While this is true, it all depends on the time period as well the region. Now a days those nationalities don't face nearly as much (if any) racism as they used to. Schwarzenegger was Austrian, and since most Americans probably closely associate Austrian with German I'm gonna assume he never really had to face discrimination based on his race or nationality.Dirty Hipsters said:Yes, because no one in America hates, or has ever hated other white Europeans, like the Italians, or the Irish, or the French, or the Polish, or the Russians.thaluikhain said:He understands his experience, not everyone is going to share it. He has the advantage, off the top of my head, of being a white European, and thus not subject to the same racism.Ihateregistering1 said:2: Even if they didn't, why would you need it? Millions upon millions of past immigrants have learned the language of the country they immigrated to without expensive lessons. To give one good example, Arnold Schwarzenegger immigrated to the US when he was 21, barely speaking a word of English (he had almost no money either). How did he learn English? By watching movies and TV, reading books, avoiding surrounding himself entirely with German speaking people, and doing everything he could to practice his English whenever possible (he did eventually take English classes, but not until 9 years after he arrived). When Schwarzenegger suggested that Hispanic immigrants do the same thing and turn off Univision and Telemundo and Spanish radio stations, he was called racist and was told that he "didn't understand immigration". Yes, a guy who immigrated here with no English ability and $17 in his pocket clearly knows nothing about the immigrant experience.
Considering that Germans were one of the more dominant European nationalities in America since its colonization and birth, they never really faced the kind of discrimination that the Irish and Italians did. While there was some discrimination against Germans in WWI and WWII, Arnold Schwarzenegger immigrated to the US in 1968, and any such discrimination against Germans would have most likely disappeared years ago.