One of the unspoken goals of the American Establishment (e.g., universities and foundations) is to use Asian status-seeking to SWPLize them into white American norms before Asians take over the world, which seems like a decent idea.
The NYT reports, although without much in the way of data:
Members of a new class of affluent Asian-Americans, many of whom have benefited from booms in finance and technology, are making their mark on philanthropy in the United States. They are donating large sums to groups focused on their own diasporas or their homelands, like the organization that held the fund-raiser, the Korean American Community Foundation.
And they are giving to prestigious universities, museums, concert halls and hospitals — like Yale University and the Metropolitan Museum of Art. The institutions, in turn, are increasingly courting Asian-Americans, who are taking high-profile slots on their governing boards.
SungEun Han-Andersen, a Korean immigrant who runs two family foundations and is on the boards of the New York Philharmonic and Boston University, said the philanthropic impulse was for the first time becoming deeply rooted within her circle of Korean acquaintances.
“I don’t have to ask for funds twice, because they’re beginning to understand,” Ms. Han-Andersen, a former management consultant and concert pianist, said.
Pradeep Kashyap, an Indian immigrant and former senior executive at Citibank, described this shift as “the journey of becoming American.”
“They see their mainstream American peers giving and they say, ‘I’m going to do that,’ ” said Mr. Kashyap, vice-chairman of the American India Foundation, one of the largest and most successful of the new Asian philanthropies.
The growth in philanthropy by Asian-Americans parallels a surge in the Asian population in the United States. From 2000 to 2010, according to the Census Bureau, the number of people who identified themselves as partly or wholly Asian grew by nearly 46 percent, more than four times the growth rate of the overall population, making Asian-Americans the fastest growing racial group in the nation.
Lulu C. Wang, a money manager and philanthropist in New York, and her husband, Anthony Wang, established themselves in the vanguard of this new wave of Asian-American philanthropy when they donated $25 million to Wellesley College, her alma mater, in 2000.
“With this new display of philanthropy, there are many more who are looked at with great interest by these boards,” said Ms. Wang, who was born in New Delhi and is of Chinese descent, and now sits on the boards of the Metropolitan Museum, Columbia Business School and other institutions.
Another Met trustee who is Chinese-American, Oscar L. Tang, said, “There’s a group of us who all know each other and support each other in this tendency.”
Among Mr. Tang’s contributions have been major gifts to Phillips Academy Andover, including a donation of $25 million in 2008, and Skidmore College, as well as the Met.
Asian cultures have a strong tradition of philanthropy in the broadest sense, though it has usually involved donations to relatives, neighbors, churches and business associations. Many Asian immigrants have not immediately embraced the Western-style practice of giving to large philanthropic institutions, organizers said.
“The reaction is: ‘Why should we give money to a third party?’ ” said Cao K. O, executive director of the Asian American Federation, a nonprofit group in New York City established in 1989 that manages a community fund.
The American India Foundation emerged in response to an earthquake in the Indian state of Gujarat in 2001. Mr. Kashyap said the organization had sought to dispel some deeply ingrained cultural suspicion among Indians about “the credibility of institutions,” a holdover from India, where, he said, institutional transparency and accountability have historically been weak.
The foundation raised more than $7 million this fiscal year for nonprofit groups in India, much of it through six major galas, each in a different American city.
The Korean American Community Foundation grew out of a gathering of a group of influential Korean-Americans in New York in 2002. Unlike the American India Foundation, it decided to channel money back into the diaspora and help compatriots in New York.
The myth that Asians are a “model minority” had created a blind spot that obscured social problems among Korean immigrants, including poverty, homelessness, mental illness and the unmet needs of the elderly, said the foundation’s executive director, Kyung B. Yoon.
“In some ways for immigrants, the better off you become, the more disconnected you become from your community needs,” said Ms. Yoon, a former news correspondent for Fox who was born in South Korea and moved to the United States when she was 6.
“We grew up with this idea that success is the more distance you can create between yourself and the pack,” Ms. Yoon said. “But it’s really about how much of the pack you can bring along.”
At first, the group found little traction among Korean immigrants. So it focused on the so-called 1.5 generation — those, like Ms. Yoon, who had moved to the United States as children — and among those born in the United States to immigrants.
