And? |
Those are in combination. I'm at least 2/3 of those and probably 3/3 if I go back far enough. There's a lot of overlap in those numbers. People who have been here since 1850 have pretty mixed origin. |
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Yep! I am all three! About 3/4 Irish, but the final 1/4 is split almost equally between German and English.
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NP here. I grew up in NoVA so probably did not know as many as you but still knew a decent number, so I was SHOCKED when I met a new friend in my 20s who had moved here from Texas and she told me she had never known real Jews before; she thought it was only a historical religion from the past!!! |
| Pretty sure most white Americans aren’t 100% English. We are mostly mutts by this point. |
I grew up in the upper Midwest, small towns, and only met one Jewish person and one Italian before I moved to DC when I was 18. I thought most white people in the U.S. were German or Scandinavian! |
(I mean I used to think this before moving to the East Coast 30 years ago). |
Yeah, but we're proud mutts. If anything, we're disappointed when we take DNA tests and there aren't more different countries or ethnicities represented. |
That is true. I once said that to a white American, and they didn't take it too kindly, even though it's probably true. |
The English were slave-owners from the earliest days they invaded so-called “America.” |
“So-called “America’”? GTFOH, Russian troll. |
Yes but English is the most common ancestry in the South according to the Census. |
Except for Chicago & Detroit areas, you can go years in the Midwest & South without meeting an Italian-American. |
| People who left Portugal, Spain, & Italy often went to South America instead of North America. |
| I lived in a town in Michigan with about 4000 people. Lots of German, Polish, & French names. Everybody knew the one Jewish family (a doctor & his family). There was one clearly Italian family, & their son was a friend of mine. When the Godfather movie came out, he endured endless good-natured kidding. |