Re: The Haves and the Have Mores
I fear your point still escapes me.
If Chinese immigrants are far better educated, furthermore have much farther to go (as opposed to hopping a fence), there are definitely factors at work beyond skin color.
As for the INS - they definitely DO control what class of society immigrants come from.
The better your education and income category, the lower the legal barriers to entry.
From a numerical basis - how many Mexican H1B visa holders are there vs. Chinese or Indian?
And again, you failed to inform whether China is considered homogeneous or non-homogeneous. China has an extremely high gap between levels of society - and the majority of China is extremely homogeneous. There are no Mexican immigrants there either.
You may not have a fetish, but your unqualified statements certainly make it seem otherwise.
As for LA vs. Singapore - there are huge differences in how both cities are run.
If you advocate a more or less permanent underclass - that would be Singapore - Singapore's equivalent to the Mexicans being the Indians and Malays.
To go along with this legally mandated underclass, you also have a legally mandated overclass - the ethnic Chinese. While there is no law per se stating this, nonetheless the ridiculous over-representation of ethnic Chinese in the Singaporean government (even vs. legal Singapore citizens), plus the reality that Singapore was founded by an ethnic Chinese, plus the clear hereditary nature of its leadership, all would indicate something besides an open society.
Thus it might be more illuminating if the assertion that diversity equals inequality be more coherently backed by evidence as well as clear definition of terms.
Originally posted by hayekvindicated
If Chinese immigrants are far better educated, furthermore have much farther to go (as opposed to hopping a fence), there are definitely factors at work beyond skin color.
As for the INS - they definitely DO control what class of society immigrants come from.
The better your education and income category, the lower the legal barriers to entry.
From a numerical basis - how many Mexican H1B visa holders are there vs. Chinese or Indian?
And again, you failed to inform whether China is considered homogeneous or non-homogeneous. China has an extremely high gap between levels of society - and the majority of China is extremely homogeneous. There are no Mexican immigrants there either.
Originally posted by hayekvindicated
As for LA vs. Singapore - there are huge differences in how both cities are run.
If you advocate a more or less permanent underclass - that would be Singapore - Singapore's equivalent to the Mexicans being the Indians and Malays.
To go along with this legally mandated underclass, you also have a legally mandated overclass - the ethnic Chinese. While there is no law per se stating this, nonetheless the ridiculous over-representation of ethnic Chinese in the Singaporean government (even vs. legal Singapore citizens), plus the reality that Singapore was founded by an ethnic Chinese, plus the clear hereditary nature of its leadership, all would indicate something besides an open society.
Thus it might be more illuminating if the assertion that diversity equals inequality be more coherently backed by evidence as well as clear definition of terms.
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