Except that there is an exception in the US called: The Asians (not mentioned in that anti-racist math guide)
I'm sure there could be reasons given for selective immigration for Chinese, Korean and even Filipino students here in California (which is the state the guide is meant for)
But what of the Vietnamese? the Cambodians?
These were refugees that came in the 70's and 80's with very little in terms of education, English skills, and nearly all were in the poverty bracket.
So I looked at the main
public high school in Little Saigon here in Westminster. 80% Asian (nearly all are Vietnamese), 3% white. 62% of students considered low income. 17% are learning English.
In every metric, they
still do
better than every other ethnicity. Better than the nearby majority white school in the affluent beach community of Corona del Mar where low income students are just 9%. (it was actually difficult to find a public school around here with majority white students that was near enough to compare).
This result is repeated again and again and again in schools across the state.
Recommendations on race inequalities in Math that focus on "white supremacy" when the top scores are by far the Asian students- no matter their income or culture or English skills when they get here is quite a big omission. At the very least they should give some theory on why they excel.
Asian students are more than double the population of black students in the state and second in immigration only to hispanics.