Since its founding, it has raised more than $7 million, disbursing about 50 grants to organizations.
Dien S. Yuen, a philanthropy consultant focusing on Asian-American giving, predicted that the surge in philanthropic activity among Asians was “only a beginning.”
My personal experience is that South Asians, with their traditions of giving alms, tend to be more generous than East Asians, but that is based on a very small sample size: my older son lived in a nice new dorm that, halfway through the year, was named after a South Asian donor, and my younger son enjoyed a nice new library at his high school that was named after a South Asian donor
Giving money to a place like Harvard, which has a $30 billion endowment but still continually raises tuition faster than inflation, is absurd. I hope Asian-Americans and others will donate to institutions that use the money more effectively. I think donations to online educational providers such as Coursera or Khan Academy will go further. Of course, donating to them won't help get your kid into a famous school or get on a multi-billion investment committee (which you can have your company manage), which is what much "philanthropy" is about.
ReplyDeleteFinally, why would I as an Indian-American donate to organizations that discriminate against my children because of their race? Whether schools discriminate against Asians vs. whites is arguable, but it is undeniable that they discriminate against both groups in favor of blacks and Hispanics.
The South Asian centi-millionaires do not seem particularly interested in obtaining the West's approval.
ReplyDeleteMany wealthy South Asian families would rather found their own local institutions, such as the Jindal Global Law School outside Delhi, than be yet another family that donates a wing to Stanford.
Yes, they are interested in having their children obtain a degree at the flashy U.S. schools, but the empire building is being done at home.
Interesting that the Korean Diaspora is becoming more philanthropic. I've been told that Koreans back in the homeland, in spite of their racial homogeneity, are notoriously un-philanthropic towards each other.
ReplyDeleteThe myth that Asians are a “model minority”. . .
ReplyDeleteMust dispel that myth! Once you start thinking about "model minorities" you might start thinking about "non-model minorities."
Also, "model minority" sounds kind of teacher's pet, beta male, honorary white person, and Asians want to preserve the option to go all ghetto on us. So watch out.
How the fuck is donating to Andover philanthropy?
ReplyDeleteIt is status seeking and almost certainly associated with a desire for descendants to attend and thus be prepped---literally---for the Ivies.
My daughter's dorm at MIT is named for an Iranian-American donor. I don't recall many (any?) buildings on campus named for East Asian donors.
ReplyDeleteyou gotta pay to play.
ReplyDeleteFrom what I have seen, many white churches spend lots of money in the third world or in minority communities in the U.S. My guess is that most major philanthropic institutions do the same, as does the federal government.
ReplyDeleteAre there any groups of programs that specifically serve non-minority whites? I'd like to give to my own community.
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/education-of-michelle-rhee/
ReplyDeleteWanting one's name on a building takes a certain level of outward narcissism. East Asians, while possibly more narcissistic, usually don't match the outward narcissism of South Asians.
ReplyDelete"Conservative" news!
ReplyDeleteBill Maher, "put up or shut up!"
http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/lookout/yahoo-news-exclusive-trump-releases-birth-certificate-bill-151304482.html
I often read these types of comments about 'fasting growing' ethnic groups in various Western countries. The inference seems to be that this is something that is accompanied by a growth in their significance and relevance.
ReplyDeleteI wonder then what it means to be the fastest declining group? Nothing, I guess. Apart from the obvious pleasure it must give that group of being able to experience all those fast-growing groups rising up around them like so much vibrant Japanese knot weed.
Hey, Koreans! When you get yourself nice and 'deep rooted' in there, just spare a thought for the poor old compost, OK? We had to eat a lot of manure for you chaps.
ReplyDeletemead on green vs brown energy
http://blogs.the-american-interest.com/wrm/2013/01/08/greens-jump-the-gun-on-oil-sands-pollution/
fuku on education
http://blogs.the-american-interest.com/fukuyama/2013/01/06/albert-o-hirschman-1915-2012/
Why should Asians donate to organizations that discriminate against them and seek to control them? Just because it benefits white people?
