A very interesting read

When the author figures out the difference between correlation and causality he should resume writing. Until then this is a bunch of bovine scatology.

Sirhr
I could say EXACTLY the same about many of the comments on the 13%. Making condemning statements about an entire race, with out looking int that causation and correlation is the height of ig'nint.

Looks like simple statistics to me, care to expand your thought.
 
  • Like
Reactions: sirhrmechanic
No need to expand… simple statistics… many factors not considered.

Are Asians moving in because neighborhood is going to shit? Are whites moving out for same reason. Are Asians moving in because neighborhood is improving?

Are asians having more kids?

Are more white people home schooling?

Are these statistic relevant across a real cross section or cherry picked?

Source of stats? Political view of the writer? What was he trying to accomplish with his little article?

Did I assume the gender of the author.

Blanket statements are just that. Little more than opinion or personal prejudice. And we all have both. Trying to make blanket statements in articles and speeches… by twisting statistics… is dishonest and is stock and trade of every journalist, activist, politician and most paid-off scientists.

So, as I think you did Maggot, I assume most of the Are crap without full citations and support and disclaimers. Just trying to sell clicks, outrage or fake crisis that require more tax dollars To make worse.

Cheers, Sirhr
 
  • Like
Reactions: Maggot and nikonNUT
I'm not clicking some random link at work. Who's fearing competition, white parents? Afraid their kids will look stupid in school because of the half ass'd job they're doing raising them?
 
  • Like
Reactions: Maggot

Fear of Competition? Research Shows That When Asian ...

View attachment 8283990
The 74 Million
https://www.the74million.org › article › fear-of-comp...



3 hours ago — A recent study of wealthy California suburbs finds that white families drift away from public schools as more Asian students enroll in them — ...
Having lived in Silicon Valley for a while, I would agree with the article. Asian kids were driven hard to succeed in academics. They received the best grades and test scores because they were driven as hard as they were. Most of the Asian families I knew had Mom and Dad in technical fields, so they drove their kids hard when it came to Math and Science.

On the flip side, suicides amongst Asian high school-aged kids were much higher than non-Asians. In Cupertino, it was not uncommon for an Asian kid to jump in front of a train. Had a few every year I was there.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Maggot
Having lived in Silicon Valley for a while, I would agree with the article. Asian kids were driven hard to succeed in academics. They received the best grades and test scores because they were driven as hard as they were. Most of the Asian families I knew had Mom and Dad in technical fields, so they drove their kids hard when it came to Math and Science.

On the flip side, suicides amongst Asian high school-aged kids were much higher than non-Asians. In Cupertino, it was not uncommon for an Asian kid to jump in front of a train. Had a few every year I was there.
Yep. When I visited the area I visited UCB and Stanford. Berkeley was about 60% Asians, Stanford less.