This is a different question though altogether. When you are a tourist in another country, they want to know where you are traveling from. Not where you grew up. |
You are odd for being so secretive. Really. it's you, not them. If I was in another major city full of transplants like NYC and someone dodged answering the question, I'd automatically assume very strange person. |
Exactly. Would you prefer people make assumptions? Would you prefer people not care or acknowledge? I live in MoCo where we have a very diverse Spanish speaking population. I hate it when people assume we have lots of Mexicans living here. Guess what? We don’t. We have newly arrived immigrants from dozens of Spanish speaking countries alongside first generation, second generation, etc. I hope we can move away from this micro aggression stuff and determine how to have polite, friendly conversations about such stuff. Right now, it feels like we can’t ask. |
What about when I’m on a business trip? What about if a colleague asks? The assumption is where do you currently live, not where were you born 40 years ago. |
Again - if you are a tourist, question means where are you visiting from. If you are in the town you live in, i.e., you are at work, they are obviously asking where you came from. Like, what's your hometown. This is playing coy to pretend you don't understand the question. Give me a break! |
I'm sorry you've had to deal with such ignorance. But I'm genuinely curious, when you say "uncultured pasty white person" are you trying to imply that white people on the more orange/olive spectrum are more cultured? Since you believe that the range of skin tones within any ethnic or racial group is relevant to the conversation, do you see skin tone generally as an indicator of the character of the human you're interacting with? |
I don't dodge the question; as I said, I have a pat answer I give that sums it up. I just find this type of conversation dull and pointless. Do you also routinely ask people how many siblings they have and what their first pet's name was? Who cares about information from 20+ years ago? |
You are one of those black/white take everything literally people. Exhausting, but okay. If I meet someone for the first time and they ask where I am from, I say I grew up in Mayberry and have lived in Dcumlandia for the last 20 years. You know what your problem is? You aren’t precise with your words. If you want to know where someone grew up, then say that instead of where are you from. Your fixation is weird and I can’t figure out why you feel so irritated by this. The reasonable response is to clarify with a more precise question. |
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OP, some people are embarrassed about being from certain areas.
Other people are proud of being from certain areas. I find the question ("where are you from') intriguing - and very telling if people are offended by it - not for the better. If someone judges you for asking that question, you have every right to judge their answer. |
Bold above is racist. |
| Reminds me of a girl I met freshman year of college. I asked her where she was from and she said "the city" so I asked what part. She responded "Greenwich" and I said "oh, Greenwich Village? Cool." And she said "no, Greenwich, CT." LOL |
I'm the pp. My hometown has locally recognized negative connotations, particularly in Virginia. It doesn't have to be "national." When I moved further south or west, it wasn't a problem. When I move to within one or two states near Virginia, it is an issue. Have literally had coworkers refuse to talk to me, because they hated my hometown so much when stationed there. Hint Hint. After I opened up how much I hated it too, we usually became friendly. That's when I learned that it's best not to talk about specifically where I am from until I get to know others better. |
I suspect you are projecting. |
You aren't genuinely curious you are trying to stir up crap. And they said that these SPECIFIC white people were uncultured because they didn't know not to ask 'where are you FROM FROM' which is rude. Example: no one has EVER asked me, a white person, where I'm FROM FROM despite the fact that I'm actually first generation American. But if you don't look white you will get this question a lot. |
Why is this racist. They didn't say all whites are uncultured. Also---you can't be racist against whites because racism has the element of a power structure within society behind it. Prejudiced against whites, sure. Not racist. |