Compared with Europe, the U.S. attracts more immigrants who share the dominant faith. (Imagine if Mexicans built mosques.) An economy that, until recently, had lots of entry-level jobs has made it easier for immigrants to find work. American schools generally provide students second chances, while Europeans are more likely to leave stragglers on vocational tracks. The U.S. also had Martin Luther King Jr.—the civil-rights movement, cresting just before the current mass migration started, bequeathed a robust apparatus for promoting opportunity. And American culture sells, in all its tawdriness and splendor. In Europe, the children of immigrants sometimes cling to the Old Country more than their parents do: sons import brides. In the U.S., the bigger danger is assimilating too fast: children get fat eating french fries and watching TV.
Quote from: Pip on March 24, 2016, 09:50:10 AMOh and by the way, immigrants can get benefits galore here.http://www.welcometousa.gov/government_benefits/They get welfare like crazy in Europe.
Oh and by the way, immigrants can get benefits galore here.http://www.welcometousa.gov/government_benefits/
Nationalism maybe? One thing I've noticed about immigrants in the US is that can get behind the cause of America. You get people of all different colours and backgrounds representing and supporting one country and one flag, I don't sense that in European countries.One flag to rule them all.
It's at least partly to do with U.S. culture. Europeans are nice to immigrants in a condescending way; most of us, especially the political establishment and the media, see them fundamentally different and--basically--victims who need help. You can be an American no matter your motherland or race. America has never been a particularly homogenous nation.
Also, you should all reconsider the Rome comparisons I've made in the past.Pax Americana, baby.
We get immigrants, not "refugees".
Give a man a dollar, and he won't bomb you for a dayGive a man FREEDOM, and he won't bomb you for life
Quote from: Luciana on March 24, 2016, 01:15:30 PMQuote from: Yulius Kaisar on March 24, 2016, 12:26:31 PMAlso, you should all reconsider the Rome comparisons I've made in the past.Pax Americana, baby.America is the new Rome is my meme thank you very much.But yeah, there have been a handful of Pax *insert here*. Pax Britannia, Pax Mongolica, Pax Europaea. It's more of a general and loose term at this point. I'd have said Pax American was more a thing after the Cold War ended, and up until 9/11.I would say right now that we're struggling to maintain it, and the question of the day is whether our hegemony will be reaffirmed, or slip away.
Quote from: Yulius Kaisar on March 24, 2016, 12:26:31 PMAlso, you should all reconsider the Rome comparisons I've made in the past.Pax Americana, baby.America is the new Rome is my meme thank you very much.But yeah, there have been a handful of Pax *insert here*. Pax Britannia, Pax Mongolica, Pax Europaea. It's more of a general and loose term at this point. I'd have said Pax American was more a thing after the Cold War ended, and up until 9/11.
I don't think riots = inability to assimilate, and I'm not sure what you mean by previously invaded. You mean the Native Americans being killed?