Bl@ack international students I met in graduate schools were generally much better, especially more hardworking than our homegrown ones.
They don’t seem to feel entitled to anything, and are free of the victim mentality.
They were also generally much better than the homegrown wh!tes.
Bl@ack international students I met in graduate schools were generally much better, especially more hardworking than our homegrown ones.
They don�t seem to feel entitled to anything, and are free of the victim mentality.
Black Americans are far more attractive athletic creative and resilient to their African counterparts. We are also many shades of color within the skin complexion spectrum and have varied hair textures. Immigrants after one generation begin to have health outcomes that are equivalent to that of Americans so this thread really does not matter.
In my experience, immigrants from East Africa especially, (eg Ethiopia, Somalia, et al), really do not like American bl@cks.
These are two black peoples OP met twice and represents as some of their best friends because they think this shields against accusations of racism.
I am an international graduate student and I am a s h amed that you can say this in a country with such structural inequality. I never started life as a Black does in the United States. My schools were funded by tax money. I did not spend much on a top public university. Our state even gave us students a scholarship. After years spent in the USA, I came to the conclusion that internationals are used by you just to prolong the systemic inequality. My Black first gen students tell me that their school in the middle of a rich state does not even have a copy paper. Given such inequalities that are not tackled, don't say this. Sh a m e on you.
Bl@ack international students I met in graduate schools were generally much better, especially more hardworking than our homegrown ones.
They don�t seem to feel entitled to anything, and are free of the victim mentality.
Black Americans are far more attractive athletic creative and resilient to their African counterparts. We are also many shades of color within the skin complexion spectrum and have varied hair textures. Immigrants after one generation begin to have health outcomes that are equivalent to that of Americans so this thread really does not matter.
You are smo.king c.rack. Most Afri.cans are way more attra.ctive than US bl.acks. Look at your average Nig.erian, Ethiopian, Somalian, Eritrean, etc.
I am an international graduate student and I am a s h amed that you can say this in a country with such structural inequality. I never started life as a Black does in the United States. My schools were funded by tax money. I did not spend much on a top public university. Our state even gave us students a scholarship. After years spent in the USA, I came to the conclusion that internationals are used by you just to prolong the systemic inequality. My Black first gen students tell me that their school in the middle of a rich state does not even have a copy paper. Given such inequalities that are not tackled, don't say this. Sh a m e on you.
Bl@ack international students I met in graduate schools were generally much better, especially more hardworking than our homegrown ones.
They don?t seem to feel entitled to anything, and are free of the victim mentality.
Oh go cry me a river azzhat
This really comes down to the fact that African Americans are racial hybrids. The genetic distance between human "races" is much larger than that between many animals considered separate species such as a grey wolf and coyote, with most genetic difference concentrated on appearance along with psychological, emotional, and cognitive qualities. When human races hybridize, this creates potential for outbreeding depression related to psychological instability. This has no predictive power at individual level but can predict outcomes at group level in some societal contexts. Ever wonder why African Americans have such vastly higher violent crime rates than almost all of Africa?
so many r a c ! s t wh!tes on this site
I am an international graduate student and I am a s h amed that you can say this in a country with such structural inequality. I never started life as a Black does in the United States. My schools were funded by tax money. I did not spend much on a top public university. Our state even gave us students a scholarship. After years spent in the USA, I came to the conclusion that internationals are used by you just to prolong the systemic inequality. My Black first gen students tell me that their school in the middle of a rich state does not even have a copy paper. Given such inequalities that are not tackled, don't say this. Sh a m e on you.
Bl@ack international students I met in graduate schools were generally much better, especially more hardworking than our homegrown ones.
They don?t seem to feel entitled to anything, and are free of the victim mentality.
Oh go cry me a river azzhat
African Americans compared to contemporary African migrants.
I love how these people present to us topics that we've studied to death like it's a grand revelation. If I could convince myself that ALL of sociologists' critics are this clueless about what we do, I'd sleep a lot more easily.
I have friends that teach in foreign universities.
They hate white American exchange students. They find them under-educated, uncouth, jingoistic, and entitled.
I worked at an HBCU for a time. The African and Caribbean professors (who were usually pretty cool people) visibly loathed the students.
I have friends that teach in foreign universities.
They hate white American exchange students. They find them under-educated, uncouth, jingoistic, and entitled.
I worked at an HBCU for a time. The African and Caribbean professors (who were usually pretty cool people) visibly loathed the students.
Cool story bro