"You don't think blacks are as intelligent as asians, so if you had to hire a mathematician, you are going to look for an asian first, which is fucking stupid, because now you aren't giving a black person a chance, which is inherently racist."
According to Malcom Gladwell in his book Outliers, the reason asians are so good at math is that their language facilitates mental calculation. Their words for numbers are shorter than English equivalents, and follow along the lines of "3 tens 4, plus 4 tens 5, equals 7 tens 9", instead of our "Thirty-four plus forty-five equals seventy-nine." With asians having this advantage in the language of numbers, it makes sense to hire them for jobs requiring strong mathematical skills.
On the concept of anarchy in general, I would like to say that I leaned toward Mark (the show's host) and his ideas about anarcho-capitalism rather than Ian's. I would think that an-cap is a great idea--in theory--but practically unworkable. "Show me any examples of an-cap working" I would mentally argue with Ian. Now, I have purchased a book that almost makes Ian's argument for him. In "33 Questions You're Not Supposed to Ask about American History", by Tom Woods, it discusses the "Wild" West days, and how relatively tame those days were. Apparently, there are more crimes committed in a single year in a modern American city than there were in the whole Wild West Days, in the whole Wild West. What's further, many of the individuals who lived in that time and place did so without government supervision. They dealt with each other on a voluntary basis, setting up more-or-less private institutions to deal with establishing property boundries and for adjudicating crimes. As one scholar was quoted as saying, "When everyone has a gun, people tend to avoid confrontations."