Uh, you’re playing into their hands taking their claim as true.
There is a HUGE cohort of dark-skinned industry leaders in Silicon Valley. They’re called Indians.
How Indians Conquered Silicon Valley
Release Date:
01/17/2012
Here’s an extract from the piece
The proportion of Indian-founded startups in Silicon Valley startups had increased from 7% to 15.5%, even though Indians make up just 6% of the Valleys working population.
Indian immigrants were standing shoulder-to-shoulder with the worlds most innovative tech workers, and were matching them in entrepreneurship The Indian networking organizations learned the rules of engagement of Silicon Valley and mastered these. For a while, these were the most vibrant and active professional associations in the region.
Why were Indians so successful?
The first few who cracked the glass ceiling had open discussions about the hurdles they had faced.
They agreed that the key to uplifting their community, and fostering more entrepreneurship in general, was to teach and mentor the next generation of entrepreneurs.
They formed networking organizations to teach others about starting businesses, and to bring people together.
These organizations helped to mobilize the information, knowhow, skill, and capital needed to start technology companies. Even the newer associations had several hundred members each, and the more established associations had more than a thousand members.
The first generation of successful entrepreneurspeople like Sun Microsystems co-founder Vinod Khosla—served as visible, vocal, role models and mentors. They also provided seed funding to members of their community.
flash, you missed the key factor in the indian move into the US tech sector...
indians hire indians.
oh, sorry... was i not supposed to mention that?