You must have visited a remote area of the States. New York, Miami, Boston, Los Angeles, Oakland, San Francisco, Honolulu, Philadelphia, Providence, and Houston are all far more diverse than any Brazilian city. The U.S. also has more Asians and Native Americans than Brazil. Both of my parents are Brazilian immigrants and they agree that the variation in the United States is far greater. Don't worry about your English, I understood everything you typed perfectly.
I still have the same opinion ... Brazil is more diverse than the USA! It is that the U.S. has 315 million inhabitants, Brazil and just get to 200 million, and that makes a false sense that the U.S. is more diverse, but in terms of the proportion Brazil has more variety ...
Brazil has descedants from the pacific islands (facts), it has the largest asian community outside the following countries (South Korea, Japan, China, Indonesia mainly from Java who entered the country from the guyanas and since 2012 Vietnam and Thailand. Brazil has a large and small communities from Northern Africa again numbers don't matter but where they are from (Marocco, Algeria, Libya and Egypt). Yes, I already had the clue that you're clueless about Brazil which is more mulit ethic vs USA
Damn, are we tied? I think not, if you come to Brazil once, would be impressed with our diversity ... I've been to the States once and the people there are mostly Blacks and Whites reddish ... kkkk sorry for the Inglês, I'm not fluent
Culture of Brazil compared to USA. Brazil's culture is far more diverse compared to the United States. The US has more people vs Brazil, but Brazil's number of cultures are higher when you compare to the United States plus more vibrant.
You totally misinterpreted my post. I did not compare Hawai'i to Brazil. I said Hawai'i has a larger percentage of nikkei than any STATE in Brazil. I was comparing Hawai'i to Brazilian states. Percentage is much more relevant than numbers. Numbers don't matter because they can easily be dwarfed in such a populous country.
Thirdly, people of Japanese descent are 705,665 out of 41,901,219 in the state of São Paulo, which is a mere 1.7% of the state's total population that is of Japanese descent, or in another words, 1 in every 59 paulistas, making them a barely visible minority. People of Japanese descent in Hawai'i are 185,502 out of 1,392,313, which is 13.3% out of the state's total population, making them a significant minority in Hawai'i. So, check your lyrics before you decide to get slick out of the mouth.
"New York, Miami, Boston, Los Angeles, Oakland, San Francisco, Honolulu, Philadelphia, Providence, and Houston are all far more diverse than any Brazilian city." I can't speak for most of these, but I have lived in LA and Miami and my hometown of São Paulo is waaay more diverse than these 2. I would have to agree that New York may be the most culturally diverse city in the world, which is to be expected of the new Rome as John Lenon would say, but it is diverse in the American sense of the word, which is "existing side by side". Brazil has much more cultural syncretism, and ethnic mixing. So even though the US may attract a wider range of immigrants due to its economic leadership (for now) it is Brazil that actually does a better job of integrating the people and absorving the new culture into the native one. For everyone of my Brazilian friends I can count at least 5 different ethnic groups in their family trees, whereas most Americans I've known are more likely to "full blooded" whatevers. Unfortunately Americans often fail to recognize the tremendous ethnic diversity in other countries (like Brazil, Canada, and even many European countries in recent times) , because of the myth of American exceptionalism that they have bought wholesale. And one of the things many of them believe that makes it exceptional is the fact that the U.S. is made up of immigrants and people of diverse backgrounds. They think of the U.S. as a promised land that bestows upon its people unlimited room for development, personal freedom, entrepreneurship, and wealth on people who value liberty and opportunity enough to leave everything they know behind and bear the tremendous costs and risks of crossing an ocean or a desert to get there, and that it is this that makes it unique in the world. But the US is not now, nor was it ever the only multicultural country, it's just bigger and richer than most. But there are many other countries that are founded on multicultural ideals.
Keep myself high with ego? You need to get a grip and not be so personal when engaging in an online discourse... it's unbecoming and quite infantile. On another note, I'm not even from Hawai'i, so there goes your so-called theory. On another note, I don't see how you came up with a diagnosis regarding my self-esteem over unrelated comments, but now I'm seeing your angle... you're a troll, and I guess it's partially my fault for not noticing it earlier.
This is a stupid comparison. Brazil is a nation. Hawaii is a state of the United States and not a nation. Brazil, a nation, has the largest Japanese diaspora in the world outside Japan. Nobody cares about percentages. If you want to compare Brazil vs the United States, you should do that by comparing states in Brazil vs states in the United States and not a nation with one state in the US that does no represent whole USA.
seriously, you need to get out of that bubble you are. That you are a son of Brazilian immigrants says ZERO. Brazil is more diverse than the US, and that is just the reality.
Nonsense. The United States has far more immigrants than Brazil. We also have many more races and ethnic groups. Brazil lacks sizable South Asian, Southeast Asian, Pacific Islander, and North African ethnic groups that are found in the U.S. without difficulty. You can find almost everyone one of the main ethnic groups of Brazil present in the United States with abundance, which cannot be said the other way around. Brazil is far from being as multicultural as the USA. Get a clue.
hey thanks for the video.
Very nice
USA has tons of people of Indian descent, such as Kal Penn, M. Night Shyamalan, and Nina Davuluri (i.e. Miss America 2014), to name a few.
