Quote:
Originally Posted by DrPhil
That depends on what the "same rate" is based on. Topic for another thread.
This never was and never will be a "melting pot." It is a "salad bowl"*** where you keep each vegetable in its own compartment until it's time to eat.  Meaning, this is an extremely racially segregated society where there remains identifiability for different racial and ethnic groups (a melting pot would mean that we melt into one more homogenous group). The average American only mixes with someone of another race and ethnicity in the workforce or another non-home/non-neighborhood/non-family/non-friend environment.
Another topic for another thread. But, how people feel about race and ethnic relations is correlated with how they feel about education, employment, crime, and immigration.
***There's nothing inherently wrong with a "salad bowl." I appreciate the social differences across racial and ethnic groups and never want us to "melt together." A "salad bowl" doesn't have to mean racial and ethnic segregation, but it's no surprise that's what it means for America.
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I don't disagree with you...that's why I put it in quotes. My point is that people argue that hispanics immigrants don't speak English, but neither did Italian, German, Russian, etc immigrants when they first got here. Their children learned English when they went to school. You could always go back to the neighborhoods and find tons of older immigrants who could only speak the "old" language. They've always called America the "melting pot" but I agree with your "salad bowl" label. Language evens out over generations, but for many groups, they never lose their special traditions nor should they.