First off, Canada is
bilingual and secondly we have
higher levels of diversity. We are also home to the city most often cited as the most multicultural in the world, the place I currently live in, Toronto.
Correct, Canada has two official languages, America has zero. You're restating my original point, that a national language has never been as important to America as it is to countries like Canada.
Canada isn't really more diverse, it's more that Canadians are more likely to identity as ___ or smaller subgroups than Americans. Hence the America is much better at integrating immigrants over time.
To that point, America is about 59% white identifying versus almost 70% for Canada. After that, it's Hispanic Latino (19%, but some are also white), Black (13%), and then Asian (13%) for the US and then Asians (20%) and then indigenous (5%) and a bunch of small populations.
TLDR: The only groups where Canada over indexes against the US is Asians and indigenous people.
Also, I like how the goal posts are shifted from "you've never stepped foot in America" to "you've never stepped foot in one of these enclaves in America." The moment you discover I have actually stepped foot in America.
The goal posts didn't move, you're just terrible at reading.
Assuming you've been to the US, what insular diaspora communities that don't learn English did you spend time with?
What was your experience like?
It's not arrogance to talk about immigration in a thread about immigration especially when it wasn't specified whether or not the TS was American himself or if this was Infact about America. That's a tactic your using to obfuscate any opinions you don't like. This is something you've repeatedly done when you don't have an actual argument.
For someone convinced immigrants are ruining their country, you show little critical thinking.
The first post mentions English proficiency, which rules out Canada since it has two official languages. Then most of the posts on the first page refer to Spanish and Latino immigrants. What countries speak primarily English, but not French, and have a large migrant community of Spanish speakers?
Not to mention, statistically speaking, unless Canadians love Sherdog more than Americans, you're almost 10 times as likely to encounter Americans on Sherdog than Canadians.