You must have visited a remote area of the States. New York, Miami, Boston, Los Angeles, Oakland, San Francisco, Honolulu, Philadelphia, Providence, and Houston are all far more diverse than any Brazilian city. The U.S. also has more Asians and Native Americans than Brazil. Both of my parents are Brazilian immigrants and they agree that the variation in the United States is far greater. Don't worry about your English, I understood everything you typed perfectly.
Brazil is the most diverse country in the world! Need not be a scholar to know that.'s Just you to learn more, it is easy to know ...
I still have the same opinion ... Brazil is more diverse than the USA! It is that the U.S. has 315 million inhabitants, Brazil and just get to 200 million, and that makes a false sense that the U.S. is more diverse, but in terms of the proportion Brazil has more variety ...
Brazil does host the largest Japanese diaspora in the world. However, Hawaii has a higher percentage of nikkei than any state in Brazil.
Brazil has descedants from the pacific islands (facts), it has the largest asian community outside the following countries (South Korea, Japan, China, Indonesia mainly from Java who entered the country from the guyanas and since 2012 Vietnam and Thailand. Brazil has a large and small communities from Northern Africa again numbers don't matter but where they are from (Marocco, Algeria, Libya and Egypt). Yes, I already had the clue that you're clueless about Brazil which is more mulit ethic vs USA
Damn, are we tied? I think not, if you come to Brazil once, would be impressed with our diversity ... I've been to the States once and the people there are mostly Blacks and Whites reddish ... kkkk
sorry for the Inglês, I'm not fluent
Culture of Brazil compared to USA.
Brazil's culture is far more diverse compared to the United States. The US has more people vs Brazil, but Brazil's number of cultures are higher when you compare to the United States plus more vibrant.
You totally misinterpreted my post. I did not compare Hawai'i to Brazil. I said Hawai'i has a larger percentage of nikkei than any STATE in Brazil. I was comparing Hawai'i to Brazilian states. Percentage is much more relevant than numbers. Numbers don't matter because they can easily be dwarfed in such a populous country.
Thirdly, people of Japanese descent are 705,665 out of 41,901,219 in the state of São Paulo, which is a mere 1.7% of the state's total population that is of Japanese descent, or in another words, 1 in every 59 paulistas, making them a barely visible minority. People of Japanese descent in Hawai'i are 185,502 out of 1,392,313, which is 13.3% out of the state's total population, making them a significant minority in Hawai'i. So, check your lyrics before you decide to get slick out of the mouth.
Putzgrilli..kkkkk..ri pa krl
No, I will meet people, come with me, come with me!!
The U.S. has more variety. That's just inarguable common knowledge.
Nossa que bagulho mais tosco mano
"New York, Miami, Boston, Los Angeles, Oakland, San Francisco, Honolulu, Philadelphia, Providence, and Houston are all far more diverse than any Brazilian city."
I can't speak for most of these, but I have lived in LA and Miami and my hometown of São Paulo is waaay more diverse than these 2. I would have to agree that New York may be the most culturally diverse city in the world, which is to be expected of the new Rome as John Lenon would say, but it is diverse in the American sense of the word, which is "existing side by side". Brazil has much more cultural syncretism, and ethnic mixing. So even though the US may attract a wider range of immigrants due to its economic leadership (for now) it is Brazil that actually does a better job of integrating the people and absorving the new culture into the native one. For everyone of my Brazilian friends I can count at least 5 different ethnic groups in their family trees, whereas most Americans I've known are more likely to "full blooded" whatevers.
Unfortunately Americans often fail to recognize the tremendous ethnic diversity in other countries (like Brazil, Canada, and even many European countries in recent times) , because of the myth of American exceptionalism that they have bought wholesale. And one of the things many of them believe that makes it exceptional is the fact that the U.S. is made up of immigrants and people of diverse backgrounds. They think of the U.S. as a promised land that bestows upon its people unlimited room for development, personal freedom, entrepreneurship, and wealth on people who value liberty and opportunity enough to leave everything they know behind and bear the tremendous costs and risks of crossing an ocean or a desert to get there, and that it is this that makes it unique in the world. But the US is not now, nor was it ever the only multicultural country, it's just bigger and richer than most. But there are many other countries that are founded on multicultural ideals.
"waaay more diverse" you aren't, no need to turn this into another competition. Can't you accept the new world is essentially made up of foreigners?
Keep myself high with ego? You need to get a grip and not be so personal when engaging in an online discourse... it's unbecoming and quite infantile. On another note, I'm not even from Hawai'i, so there goes your so-called theory. On another note, I don't see how you came up with a diagnosis regarding my self-esteem over unrelated comments, but now I'm seeing your angle... you're a troll, and I guess it's partially my fault for not noticing it earlier.
This is a stupid comparison. Brazil is a nation. Hawaii is a state of the United States and not a nation. Brazil, a nation, has the largest Japanese diaspora in the world outside Japan. Nobody cares about percentages. If you want to compare Brazil vs the United States, you should do that by comparing states in Brazil vs states in the United States and not a nation with one state in the US that does no represent whole USA.
seriously, you need to get out of that bubble you are. That you are a son of Brazilian immigrants says ZERO.
Brazil is more diverse than the US, and that is just the reality.
Nonsense. The United States has far more immigrants than Brazil. We also have many more races and ethnic groups. Brazil lacks sizable South Asian, Southeast Asian, Pacific Islander, and North African ethnic groups that are found in the U.S. without difficulty. You can find almost everyone one of the main ethnic groups of Brazil present in the United States with abundance, which cannot be said the other way around. Brazil is far from being as multicultural as the USA. Get a clue.