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Is there a good way to describe a group like this? All ethnics are certainly not culpable for advocacy done on the behalf by people they didn't elect, much like whites as a group aren't responsible for white supremacist violence and blacks as a group are not responsible for violence committed by black criminals. But describing Jewish advocates like this feels strange and the ADL does seem to enjoy support from many more Jewish people than take active roles in it.
Ethnic descrimination does still happen and the optimal number of anti-discrimination groups is probably nonzero but it does seem wrong that anti-discrimination frequently turns into general advocacy for the group. Perhaps what is needed is some generic anti-discrimination group that handles all cases in a standard manner and rogue advocacy groups should be seen like the KKK as nakedly defecting on the social contract.
Failing that I find it hard to see why I shouldn't interpret an organization that actively advocates discrimination against my group in favor of their own, often more privileged group, as anything but a hostile threat worthy of nothing but disdain.
"Market-dominant Minority"
Note that Jewish people in the United States are not listed as an example of a "market dominant minority." The original article is here and it says:
So, she clearly sees this as a non-First World phenomenon. And note this discussion in which she defines "market dominant minority as "an ethnic minority, or ethnic minorities, who, along with foreign investors, can be expected to economically dominate the poor, indigenous majorities around them, at least in the near to mid-term future."
Again, she is talking about something more than a particular group being overrepresented in a particular sector. So, Jewish people in the US do not seem to be an example of what she is discussing.
I mean, Koreans and Indians are clearly market dominant minorities in poor urban regions, and Cajuns and Afrikaner’s fill similar roles in parts of the rural south.
These areas might be poor by American standards, but they’re globally very very wealthy, so the concept clearly applies regardless of what academic theories about race say.
I agree that Jews aren’t one, by the way, because they’re usually not owning capital.
Korean and Indians in poor urban regions often serve as middleman minorities, but I think that is a different concept.
TBQH, it seems like the distinction is one that only exists to claim that US whites are systemically advantaged over everyone else, no exceptions.
That would be a strange claim to be made by Thomas Sowell, who has written a fair amount about middleman minorities. As for market dominant minorities, as noted in the original link, Chua's concept is about such places as 'the Philippines, [where] Chua notes that the Chinese community comprise one percent of the population but control 60 percent of the private economy, with the result being resentment on the part of the Filipino majority against the Chinese minority creating an ethnic conflict. Similarly, in Indonesia the Chinese Indonesian community make up three percent of the population but control 75 percent of the economy. Similar patterns occur throughout other Southeast Asian economies." Clearly a different concept than middleman minorities, and neither has anything to do with US whites; not everything on the planet is about the current culture war.
Chua’s concept seems too narrow. If you divide into different ethnic groups (not just white but British, German, etc) there is no dominant group in the US in part because the economy is so massive unlike the Philippines.
It is true that Jews disproportionately own a lot of wealth in the US. It is also true that probably inspires jealous.
Too narrow for what? As an excuse to criticize some group one doesn't like, perhaps. But not as a means of understanding the world; it is specifically about a phenomenon which takes place in relatively low-income countries. Broadening it risks rendering it both meaningless and useless
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