV, and yet again returning to that model minority stereotype surrounding Asians. After reading such a lazy, facetious paragraph, I'm not going to even bother truly articulating my answers to your questions here:
"When is the last time a Wong, Li or Cohen got passed over for a high-paying job, let alone got arrested for being out too late?"
Oh boy, you actually think this doesn't occur? Just because one doesn't hear about it on the news, or have featured articles written on it by beat writers, absolutely doesn't mean it hasn't occurred in a world having a 7 billion population that has operated in the postindustrial age for several decades by now...
"Are you seriously complaining that the TOP fucking Ivy League school in the world won't let you in, when many blacks/Latinos are lucky if they can afford to go to their local
community college in the Bronx ?"
Let me clarify: it's actually not just Harvard that has been called into question, but many of the other elite colleges as well. And again, what type of question is that? Are you suggesting that one who is being actively discriminated against in the college application process has no basis in complaining. That one should just take the iniquity lying down. And this latter point, on blacks/Latinos being strapped to go to schools because of money: this is a problem that many Asians face as well, especially those who come here and are in the midst of pursuing the American dream, not those who have already accomplished it. Furthermore, Asians incorporate a wide variety of ethnic groups, and there are several specific demographic constituents of the Asian population that are living on the poverty line and face the costs of community college with increased difficulty as well. I've even attended a community college myself out of dire pecuniary straits. Poverty is universal in that it can be found in every ethnic group, so that point is moot.
Channel72 wrote:But again, I'm not Asian. If you are, perhaps you can help dispel my ignorance here and enlighten me in regard to your plight.
One doesn't have to be Asian, Channel72, to speak on the Asian plight but the discriminatory aspect of the Asian plight often plays out the same way as it does with all of the other ethnic groups you mentioned. The increasing numbers of Asians who have overcome the system aren't truly different than those in other ethnic groups who have done the same: many of the root challenges are the same, even though the results may be different. Regardless, I don't want this discussion to be submerged into a wider discussion of race, and I would like to ask for your specific thoughts on the passage I posted in the OP concerning colleges and application review.