If you must discriminate please don't to the Jews.
- snitzoid
- 2 hours ago
- 5 min read
Honestly, most people hate someone. I'm especially offended that recent illegals who receive free Visa cards, hotel rooms, and such aren't receiving the love they deserve and receive a cold shoulder from an uncaring public.
What's worse, however, is you're choice of folks to dislike. If you must discriminate, don't, I repeat, don't look down on a Jew. Particularly a White Jew (like myself) who is dripping with privilege. Sure, I went to an elite school (& grad school...let's not forget that), live on a lavish estate and fly private (sorry). That my fault? Worry about yourself, fool...by the way did anyone ever mention you're narcissistic?
How Much Discrimination Do Americans Say Groups Face in the U.S.?
PEW Research, May 20, 2025
Republicans are less likely to say there is discrimination against Black, Hispanic, Asian and White people than a year ago
Large majorities of Americans say numerous groups in the United States face at least some discrimination, including immigrants, transgender people and members of different racial and religious groups.

About eight-in-ten (82%) say immigrants who are in the U.S. illegally experience a lot of or some discrimination – including 57% who say they face a lot of discrimination, according to a new Pew Research Center survey of U.S. adults.
That is the highest share for any group among 20 included in the survey. Still, there is a widespread belief that many other societal groups also are discriminated against:
77% say people who are transgender face at least some discrimination, with 48% saying this group experiences a lot of discrimination.
74% say Muslims in the U.S. face a lot of or some discrimination, while a similar share (72%) say Jews face at least some discrimination. Roughly a third say there is a lot of discrimination against those in each of these groups.
Nearly three-quarters of Americans say Black people (74%) and Hispanic people (72%) face at least some discrimination. About two-thirds (66%) say Asian people face a lot of or some discrimination.
While there is a widespread perception that immigrants who are in the U.S. illegally face discrimination, 65% say immigrants who are legally in this country also face a lot of or some bias.
70% say people who are gay or lesbian encounter at least some discrimination.
There is also variation in perceptions of discrimination across other demographic categories:
Women and men. Nearly two-thirds of adults (64%) say women face at least some discrimination, with far fewer (34%) saying the same about men.
Religious groups. A 57% majority of adults say people who are religious are subject to a lot of or some discrimination; just a third say atheists in the U.S. face at least some bias. When asked about specific religious groups, far fewer Americans (43%) say evangelical Christians face a lot of or some discrimination than say this about either Muslims (74%) or Jews (72%).
Age groups. A much larger share of the public says older people (59%) than younger people (40%) face at least some discrimination in the U.S.
Where people live. Fewer than half of Americans say that people living in rural areas or city dwellers face a lot of or some discrimination. But a larger share say rural residents are subject to at least some discrimination (41%) than say this about people living in cities (33%).
These are among the key findings of a national Pew Research Center survey of 3,589 U.S. adults conducted April 7-13, 2025.
The survey also finds that perceptions of discrimination against racial and ethnic groups – Black people, Hispanic people, Asian people and White people – have declined over the past year. These changes have been largely driven by Republicans and Republican-leaning independents. There have been virtually no changes in the views of Democrats and Democratic leaners over this period.
Republicans and Democrats continue to have very different views of how much discrimination many groups face in the U.S. While there have been some shifts since last year, the partisan patterns are consistent.
Democrats are more likely than Republicans to say most of the groups asked about face at least some discrimination. But there are exceptions among certain groups.

Democrats are more likely than Republicans to say that 15 of 20 groups included in the survey face a lot of or some discrimination. These are the widest differences:
People who are gay or lesbian (90% of Democrats vs. 50% of Republicans)
Black people (94% vs. 54%)
Immigrants who are in the U.S. legally (84% vs. 45%)
Hispanic people (90% vs. 54%)
Women (80% vs. 47%)
Partisan differences extend to how much discrimination various groups face. For instance, while majorities in both partisan coalitions (94% of Democrats, 69% of Republicans) say that people who are in the U.S. illegally face at least some discrimination, Democrats are about twice as likely as Republicans to say they face a lot of discrimination (75% vs. 37%).
Similarly, majorities of Republicans and Democrats say transgender people and Muslims in the U.S. face at least some discrimination. But in both cases, far larger shares of Democrats than Republicans say they face a lot of discrimination.
For some groups, however, there is little to no partisan gap in these perceptions. Sizable majorities in both parties (77% of Democrats, 69% of Republicans) say Jews in the U.S. face at least some bias, including about three-in-ten in each party who say Jews face a lot of discrimination. And Democrats (44%) and Republicans (39%) are about equally likely to say people in rural areas face discrimination.
Declining shares of Americans say the country’s largest racial and ethnic groups face at least some discrimination, and this decline is driven primarily by Republicans.

Between 2024 and 2025, the shares of Republicans who say each group faces a lot of or some discrimination declined by roughly 10 percentage points for:
Black people (66% in 2024, 54% now)
Hispanic people (66% in 2024, 54% now)
Asian people (66% in 2024, 51% now)
White people (66% in 2024, 55% now)
The shares of Democrats who say these groups face at least some discrimination are essentially unchanged from last year.
Americans are also less likely to say Muslims and Jews face discrimination than a year ago. The shares saying Muslims (34%) and Jews (30%) experience a lot of discrimination are down 10 points from early last year. The share of Americans saying Muslims experience discrimination is now lower than at any point over the last eight years. But the share saying Jews face discrimination is higher than it was from 2017 to 2021.
Read Chapter 2 for more on Americans’ views of how much discrimination there is against Muslims, Jews and evangelicals.
The share of Republicans saying there is discrimination against people who are gay or lesbian has also declined. Half of Republicans now say gay and lesbian people face at least some discrimination, down from 59% in 2021 and 64% in 2017. Democrats (90%) continue to overwhelmingly say gays and lesbians experience discrimination.