This article very nearly made me cry, but it was fascinating.
Good read, and not atypical in my experience. I know a LOT of folks in the 21-40 age range who are 1st generation Americans, children of Indians, Taiwanese, Chinese, Koreans, etc. and have that attitude. They're strongly nativizing, in the same way that my own grandmothers forgot their native
Volgadeutsch and spoke only English. It's more than just Americanizing, it's full assimilation where the old culture and values are forgotten. And that attitude just gets stronger the younger you go. When I started learning Mandarin, most of my classmates were Chinese-Americans who were only learning it because their families were putting pressure on them to, and who mostly didn't want to be there.
I had one Taiwanese friend pay me the odd compliment of calling me a
ji dan ("egg"), because I was "white on the outside and yellow on the inside". Mostly because his other 1st or 2nd generation Asian friends weren't interested in their own culture, and I was.
And I think a lot of *why* there's a mass migration away from being more "American" and less "Asian" is the sort of pressurized hell that the article describes. When I was in high school, one of the big powerhouses in the state in terms of scholastic competitions had this elite squad of Vietnamese prodigies that were living calculators, but could barely hold a normal conversation without a handler present. It was really, really sad and a big part of why I chose not to go the overachiever/Valedictorian/triple major path in school.