Some white Americans assume that living here automatically means I owe them loyalty or support, but that expectation feels hollow. “Assimilation” gets thrown around a lot, but what does it actually mean in practice? Too often, it comes across as pressure to abandon your identity, to conform in ways that feel like betrayal, or to accept a subordinate role just to be accepted.

There’s also a deeper frustration behind it. If U.S. foreign policy hadn’t destabilized my home country, I might not even be here in the first place. So being told I should support a country I associate with that kind of harm feels unreasonable. From my perspective, it shouldn’t be surprising that I still feel connected to China and view it more favorably. And if China continues to develop, returning to my home country could become a real option.

The “American Identity” is a joke. This is a country that bombs and invades others to pilfer resources. America is a terrorist country.

  • big_spoon@lemmygrad.ml
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    28 days ago

    America feels less like a home and more like a place to earn money.

    facts…from everywhere in the world, people usually go to USA to grift or hustle to send money back home and enjoy the wealth. there’s people who stay there, but usually tend to return of being proles in gringoland to feel like the rich familiar from the US back at home