Anonymous wrote:When people ask me where I am from I don't say I'm AA, I say I'm from New York. Why not just tell people where you were born rather than your ethnicity?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When I answer that I'm originally from Pittsburgh, I'm asked where I'm really from. It's veiled racism. They are trying to stereotype you and you don't fit their mental image of what you should be, so they discredit your answer.
How does that work? People can already see that you are Asian. Why is it veiled racism and stereotyping trying to learn if you are of Chinese or Taiwanese decent?
Because PP isn't from China or Taiwan! He or she is from freaking Pittsburgh! It's racism and stereotyping to assume that an Asian person is foreign or can't really be from the US. If you must be so bold as to ask what someone's ethnicity is, then use the right words. What is your ethnicity? Not "where are you from" because they're from Pittsburgh.
Anonymous wrote:When I answer that I'm originally from Pittsburgh, I'm asked where I'm really from. It's veiled racism. They are trying to stereotype you and you don't fit their mental image of what you should be, so they discredit your answer.
How does that work? People can already see that you are Asian. Why is it veiled racism and stereotyping trying to learn if you are of Chinese or Taiwanese decent?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When someone speaks with an accent, I do ask where they’re from. I certainly hope I’m not offending anyone - it’s simply that I want to know more about them. I would never ask that of someone without an accent, however.
Don’t do this. It can definitely be offensive.
Anonymous wrote:Look, I just turned 54. I'm an American born of Chinese descent. I have no Chinese accent. I actually speak Mandarin with a slight American accent (slight enough that most people don't think I'm American, but Chinese think I'm Taiwanese and Taiwanese think I'm from China).
And yet, I still routinely have people ask where I'm from. When I answer that I'm originally from Pittsburgh, I'm asked where I'm really from. It's veiled racism. They are trying to stereotype you and you don't fit their mental image of what you should be, so they discredit your answer.
When I answer that I'm originally from Pittsburgh, I'm asked where I'm really from. It's veiled racism. They are trying to stereotype you and you don't fit their mental image of what you should be, so they discredit your answer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"I'm Hispanic" is not a valid answer to "Where are you from?"... because "Hispanic" is not a place, and there are actually many countries it refers to. So that's probably the reason that people are asking where you're actually from - so they can ask more about it, try to figure out whether they've been there and can relate or share stories, etc.
It’s this. People expect either a country or a US state as a response.
Anonymous wrote:When someone speaks with an accent, I do ask where they’re from. I certainly hope I’m not offending anyone - it’s simply that I want to know more about them. I would never ask that of someone without an accent, however.
Anonymous wrote:"I'm Hispanic" is not a valid answer to "Where are you from?"... because "Hispanic" is not a place, and there are actually many countries it refers to. So that's probably the reason that people are asking where you're actually from - so they can ask more about it, try to figure out whether they've been there and can relate or share stories, etc.