Seriously. Nose job for sure. Phhhht. why do people hide their background this way? This is clearly a biracial person B/W. It saddens me so much. I am white have adopted biracial b/w kids. I find the attitude of hiding this to be very prevalent among southern europeans--really all europeans. |
Seriously. I was about to say the same thing. |
They say that they are100% Italian. Here are her sisters : http://anythingnjhousewives.files.wordpress.com/2012/07/marco.jpg |
|
Not directly relevant, but it gives an idea of how northerners feel about southerners: Years ago in Pisa there was a prominent graffito that said "Meglio Ebrei que Terroni" [better Jews than southerners]. I was never sure whether that really indicated more dislike for the latter than the former, but it was pretty clear there was no love for either group. "Rednecks" might give a better idea of "terroni".
Last time I was there, it was gone, but I just took a virtual trip to the street where I think I saw it (via Google Maps) and found a different one. Can anyone translate? Looks to me like someone really digs the band Tetania, but I could be way off.
|
|
Something about not staying without you, Tania?
I've never properly studied Italian, so, you know, I'm not gonna be the best translator. But I think that's on track, no? |
| So the Northerners dislike Southern Italians and Sicilians because of their skin coloring? |
Sorry, bitch. Most Italian-Americans have parents who were actively forced to assimilate (i.e., the grandparents would not LET them speak Italian) because of discrimination. Many (like me) relearned Italian via college or study abroad. It's sad that discrimination worked that way, but it's not like Italian-Americans wanted to give up any part of their culture, more that they wanted to "fit in" (and with lots of senators, supreme court justices, doctors, lawyers who are Italian-American, I think they succeeded. And yeah, idiot reality TV stars, too, sigh). And Italians in Italy aren't douchebags to Italian-Americans the way Irish are to Irish-Americans. So there's that. |
| It's elitist and racist IMO. People from the south are thought to be simple and dark. North the opposite. Really goes back to the days when Italy was made up of many, distinct pseudo-countries pre-WWII |
Certo! "te Tania", non "Tetania". Grazie. But that "fu'" I don't get. "There's no --- to be without you, Tania"? Anyway, it seems like a great improvement over the one I remembered. I love the fact that Google let me check it out. |
BS. My grandmother (now 102) was second generation German, born in Indiana in 1910. Everyone in her family spoke German and went to German language schools until the start of WWI when it became unpopular to be heard speaking German. My mother never learned German but many of the things we did were still culturally German. I was an exchange student to Germany when I was 14 and was surprised at how similarities there were. I was spent significant amounts of time in Italy (I have a BA in Classical Languages) and Asia. Those cultures were not nearly as familiar to me as German culture. It doesn't really matter if you consider someone Italian-American or German-American. In America, we're allowed to self-identify. |
All three look biracial to me. |
When I was pregnant I had to take a blood test similar to tests taken by African Americans - a form of sickle cell, I guess. - Southern Italian here often mistaken as a Northerner |
agree Sono Italiana ma sono nata qui. Siamo dal Sud. |
I am first generation - and I'm old, hon. I grew up bilingual, as my parents and grandparents never lost the language. |
Race baiting troll. South italy is closer to Africa and NOBODY is from Africa. |