| >The US is a much more diverse population... Why is this always a fallback reference point? It is demonstrably false[0,1,2,3] and is continually regurgitated - as if the continued repetition would make it consequently true. There are countries in Europe that are far more diverse than the United States. Full stop. >But dealing with that chaos, at that scale, produces lessons and learning that won't happen anywhere else, other than probably India. You could start with your immediate neighbours, yeah? Canada and Mexico are both far more diverse than the United States and would - by your own argument - be far more chaotic than anything the United States or Europe has to deal with, yeah? [0] - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_ranked_by_et... [1] - https://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2013/07/18/the-most-an... [2] - https://www.atlasandboots.com/worlds-most-diverse-country/ [3] - https://archive.fo/9AV1K |
Sort the first table by rank US - 87 UK -109 France - 117 Germany - 148. When we talk about the West who else is anyone referring to? Denmark - 144. Norway - 146.
My comment is in response to someone separating the US from the west, not US compared to the rest of the world. So don't be in such a hurry to react.
The data shows the US is more diverse than other western countries.
Population is another important factor. What happens in a city of 10 million people and what happens in a country of 10 million people is very different. I come from India and have lived in both the US and Europe. My city has a population somewhere between Ireland and Norway but it's impossible to handle social issues the way those countries do or use them as models precisely because of the population density and diversity.