ReplyDeleteAgain because we let you stay here. But really it doesn't matter what you think its quite clear that the achievers in your race want nothing more than fit in with the SWPLs. If you like you can go back to your country. That is unless you are a PRC spy to which I say get back to work those commerce departments docs won't photocopy themselves.
ReplyDeleteDonating to universities isn't really a SWPL thing. Donating to Haiti is.
ReplyDeleteSWPL norms seem not very good for whites and seem ultimately aimed at serving black interests. Spreading them further is probably a bad idea.
“We grew up with this idea that success is the more distance you can create between yourself and the pack,” Ms. Yoon said. “But it’s really about how much of the pack you can bring along.”
ReplyDeleteThat´s not everybody´s idea of philantropy! It´s more like clannishness.
Why should Asians donate to organizations that discriminate against them and seek to control them? Just because it benefits white people?
ReplyDeleteThose organizations don't benefit white people.
"Interesting that the Korean Diaspora is becoming more philanthropic. I've been told that Koreans back in the homeland, in spite of their racial homogeneity, are notoriously un-philanthropic towards each other."
ReplyDeleteKoreans in the US are overwhelmingly Protestant, while back home they are equally split between Christians/Buddhists/unaligned.
Interesting that the Korean Diaspora is becoming more philanthropic. I've been told that Koreans back in the homeland, in spite of their racial homogeneity, are notoriously un-philanthropic towards each other.
ReplyDeleteIt's true that Koreans are very cut-throat and lack a level of civility in confrontations, but they are philanthropic in a nationalist way.
During the 1998 Asian currency crisis, the common folk were famous for donating their personal gold jewelry to the government to assist in the recovery. If you recall, they came out of it and paid back the IMF loan is a matter of few years.
Also, while orphans aren't as readily adopted as they are in the West, Korean orphans get every material wish they desire donated to their orphanages to include iPods and Nike shoes.
Philanthropy is what? Charity for the rich and privileged? Funding museums, galleries, classical music concert halls, elite colleges, and etc.
ReplyDeleteStuff that cater to the rich and privileged.
It's supporting the lifestyles of the rich, well-connected, and educated.
It's like Barry Lyndon in Kubrick's film. For him to be admitted into upper society, he must pay high price for paintings and spend lavishly to entertain guests.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OTX6b8fBqSQ
So, this isn't about giving to the needy but paying to the greedy to gain status and enter the upper crust.
It's about Barry Irishrogue becoming Barry LYNDON.
I'll bet when an Asian-American gives to relatives and churches, he or she is doing more good by people who really need the money. But you don't get anywhere by giving money directly to the poor and needy. To make the climb, you gotta give to the kind of fancy-pantsers who are into art and setting up elite colleges that keep out most people.
Btw, all this stuff about 'giving back' is pretty stupid. If capitalists take from society and feel guilty about it, they should just stop making money. That way, they won't be taking anything.
Of course, capitalists create jobs, opportunities, products, and etc. They do a great good for society, and they have no reason to feel guilty or sorry. Imagine the US or Japanese economy without their top 200 companies.
So, all this pressure to give is all about status.
Also, it's the one trump card that the cultural and intellectual class over the capitalist class.
Cultural class had meaning, and intellectual class has the 'truth'.
The moneyed class feels crass and materialistic. So, by funding the culture class and intellectual class, the moneyed class gain 'meaning' and 'truth'. And cultural and intellectual class know how this game is to be played: Apply pressure on moneyed folks who don't fund them while heaping praise on those who do. So, GET WALMART and CHICK FIL A but go easy on George Soros, Warren Buffett, Bill Gates, and Google.
It's like the church establishment long ago went easy on kings and noblemen who generously gave to the church.
It's really an extortion racket and bribery to gain status.
And of course, Asians are major status seekers and will fall for this shit.
From Asians to paysians.
ReplyDelete"Giving money to a place like Harvard, which has a $30 billion endowment but still continually raises tuition faster than inflation, is absurd. I hope Asian-Americans and others will donate to institutions that use the money more effectively."
ReplyDeleteBut what do you get by funding community colleges? CC people got no power. But if you give to Harvard, boy oh boy, doors open up.
