I have two immigrant parents and am 100% Hispanic. I’ve met people at work who are listed as Hispanic and have one Hispanic grandparent who they never met, don’t look Hispanic, don’t know Spanish, don’t have a Hispanic name and weren’t raised as Hispanic. Obviously, there are some people who will benefit from a “check your own ethnicity” system - but it seems preferable to a system where race and ethnicity is stamped on you at birth on your birth certificate. Hispanics are a huge, varied group in the U.S. I have not seen that checking that box has much influence on admissions. |
I don't agree with this at all. |
For many people it can, whether it is pc to say or not Revealed preference makes it pretty obvious it’s a big deal |
Be brave. https://www.axios.com/2022/09/07/approval-of-interracial-marriage-america |
Nope - then again they attended a pretty diverse HS so I'm not sure the landscape changed much. |