Is it also because people count citizens of foreign origin as immigrants too?
Go to somewhere like Bradford or Birmingham in the UK, I'm sure vast majority of people there are born in Britain, yet some people would call all of them "immigrants" regardless.
I believe the problem lies in clustering and assimilation. In some areas of the USA, the immigrant population exceeds 30-40%, and these tend to be the loudest voices.
Small towns are hit the hardest, but even large cities are not immune to sudden, rapid population fluctuations and the strain this puts on local resources (just look at New York).
The history of the Irish in the United States serves as an excellent example. Driven by the Potato Famine, they poured into the US in massive numbers. When too many people from unrelated cultures arrive too quickly, conflict becomes inevitable.
Add 10 to 20 million people over a four-year period, and you have a perfect storm for conflict.
I think this heavily depends on what people perceive as immigrants. If they considered every non white person to be an immigrant, even if their families have been here for generations, then it would approach 33%.
If you consider 1st and 2nd generation immigrants since most 2nd generation immigrants can speak their parent language and share some culture, these numbers usually get close to 30% in the US. People are not far off.
On a related note people tend to massively overestimate the global "white" population. People do the same, put it at 25%-50% when it's only about 7%-10%.
Must be a lot of light skinned South African, Algerian and Namibian immigrants then /s
I suspect why this is overestimated has a lot to do with media treatment. Different people than you moving in is scary to people, scary things get engagement, engagement gets eyeballs in front of ads. I don't know how to measure this though because this model is so ubiquitous, where would you find a control?
Both are true. A lot of those posts you think are from internet trolls are actually real concerns, mostly from poor people, whose neighborhoods the immigrants were sent to, and it's they who are feeling the costs of that.
But who cares what poor people think though, right? lol
[+] [-] rich_sasha|1 year ago|reply
Go to somewhere like Bradford or Birmingham in the UK, I'm sure vast majority of people there are born in Britain, yet some people would call all of them "immigrants" regardless.
[+] [-] gniv|1 year ago|reply
[+] [-] normalaccess|1 year ago|reply
Small towns are hit the hardest, but even large cities are not immune to sudden, rapid population fluctuations and the strain this puts on local resources (just look at New York).
The history of the Irish in the United States serves as an excellent example. Driven by the Potato Famine, they poured into the US in massive numbers. When too many people from unrelated cultures arrive too quickly, conflict becomes inevitable.
Add 10 to 20 million people over a four-year period, and you have a perfect storm for conflict.
[+] [-] dyauspitr|1 year ago|reply
[+] [-] arctics|1 year ago|reply
[+] [-] normalaccess|1 year ago|reply
This chart isn't broken down by ethnicity but it will do in a pinch. https://www.visualcapitalist.com/worlds-7-5-billion-people-c...
[+] [-] aa_is_op|1 year ago|reply
[+] [-] kroolik|1 year ago|reply
2) Dont trust everything you read on the internet. A lot of it is skewed by personal biases.
[+] [-] d2049|1 year ago|reply
[+] [-] mattnewton|1 year ago|reply
I suspect why this is overestimated has a lot to do with media treatment. Different people than you moving in is scary to people, scary things get engagement, engagement gets eyeballs in front of ads. I don't know how to measure this though because this model is so ubiquitous, where would you find a control?
[+] [-] red016|1 year ago|reply
[+] [-] VoodooJuJu|1 year ago|reply
But who cares what poor people think though, right? lol
[+] [-] dyauspitr|1 year ago|reply