Since we were all forced to bail out Wall Street, aren't we all philanthropists?
ReplyDeleteBecoming rich is crass. Paying the established rich earns you class.
ReplyDeleteOf course the article really is anecdotal. But, it is striking that the donations are to other Asians, or to causes which by and large do not help the folks at the bottom of the ladder who need it most.
ReplyDeleteThe growth in philanthropy by Asian-Americans parallels a surge in the Asian population in the United States. From 2000 to 2010, according to the Census Bureau, the number of people who identified themselves as partly or wholly Asian grew by nearly 46 percent, more than four times the growth rate of the overall population, making Asian-Americans the fastest growing racial group in the nation.
ReplyDeleteThey've got some pretty good competition, however. Texas had an enormous Mexican population in 2000, but somehow Texas's Hispanic population still managed to increase by 43% from 2000 to 2010.
How much do Asians give to charity anonymously? How much that doesn't entail getting their name affixed to the outside of a building? Do they donate blood? Are they organ donors?
ReplyDeleteAlso, "model minority" sounds kind of teacher's pet, beta male, honorary white person, and Asians want to preserve the option to go all ghetto on us. So watch out.
ReplyDeleteAsians as a group don't want to preserve the option to "go all ghetto" nor do they want to be honorary whites. They want to be seen as equal to (or better than) everyone else in terms of conspicuous achievements. In the past this has not been for the sake of white approval, but to enhance personal status in their own ethnic groups. It seems they are realizing that broad philanthropy can increase one's status far more than donating to close associates or co-ethnics.
I'm guessing a similar scenario happened as Jews, Irish, and Italians integrated. I wonder if there's some data out there clearing showing the ethnicity of philanthropic donors to academia over time.
For better or worse, Asians are not taking over the world. It's true that a lot of white people seem to be fantastically eager to give it to them though.
ReplyDeleteAre there any groups of programs that specifically serve non-minority whites? I'd like to give to my own community.
ReplyDeleteSalvation Army is the closest.
Appalachia gets federal dollars and private funds.
ReplyDeleteWhy should Asians donate to organizations that discriminate against them and seek to control them?
ReplyDeleteWhy should Whites donate to organizations that discriminate against them and seek to control them?
"Interesting that the Korean Diaspora is becoming more philanthropic."
ReplyDeletei'm not sure that's happening. it might be, but it seems to me like it's more about status seeking.
though, this guy did run for mayor of boston, and he might be an actual philanthropist:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sam_Yoon
though it gets to hard tell, when people are democrats, whether they are actual philanthropists, or just doing things to advance their career and "prove" their worth to be elected to the next higher office.
like this guy:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jim_Yong_Kim
actual philanthropist, or career democrat social climber? does an actual philanthropist take an appointment to president of the world bank?!
The cafeteria at Ball State is named Mi Suk Kok Dining Hall in honor of an Asian philanthropist.
ReplyDeleteSteve said, "My personal experience is that South Asians, with their traditions of giving alms, tend to be more generous than East Asians, but that is based on a very small sample size:".
ReplyDeleteAnonymous said... "Interesting that the Korean Diaspora is becoming more philanthropic. I've been told that Koreans back in the homeland, in spite of their racial homogeneity, are notoriously un-philanthropic towards each other."
I think most Koreans and East Asians would agree with this observation. East Asians have lived in higher densities, on average, than Caucasians and far, far longer. This higher urbanization coupled with harsh cold winters have tended to make their character more thrifty, self sufficient, more willing to 'eat bitterness', and more family centered than WASPs. And far different those whose character evolved in the lower latitudes. Their character also makes them less willing to embrace wishful thinking and the idea that throwing money to the spendthrift will solve their problems.
Those interested in Korean national character would benefit from their war movies on Netflix. There the portrayal of men and women enduring fantastically harsh physical and emotional conditions is lingered over in detail.
actual philanthropist:
ReplyDeletehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patrick_Soon-Shiong
the richest man in los angeles, and no political ambitions. only trying to help people.
DJANGO UNZIPPED
ReplyDeleteUnspoken rule of the establishment that pretends it doesn't exist
ReplyDeleteDjango Unzipped: Kylie, Legendary Linda, Sheila, JSM, we're waiting for comments...
