Don't forget to tell you what "real" or "authentic" "Chinese" food is. Orange chicken comes from somewhere and just because it isn't considered "exotic" (and Chinese means exotic), doesn't make it fake. You can't win with these people. To them diversity and tolerance means all coloreds meet their stereotypes. Ironically, if some people were allowed to explore "their heritage" and how "foreign" they are or how much they have assimilated, they wouldn't ask "where you are from". But again you'll find comments about how when "whites" do it, it is racist. |
OP here. Yes this is the problem. Too many different countries to pinpoint something. And also don't feel a connection to any of those at all. Maybe Great Britain the most? |
I'm telling you, Boris Johnson is the way to go. |
My DH is from the UK. You can bring some spotted dick. That will be popular. When DH first told our very American kids about spotted dick, they howled.
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To me these are two different things. The event OP is referring to is about showing your culture. Clearly her child's culture is not in another country. She says it herself. She has European roots if you go back several generations, but we are not talking about genealogy here. Everybody has roots somewhere, it doesn't mean you belong to that place or that you have anything in common with the people who live there. Look, I find it funny but annoying that the world' superpower, whose culture has been exported and valued the most, is filled with people who, despite being constantly told that they are superior to the "rest of the world", feel the need to claim a different culture to feel special. |
I would not be bringing a certain type of British meatball though, the name might offend some. |
Who is this rude “you’re ignorant” poster? That was actually a terrific analogy. But your rudeness is highly representative of the current climate in the US so you’re representing well for your culture! P.S. people who live in Argentina are also American and I suspect they’d prefer to be left out of your version of American culture. |
Don't forget Peruvian. 20% of the population is mixed Chinese or Japanese as was their president. The first American (US) Ace of WWII, Arthur Chin, was from this heritage. Doesn't fit into the racist woke ideology and conspiracies, with just as many fallacies as Nazism, where that filth belongs. I've worked with actual people from the Caucus Mountains (actual Caucasians). They are not German or "white", all look like, because they are the same people, yet and hate each other. Same BS "logic" that says that Germans are Aryans from India but Roma (Gypsies) also from "India" are not. The racist left is no different in their fake hierarchy and history. |
I am biracial/multicultural and grew up going to an international where we celebrated United Nations day in much the same way op is describing. We could either dress in our traditional clothing or wear the colors of our flag. I usually switched off between American (one parent’s side) and the country of my other parent. Years that went as American, I brought pb&j sandwiches as my traditional food
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🙄 I would definitely ignore and just pick something. Anything other than sitting it out. |
If your kid is a girl, go as the queen! And bring fries and call them chips. Or little scones and clotted cream. |
Not sure if you were trying to make a joke. But it wasn’t funny if so. OPs white child, along with other whites, simply need to sit this one out. |
I disagree. Non-American whites have their own culture, too. DH is a Brit, and on international night, my DC did something about the UK. The vast majority of Americans don't know that much about the UK other than about mad King George, the Revolutionary war and the royal family there. I think OP should go but not take anything to represent "USA" since we live in the USA and its culture is the dominant culture, and this night is supposed to be about the nondominant culture. If OP doesn't have any specific non-American culture to represent, then just go and enjoy as an observor. You can still appreciate other people's culture. |
| I have seen families show off their state of origin rather than a country. |
With all due respect, you’re a moron. Anyway, if you have a mixed ancestry, why not pick one of your ancestors who had an interesting history and focus on that. Like, “I picked Germany because one of my ancestors came to the US in the 1840’s to avoid being drafted into the Bavarian army. I brought soft pretzels for everyone.” |