I hate this kind of talk for perpetuating the notion that Asians somehow have it easy.
I'm Asian.
Parents are immigrants.
Grew up in a family of 5 with an annual income of about 25k.
Moved around constantly due to my dad's work.
All 3 kids went to college.
Faced regular discrimination throughout my life.
I'm a doctor.
Life was hard for a long fuckin time.
I have a similar background.
Immigrated with my mother when I was 4.
Grew up in family of 3 (Mom, sister) with an annual income of 25K
Moved around constantly due to my mom's work (MA->IL->Taipei->NY->NJ->NJ).
Both my sister and I went to college (sister went to UPenn + Wharton MBA)
Life was hard for a long fuckin' time (maybe more so because my Mom was a single Mom).
But let's be real: "Faced regular discrimination" is not something I would say Asians could compare to what black Americans go through. Sure, there were some names thrown my way when I was growing up, but I don't think I'd call that "discrimination".
In a sense, there is a positive Asian stereotype that works in our favor that simply isn't present for black Americans. Good at math, studies hard, nerd, quiet, well behaved, etc.
In the big picture of things, Asians do have it relatively "easy" compared to Hispanics or blacks. I don't think you can even compare the levels of actual, systemic discrimination faced by blacks with what is faced by Asians partially because of the positive stereotypes associated with Asians.