ReplyDeleteKoreans are on an individual level autistic and even misanthropic. I've seen crowds of them just walk by a compatriot bleeding from the mouth after falling down a flight of stairs. This cruel streak has been documented since our cultures first made contact.
ReplyDeleteHowever, when a collective effort achieves critical mass and there's a chance of being the odd one out, the mood becomes almost festive as they join together to do whatever it is: donating gold during the IMF crisis, the much-touted street cleaning during the 2002 World Cup or spending the weekend with their coworkers handing out rice to the elderly.
This trait is particularly useful in attempts, encouraged by a very socially active government, to "globalize" Korean pop culture
Great comment, 4:27 anon.
ReplyDeleteAs to Trader Joes, prices vary item to item, but on the whole, I find grocery shopping at Trader Joes to be slightly more affordable than at the Safeway. I think you are thinking of Whole Foods.
[QUOTE]Donating to universities isn't really a SWPL thing. Donating to Haiti is.[/QUOTE]
ReplyDeleteSome religious White conservatives also donated money to Haiti after the earthquake.
And religious White conservatives are the extreme opposite of SWPL, when it comes to ideology.
Most of the Starbucks sipping hipster SWPL types in Portland, Manhattan, Washington D.C, and Seattle would not be caught dead praying to Jesus Christ at a religious place of worship.
[QUOTE]But there's Chipotle which is like a high end version of Taco Hell.[/QUOTE]
ReplyDeleteI like eating at Chipotle, and I am definitely not a SWPL type. My political views as a whole are closer to that of the right than they are to the left.
Good food is good food. Politics have nothing to do with it.
Why does anyone need to be a philanthropist to help people?
ReplyDeleteThe best way to help people is to be an inventor, a businessman, someone who does something for the economy. Most decent people don't want charity or handouts. They want jobs and opportunities to earn a living.
Therefore, someone who builds a business and hires people is helping people. If I were to come up with a great idea, build a business in a small town, and hire 1000 people, I'm helping them, and helping them in a way that fills them with pride. They feel as workers who are earning than as charity cases who are taking handouts.
It seems to me that charity-focused philanthropy isn't really about helping people. It's about making a lot of noise and gesture that you are HELPING PEOPLE. It's really about helping your big fat ego.
Though a business actually helps more people by expanding his business and creating more jobs and products, it's seen as 'greed'. But when a businessman says, "I'm gonna give money to such and such charity", OH MY GOD, he's being soooo nice and helpful.
But what good have you done by giving things to people for free?
Also, this is the US where the government provides tons of free stuff to a lot of people. Even fatso illegals get free stuff. Indeed, we are all taxed and forced to pay for free stuff for all the fat lazy bums out there. Just look at the reality tv show MY BABY MAMAM or some shit.
"Their character also makes them less willing to embrace wishful thinking and the idea that throwing money to the spendthrift will solve their problems."
ReplyDeleteIsn't paying taxes 'forced charity'?
I believe both Japan and South Korea has socialized medicine.
Also, haven't companies like Sony, Toyota, Samsung, and etc done more for Japan and Korea than 'do-gooders'?
I can understand people with means helping out people in desperate straits, but most people should be expected to work up the social ladder through work and struggle, which is what generations of Americans did on farms and factories.
When Asia was really really backward and poor, I can understand why Christian missionaries--mostly Americans--wanted to build universities, hospitals, and etc there. But it seems to me that Asians finally figured out that the real way to build their nations is through enterprise and opportunities.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Protestant_missions_in_China_1807%E2%80%931953
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ewha_Womans_University
The generosity of Indian-Americans seems to have a direct relationship to their tenure in this country. Fresh off the boat types tend to be really stingy. Those who've been here at least a couple decades can be stingy too, but some can be generous. The American-born children are similar to the general population. Perhaps the 3rd generation will embrace the whole WASP nobless oblige ideal. I, for one, don't have a problem with this.
ReplyDeleteI'd bet 4th/5th generation Asian-Hawaiins are pretty charitable.
Yes, East Asians seem to be socially autistic. Misanthropic might be a little strong. The flip side is that they're highly collectivist, so they can be generous when the general cultural mileu around them is strongly generous.
