posted by gut
Well, France also seems to be learning this.
I think the issue is when immigration happens too fast, rather than fully integrate they form clusters. And then, economically they get left behind, since all they've done is re-create their 3rd world home. It works for a while, because the conditions they fled aren't there. But eventually being left behind leads to real and imagined perceptions of discrimination, and then ultimately to unrest.
Feel like I read something that this starts boiling in the 3rd generation. They don't have any comprehension of how bad conditions were where their grandparents fled. All they see is a lack of opportunity.
But it takes work to climb out of poverty. The immigrants that succeed in the US bust their ass to take advantage of and create opportunities. Critical to that is assimilation. If instead they isolate and re-create a bubble of their homeland, then they aren't going have or find those opportunities.
Assimilation: The problem with that is that there are many people in the US who don't expect assimilation, they are perfectly fine with people being taken care of for 10+ years without even learning enough of the common language to get by. I know this because a few years ago we had that same discussion on this forum. Somebody had posted a picture of a woman that was being provided for by a church for 10 years and she needed a translator because she had never taken the time to even learn simple sentences. I stated that I believe that if you want to go to another country then you should learn enough of that country's language to scrape by. I got a lot of pushback on that by people who didn't think it was necessary to learn a common language. Do you guys remember that? Wayback Machine (an internet archive site) could provide lots of examples, I'm sure.
https://archive.org/web/
Mass & Fast Immigration: The people generally get massed together in communities by government. Marseille, France is a really good example of that. We tend to see that happening here in the US, also. It's what I call ghettoing and hell, our government already does that to its own people, immigration aside.
Third Generations: I think your statement is pretty spot on. And again, it's not only immigrants, we see that with current US citizens. We see the Millies and GenZ acting much more aggrieved over the past than the generations who went through it. Precisely for the reasons you describe. It's a weird phenomena. Now it is predictable, but entirely nonsensical to me.