• VolatileExhaustPipe
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    1 year ago

    Were you adding context though? Does it justify the situation if a percentage of people are migrants (who often are fluent in a language above the given literacy btw.)?

    For real literacy skills in the US are a huge problem, it is a systemic problem of which the burden is heavily placed on individuals that are marginalized. Neolibs might quote:

    It is estimated that these negative social and economic outcomes cost the United States $362.49 billion annually.

    I say watch the whole Parenti lecture if you can: https://twitter.com/a_lutacontinua/status/936363027502391298?lang=de parenti

    “Yellow” Parenti lecture

    Parenti’s questions:

    • What happens to the people that can’t read in the US?
    • What happens to the children (who don’t have food) in the US?
    • What happens to the people without houses in the US?

    Edit The fascists mentioned for example were the right wing Nicaraguan death squads, you can find more about them in the Jakarta method

    • SamboT@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      So first of all, thank you for the civil discussion because that is the biggest lacking quality of scored comment sections like this site. It seems like discussion always brings details that are helpful when we are condemning an entire country with little information provided. This is why I like discussion and not militant downvoting and personal attacks.

      I truly have no narrative here but I just searched for immigrant literacy and the first thing I found:

      “41 percent of immigrants score at or below the lowest level of English literacy — a level variously described as “below basic” or “functional illiteracy”.”

      https://cis.org/Immigrant-Literacy-Self-Assessment-vs-Reality

      Thank you for the info and sources. I do have time to watch the lecture, and will.