ReplyDeleteIndians tend to be more people-oriented and, as someone said, are probably more outwardly narcissistic and status seeking. Asians tend to avoid the public eye, for whatever reason.
That´s not everybody´s idea of philantropy! It´s more like clannishness.
ReplyDeleteYou could define philanthropy that way. Whether it's "clannishness" depends on how "pack" is defined.
Well, New York and New Jeresey tend to be another area with Koreans besides Califonira. And I know a few koreans can't comment on how genourous they are.
ReplyDeleteYou're right about Starbucks. Their coffee is some of the worst tasting. Last time I went to one, they served it to me lukewarm, then offered to microwave it. Even McDonalds doesn't do that.
ReplyDeleteThe East and South Asian kids I teach joke that when they went to a white friend's homes, they were shocked to see pictures, artworks, and appointment notes on the refrigerator doors.
ReplyDelete"That's where you're supposed to put coupons!"
So if there's a rise in Asian philanthropy, I'd guess it's motivated by self-interest.
actual philanthropist:
ReplyDeletehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patrick_Soon-Shiong
the richest man in los angeles, and no political ambitions. only trying to help people.
Obviously a brilliant man. I wonder though if he would be considered African descent by affirmative action standards. I'm not suggesting it, but he was born in Africa. How about White South Africans, are they African in college admissions?
Chinese are the ultimate social Darwinists. They believe that if you fail, it's your fault, and if your children suffer because of your lack of success, that's their bad fortune. You won't see Chinese billionaires donating to Shriner's hospital or to Oxfam any time soon. They will however be willing to put their name on a computer science lab in an Ivy League university that doesn't really need their money because that is likely to benefit children and grandchildren who might apply to that college.
ReplyDeleteGenuine philanthropy used to be an SWPL thing, back when a different crowd of elites were in power.
ReplyDeleteGiving to groups that advocate special privilege for one's own group hardly constitutes the same thing.
It's about extracting wealth from the non-Asian population then having the money "bounce" around in the Asian community. This is what creates wealth. Communities that make money "bounce" more often in their own community are wealthier. Jews have done this for a very long time. Notice all the organizations mentioned in this article are focused on helping people like them. White people in America instead of focusing on a pan-white identity should instead focus on their own ethnic identity. That way you can avoid the racism label that drives many away.
ReplyDelete"Are there any groups of programs that specifically serve non-minority whites? I'd like to give to my own community."
ReplyDeleteDaughters of American Revolution, Sons of American Revolution, Sons of Confederate Veterans, Daughters of Confederate Veterans.. Not specifically for non-minorities, but given that membership, scholarships, and benefits are primarily based on proven ancestry to soldiers of those periods, they pretty much are a proxy for non-minorities.
Better yet, start a new one, sue if they don't let you...
"There's Walmart for the slobs, but what I've noticed is the mass-marketization of high-end goods"
ReplyDeleteIts only going to increase as the nation goes down the tube- more and more people will chase bling.
The East and South Asian kids I teach joke that when they went to a white friend's homes, they were shocked to see pictures, artworks, and appointment notes on the refrigerator doors.
ReplyDelete"That's where you're supposed to put coupons!"
So if there's a rise in Asian philanthropy, I'd guess it's motivated by self-interest.
I'm sure in another context, you'd twist this made up story so the punchline is, "That's where you're supposed to put A+ papers!" or something to that effect.
"That's where you're supposed to put coupons!"
ReplyDeleteSo if there's a rise in Asian philanthropy, I'd guess it's motivated by self-interest.
I don't see why being thrifty implies any philanthropy will be out of self-interest. Unless your claim is something like all philanthropy being ultimately about self-interest.
Traditional WASPs were known for being very thrifty, even when wealthy and engaging in philanthropy. But presumably you would argue that WASP philanthropy is not out of self-interest.
So if there's a rise in Asian philanthropy, I'd guess it's motivated by self-interest.
