USA, the Melting Pot

The United States of America is a nation of immigrants, a melting pot, a land of immense diversity. People of all colors, religions, ethnic backgrounds live together peacefully, to a large extent.

In professional contexts, the diversity is mind-blowing - Project teams can often comprise of people from every continent in the world.

I have been in this country for about three years now and these are some of my observations ... Although there is excellent interaction between all kinds of people in professional contexts, most people tend to make personal friends with their own kind. White people have predominantly white friends and black people tend to stick together.

And so do the Indians, Chinese, Japanese, Hispanics and so on.

In spite of all of the attempts on the part of the university to increase diversity of campuses, the resulting diversity is only a statistic, not reality. There are white fraternities and black ones. White parties and black ones.

Diversity and acceptance of other cultures has to come from the heart and cannot be forced by affirmative hiring/admissions.

What I am really waiting for is the day they make a movie like "You've got Mail" with a black couple in the lead. Black leads, not in cop movies, action movies, horror flicks or some other special interest genre. A black couple in a regular, plain vanilla movie ... When can we see a "Sleepless in Seattle" with Halle Berry and Taye Diggs ? or Salma Hayek and Banderas ? - Where minorities come on stage as a regular couple, with regular lives ....

Comments

Anonymous said…
Movies and tv are excellent examples of the systemic racism that still exists in America. We say that we're no longer racist just because we can all use the same water fountain, but in reality we're still separated. Where are the Black, Asian, and Middle Eastern protagonists in the movies? Americans don't seem to notice this absence and it pains me that we can be so blind.
Anonymous said…
It deeply depresses me also but I do not whine as the imigrants of today's U.S.A. are basically it's foundations, it's building blocks. It would be about time if the U.S. started to realize this as I feel if we immigrants are always shunned to the other side and ignored as we're being now I'll start to get the feeling that we should leave right about then. That is what I, Abhishek Sutrave 10 yrs. old and my parents being immigrants, say about the statement of U.S. being a melting pot about to collapse right over itself.
Anonymous said…
I was born and raised in America, and while I agree with what you are saying, that there are holes in the multiculturalism of society such as in movies and TV, I also feel like white Americans are racially targeted in some ways for not being inclusive. In the anonymous comment above the person used the term "we immigrants..", in a way which leaves me scratching my head. How can American-born citizens be expected to easily include immigrant-citizens if they have trouble including themselves? And why are we blamed for "shunning" them? Sometimes I feel like racism forms in the hands of the race itself. Of course you're going to feel targeted when you expect to be, even if you truly aren't being targeted at all! Its a self-fulfilling prophecy.
Anonymous said…
"Grand Canyon" 1991 comes close, perhaps?
Anonymous said…
Anonoymous11K
I am not an American, and also, I have never visited the American continent. However, I am a UN Comittee member representing the USA this year. Now we are dealing with excluded and socially disadvantaged groups. Because I am an IB student, I am quite familiar with the US; my teacher is an American. I just want to remind you that yes, there may be some racism still in the US, however, have you ever thought that non-white races view the whites as the oppressors, the racists, the bad ones? Just as you can't help being born a black, you can't help being born a white - and not all whites are racists! Your form of critique is a form of racism as well! And there ARE many good movies with non-white protagonists, for your information. The Banderas-Hayek option you have mentioned is present in the Desperado series! Or what about Save the Last Dance (white and black protagonists)? Maybe the majority of white protagonists in movies that you mentioned is based on the fact that there is a majority of white people in the USA - so in percentages, the movies are balanced! There are definitely many negatives about the US society (for example, a complete ignorance in the world's geography and history), but I don't think that you should be concerned with idiotic ideas that you mentioned - and FYI, you have a black president, so talk about racial exclusion!

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