People who have internalized their racism need White people too help them understand their intersectionality. |
The older I get, the more I socialize only with myself, because I am one of a kind. |
You are NOT the OP, I am!! OP = original poster; the person creates the thread. You are PP. Or identify yourself with your time stamp. |
Socializing with your own kind starts young. Our school busses Hispanic kids from another area. My kid says the Hispanic kids have their own groups, the white kids have their own groups, and the rest of the kids stick together. |
Hispanic and Latino are made up terms as well. We have been tricked into thinking that Spanish speakers are an oppressed people group of color and therefore whenever we say we want to shut the border we are called racist. |
I wish. I don't think my own kind exists in many places. |
Came across this related research article. As we might have suspected, there is benefit to social similarity (they studied age, education, income, and race) but that benefit drops at some point (see figure 2).
Variety Is the Spice of Life: Diverse Social Networks Are Associated With Social Cohesion and Well-Being Both homophily and heterophily are observed in humans. Homophily reinforces homogeneous social networks, and heterophily creates new experiences and collaborations. However, at the extremes, high levels of homophily can cultivate prejudice toward out-groups, whereas high levels of heterophily can weaken in-group support. Using data from 24,726 adults (M = 46 years; selected from 10,398 English neighborhoods) and the composition of their social networks based on age, ethnicity, income, and education, we tested the hypothesis that a middle ground between homophily and heterophily could be the most beneficial for individuals. We found that network homophily, mediated by perceived social cohesion, is associated with higher levels of subjective well-being but that there are diminishing returns, because at a certain point increasing network homophily is associated with lower social cohesion and, in turn, lower subjective well-being. Our results suggest that building diverse social networks provides benefits that cannot be attained by homogeneous networks. https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/09567976241243370 |
Yes. |
I socialize with same socio-economic group only, people from all sorts of countries, backgrounds and religion. |
Me too. We are all very wealthy, send our kids to the same schools, are members of the same clubs, travel to many of the same places yet we are all of different races, religions and backgrounds. The common bonds are achievement, means and related interests. |
It's also very regional. In TX, many people say Hispanic. In GA, most people say Latino. I'm talking about people who are Hispanic and Latino. In CA, it's Latino. You don't hear Hispanic in DC too much. |
That's because of the bussing aspect. My kids' school is 40+% Hispanic and everyone socializes with everybody. |
I am Asian-American and have always had a very diverse friend group. My DH is African-American and has social interactions with all different people but I would say almost 100% of his close friends are also African-American. It used to bother me bc I always have been so open to anyone and it felt limiting to form a community together when he only truly opens himself up to people like him. However with time I've just come to accept that this is one area where we will always be very different. |
I struggle with this. My kids go to a Title 1 school. 40% of students are low income and mostly Hispanic. DD says the kids all play together during recess, but after school? Pretty much never. We've invited kids to playdates, invited the whole class to DD's birthday, but only the middle class kids (mostly white) come. We don't even get a response to any invites. We've also never received an invite from anyone outside of that bubble too. Some of it is a language barrier because they didn't speak the same language initially in K. |