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Schools and Education General Discussion
Reply to "What can be done to level the playing field?"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][b]Whenever schools are mentioned and equity is mentioned, it always seems to be for African Americans. No other ethnic group struggles the way this group does. [/b] I have seen African immigrants excel. I have seen uneducated refugees from all over the world work hard and succeed. The US has so many opportunities. You have to take advantage of the opportunities.[/quote] I wonder why that could possibly be....what have African Americans experienced that no other ethnic group has... let's think....[/quote] Oh please. Slavery ended 150+ years ago. Some of these new immigrants come from war zones, had family members murdered and lived in abject poverty that doesn’t exist in the US. [/quote] So you are willing to ignore the issues that arose from sharecropping, Jim Crow laws, red lining, and a host of whole other systemic issues that created an inequalities between African Americans and White Americans in this country? Granted, the issues with generational poverty affect more then African Americans in the US. White people in Appalachia are an example of a community that is massively impacted by generational poverty. There are entire sectors of the Hispanic population that are struggling with generational poverty. Most immigrants that arrive in the US through the Visa lotteries and legal methods are people who have a specific skill set or background that makes it easier to succeed in the US then low wage workers or people who risk coming tot he US illegally. And there are plenty of illegal immigrants coming from Asian, European, and African Countries. People granted a Visa or asylum from Afghanistan or another war torn country are able to provide specific skills or have provided some type of service to the US that puts them in danger if they stay in their country. There is an entire vetting process. It is very different for poor people fleeing violence and crime in their local village in Central America that are willing to risk the trip to the US. The skills and backgrounds are very different. [/quote]
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