Why is it a bad thing that white people are becoming a minority? (which they aren't)
Minorities in America, especially blacks and latinos, tend to come from disadvantage backgrounds and histories. Like most other demographics with such backgrounds in the world, this results in them and their communities being notably more likely to undergo struggles such as poverty, crime, lack of academic performance, etc. Now while the majority of minorities in America don't suffer from all or even one of these things, and they do exist in a spectrum, this isn't how people like JonTron see it.
To them they feel that the core issue with minorities, specifically blacks, latinos, and refugees from brown countries is that they have severe flaws in their culture that just can't be fixed. Due to this, they fear that if minorities keep coming, then by the time their grandchildren will come around America will be much like how they see a country like say Brazil, a nation where the minorities have become the majority and thus a large sum if not the majority of people are violent, lazy, and push crazy politics as well as a delinquent culture.
Where they have things wrong is that they both tend to hilariously exaggerate things and simply don't look at trends. They exaggerate things such as claiming that most black people are poor and on welfare (that number is well below 50%) or the percentage of refugees we take that are terrorists (it's like less than 1% or something). They also do not look at trends such as crime and teen pregnancy going down, or how business starts ups and graduation rates are increasing in these "basketcase communities".
Strg+F Bee
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been, been, been
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One P.S. 452 parent speaking out against the move is comedian and former Daily Show correspondent Jason Jones, who's married to Samantha Bee. "To portray any opposition as classist or racist is as bad as it can get," Jones told WNYC. And elsewhere: "We are not divided," he said at a public hearing about the proposal, ”we are absolutely united in wanting what's best for our children," then encouraged fellow parents not to talk to the press about the controversy.