Posted by Ilya Somin:
Thirty Years in America:
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2009_05_31-2009_06_06.shtml#1244339149


   In addition to being the 65th anniversary of D-Day, today is the 30th
   anniversary of my arrival in the United States from Russia, at the age
   of five. Nothing else that has ever happened in my life had a greater
   positive impact on me than my parents' decision to leave the Soviet
   Union and come to this country. The gains in both standard of living
   and - even more so - personal freedom have been enormous.

   Life in post-Soviet Russia is in many ways better than in the days of
   communism. But living standards for most people remain far lower than
   in the West, and the regime of ex-KGB Colonel Vladimir Putin rolled
   back some of the political freedoms that Russians had begun to enjoy
   in the 1990s.

   The advantages of life in the US over life in Russia are perhaps too
   obvious to dwell on. Less often appreciated are the ways in which life
   for immigrants in America is much better than in most other affluent
   liberal democracies. Although the US is not free of racism and
   nativist xenophobia, on the whole immigrants are much better accepted
   by natives than in almost all of the many other countries I have seen.
   We take it for granted that a person born in Russia or China or India
   can become as much a "real American" as the descendants of the
   Founding Fathers. Yet such ready acceptance is far less common
   elsewhere. In trips abroad, I have seen Russian immigrant communities
   in several countries, including France, [1]Germany, and Israel, and
   spoken extensively with relatives and other Russians living there. In
   each case, they are less assimilated, worse off economically, and have
   much more tense relations with native-born citizens than the Russians
   who have come to the US over the last several decades.

   In addition to the greater acceptance of immigrants by natives, an
   important advantage of the US for recent immigrants is that of
   relatively free labor markets, which make it much easier to get jobs.
   In Western Europe and Israel, I saw many Russian Jewish immigrants who
   either depend on welfare or are seriously underemployed. Both are far
   less common among Russians in this country, except for the elderly.
   European and Israeli labor regulations make it far harder to fire
   workers; but that also makes employers more reluctant to take a chance
   on recent arrivals from abroad. Obviously, jobs are an essential
   prerequisite for moving up the economic ladder and a crucial pathway
   to acceptance and assimilation.

   Life for immigrants in the United States isn't perfect, and I of
   course recognize that many have not been as lucky as I was. But we
   immigrants have reason to be grateful that it is so much better than
   anything we could have found anywhere else.

References

   1. http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2008_01_06-2008_01_12.shtml#1199601038

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