Thank you Rachel Dolezal. |
Except when getting approached by the police. |
Exactly. And OP well knows this (as do others who take advantage of this situation). |
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I am Mexican-American and Puerto Rican. I have put Hispanic down all my life. I have people look at me and assume I am the first in my family to go to college. People approach me in stores because they think I work there. People also think I am my children's nanny. I get stupid comments and out racist ones. I have white-ish skin, but I don't look completely white.
If you have to ask this question, the answer is NO! |
You're assuming a lot with that last sentence. Op is just recognizing/ accepting/ honoring at the time of college application the Chilean grandfather bloodline. Prior to that, she was proud of the all American white person. |
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What have you put the past 17 years? If Hispanic, put that. If white, put that. If biracial or something else, put that.
If you haven't ever put Hispanic before...that seems like gaming the system and would make me uncomfortable. But I guess you "can" do it...just depends on your conscious. |
Wow all but 5 are crazy stereotypes. Guess what? I was born in South America and spent most of my childhood there. I came to the U.S. with my parents when I was 12 . I would check no to all but number 5. |
I am a gringa from the Southwest, and I would answer yes to three of these five questions. (Actually, I'd answer yes to 4 of them...because number 5 is phrased so that a "yes" answer means you should not check the box.) |
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No joke.... my DH's friend's DD is going to Duke (in a medical graduate program) on a full scholarship b/c her grandmother is from Paraguay. She (student) has a German last name and has lived in the US or Canada her whole life. The only reason she got the scholarship is b/c she claimed "hispanic."
DH's nephews both attended a large, well-known state university for FREE b/c their father is of mexican heritage (although he lived in the US his whole life). Their mother (my SIL) is blonde and blue eyed northern european/midwestern decent. The only reason they "speak Spanish" is b/c they took Spanish in college and did the semester in Spain. F-R-E-E four years tuition. Their father (the one of mexican descent) has a PhD in physical therapy and drives a Lexus. They have never wanted for anything. So, I guess you can claim it. If the universities are too stupid to check it out or define it better, then you might as well take it. |
There is no gaming the system, because there's no benefit to being Latino in higher Ed. If you can write an essay about the hardship that you endured as an upper middle class kid growing up in Bethesda, then you might have a shot at a merit scholarship. |
You're assuming too! |
You have GOT to be kidding me. I am half Colombian and none of these, except 5, apply to me. Does that mean I'm somehow less "half-Hispanic" than someone for whom all apply?
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The Ivy bound "National Hispanic Scholar" from our HS didn't speak spanish, born in the US of professionals w/advanced degrees (one of whom had hispanic heritage). IMHO this was not the profile of a student this program was set-up to help.
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My worry is the universities are in on this scam. The U's would rather have assurance that the student can pay the balance (affluent/educated parents) and are likely to graduate (affluent/educated parents) I think U's look the other way. They are happy to check-off their own box claiming diversity. |
race can be fluid, just like gender.
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