ReplyDeleteI think the same could be said of non-Asian philanthropy. If they weren't motivated by self-interest and actually wanted to help, the Bill Gates, Clinton, etc. philanthropic efforts wouldn't support these Africa boondoggles that don't actually help but are and will make problems worse. They have enough money and brains that there's simply no excuse. The only explanation is that they care more about their personal status than genuinely helping Africans and others.
From the Article:
ReplyDelete"“They see their mainstream American peers giving and they say, ‘I’m going to do that,’ ”"
Sorry, but can this be called 'philanthropy'? It sounds like (typical East-Asian) status-seeking.
But presumably you would argue that WASP philanthropy is not out of self-interest.
ReplyDeleteI would not. Charity is just a form of leisure spending.
However, the article clearly implies that Asians are spending charitably as a form of assimilation, which is nonsense.
Westerners give charitably because it makes them feel good about themselves, as a part of their self-image, and as a form of advertisement.
I don't know why Asians are starting to give. But their form of self-interest is probably quite different.
http://www.amazon.com/Makioka-Sisters-Criterion-Collection-Blu-ray/dp/B004S8021M
ReplyDeleteIt's on blu-ray!
Traditional WASPs certainly weren't thrifty in South. Neither were the puritans that thrifty once the half way covenant gutted their fervor.
ReplyDeleteEducation Realist, no, Europeans give because they want to help.
ReplyDeleteAsians are following a Jewish model of charity. Instead of giving to broad interests they are investing solely in people of their own group.
Anon at1/9/13 9:39 PM, what do you expect from bringing an Iron Age people in sub-Saharan Africans into the modern world? You have the long term issues they always had along with issues of modernity coming together. I think people like Bill Gates are making a sincere effort. Bill Gates already had high status before he started his charitable organization.
One of the unspoken goals of the American Establishment (e.g., universities and foundations) is to use Asian status-seeking to SWPLize them into white American norms before Asians take over the world
ReplyDeleteWho cares what their norms are if they take my country away from me? If a person doesn't have a normal feeling of wanting to protect his own people (whether they are Asian, White or Black), then that person has sociopathic tendencies.
Turning non-Whites into to little WASPs, behaviorally speaking, has nothing to do with the survival of my people.
I think people like Bill Gates are making a sincere effort. Bill Gates already had high status before he started his charitable organization.
ReplyDeleteHe would lose status if he started promoting politically incorrect things that would actually help. He's smart enough to know this, and he has enough money to know that he could bear the cost of losing status. But he doesn't, because he cares more about his status than actually helping Africans.
Traditional WASPs certainly weren't thrifty in South.
ReplyDeleteYes, and Southern WASPs aren't known for their philanthropy like old Yankees are.
what do you expect from bringing an Iron Age people in sub-Saharan Africans into the modern world? You have the long term issues they always had along with issues of modernity coming together.
ReplyDeleteIt has nothing to do with being an "Iron Age people". The Iron Age wasn't that long ago. Non-African "Iron Age people" had different mental and behavioral traits. Gates is the richest man in the world and he won't even address the actual problems because he'll no longer be portrayed as a politically correct hero, even if he'll get closer to actually solving the problem.
I truly doubt that you have any data on the difference of charitable donations as a function of income between North and South. In fact I am sure of it. And again I'm not sure what your point is as I pointed out when the Northern WASPs started giving they had already stopped being particularly thrifty.
ReplyDeleteHe would lose status if he started promoting politically incorrect things
ReplyDeletehe wouldn't just lose status he would lose money. Clinton and the EU made this very clear to him.
Finally, why would I as an Indian-American donate to organizations that discriminate against my children because of their race?
ReplyDeleteGood question. Whites somehow pull it off, but I suspect many of them feel obligated to rather than doing it from the goodness of their hearts. That model doesn't seem to me anything worth emulating. But hey, enjoying that double standard is a huge part of what "becoming American" is all about.
"Chinese are the ultimate social Darwinists"
ReplyDeleteWrong, the Chinese are more fatalistic than Europeans, and believe luck plays a big part in personal success (which is one of the reasons they like gambling so much).
You're confusing social Darwinism with nepotism and lack of sentimentality.
"This SWPL thing"...by anonymous above.
ReplyDeleteVery good comment. Your comments about the hip urban sheeple buying Apple products was right on