Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wasian. It’s a thing.
Wazian, but only if they can tell you a faster way to drive.
Seriously folks, its all a cultural construct, some worrying about it.
Spoken like a white man. Many things are cultural constructs (money, war, politics) but still have real consequences.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:. Huh? So if a white couple adopt a black kid then would u even ask that question?Anonymous wrote:How about adopted Asian kids being raised in white families?
Because OP started the stupidity, and here we gladly keep it alive.
My adopted Asian daughter is often perceived as being Latina.
One time, I brought my adopted Asian daughter to a Latina girls' science event, because it just sounded really cool, and she was able to participate just like everybody else, because they thought she was HIspanic.
As opposed to skin color-obsessed Anglos, we Hispanics focus on the "content of your character" and all that soft stuff.
GTFOH.
Love,
Black Puertorriquena with “pelo malo” who has met with more discrimination from fellow Latinos than from anyone else
Funny, the only times my Hispanics kids and their friends have been discriminated in school it's always the same black Puertorriquena nurse who sees Hispanics as whites and insults them as "slave-owners."
El problema no es el pelo, es lo que hay debajo.
OK, that settles that! There is no well-documented and long-entrenched anti-black racism among Latinos. It is all anti-white racism because...you claim to know a school nurse. Good anecdote.
No, the point is that Hispanics never had that skin color obsession that you Anglos had.
We have other problems, but not that one -- which explains why most Hispanics are mixed race.
Now, if you want to keep promoting old stereotypes and bs, admit at least that you see yourself as black first and Latina second if at all. When was the last time you read an adult book in Spanish by a Hispanic writer?
You're another race-obsessed anglo.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:. Huh? So if a white couple adopt a black kid then would u even ask that question?Anonymous wrote:How about adopted Asian kids being raised in white families?
Because OP started the stupidity, and here we gladly keep it alive.
My adopted Asian daughter is often perceived as being Latina.
One time, I brought my adopted Asian daughter to a Latina girls' science event, because it just sounded really cool, and she was able to participate just like everybody else, because they thought she was HIspanic.
As opposed to skin color-obsessed Anglos, we Hispanics focus on the "content of your character" and all that soft stuff.
GTFOH.
Love,
Black Puertorriquena with “pelo malo” who has met with more discrimination from fellow Latinos than from anyone else
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:. Huh? So if a white couple adopt a black kid then would u even ask that question?Anonymous wrote:How about adopted Asian kids being raised in white families?
Because OP started the stupidity, and here we gladly keep it alive.
My adopted Asian daughter is often perceived as being Latina.
One time, I brought my adopted Asian daughter to a Latina girls' science event, because it just sounded really cool, and she was able to participate just like everybody else, because they thought she was HIspanic.
As opposed to skin color-obsessed Anglos, we Hispanics focus on the "content of your character" and all that soft stuff.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is that child ever considered white?
It depends. If he/she looks like a Caucasian/white person, he/she is white. If he/she looks like Asian, nah.
Case in point,
President Obama, half white half black, is black
Tiger Woods, half Asian half black, is black
This... but officially, such a person is mixed race.
-signed a mom of biracial white/asian children.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:......No, the point is that Hispanics never had that skin color obsession that you Anglos had.
We have other problems, but not that one -- which explains why most Hispanics are mixed race.
Now, if you want to keep promoting old stereotypes and bs, admit at least that you see yourself as black first and Latina second if at all. When was the last time you read an adult book in Spanish by a Hispanic writer?
You're another race-obsessed anglo.
I'm the white mother of 3 mixed race kids - my DH's family is South American. I don't know where you grew up but, from my MIL's stories, there absolutely IS 'skin color obsession' in Hispanics. I can't count the number of times it's come up among the women in my DH's family. It was an especially hot topic when it came to the color of babies in the family and the sunbathing of teenaged family members. My MIL was thrilled that my kids are so 'white' - not like her nieces/nephews whose parents are 'dark'. She, apparently, was called 'dark' growing up and negatively compared to her 'white' sister. I should note that my MIL's family was wealthy by South American standards and they were all proud they were 'Spanish' - with the implication they had no 'Indian' blood. DNA testing has proven them incorrect and the older generations refuse to believe the testing.
Although I don't know why it matters, the last book I read by a native Spanish speaker was The Alchemist by Paul Coelho. I've also read The Shadow of the Wind by Carlos Ruiz Zafon. In my years after college, I also read most of what Gabriel Garcia Marquez wrote as well as the novels of Isabel Allende. Oh, I've also read Don Quixote by Cervantes which is actually one of my favorites but I'm a 'classics' kind of girl.
Paulo Coelho is Brazillian and writes in Portuguese not Spanish, smarty pants who doesn't understand the difference.
Whatever.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When it benefits white people, Asians are considered white
terrible, but i laughed![]()
Anonymous wrote:When it benefits white people, Asians are considered white
Anonymous wrote:^^agreed. Many women who have darker skin are super insecure. They insist that they are of Italian descent - even though they look more Native American. I have been told that I’d never be poor in Latin America (I’m not poor in the us) because of my whiteness. And the non-lily white women are always gossiping about the lily white women. I guess lily white means slut. Smh.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wasian. It’s a thing.
Wazian, but only if they can tell you a faster way to drive.
Seriously folks, its all a cultural construct, some worrying about it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:......No, the point is that Hispanics never had that skin color obsession that you Anglos had.
We have other problems, but not that one -- which explains why most Hispanics are mixed race.
Now, if you want to keep promoting old stereotypes and bs, admit at least that you see yourself as black first and Latina second if at all. When was the last time you read an adult book in Spanish by a Hispanic writer?
You're another race-obsessed anglo.
I'm the white mother of 3 mixed race kids - my DH's family is South American. I don't know where you grew up but, from my MIL's stories, there absolutely IS 'skin color obsession' in Hispanics. I can't count the number of times it's come up among the women in my DH's family. It was an especially hot topic when it came to the color of babies in the family and the sunbathing of teenaged family members. My MIL was thrilled that my kids are so 'white' - not like her nieces/nephews whose parents are 'dark'. She, apparently, was called 'dark' growing up and negatively compared to her 'white' sister. I should note that my MIL's family was wealthy by South American standards and they were all proud they were 'Spanish' - with the implication they had no 'Indian' blood. DNA testing has proven them incorrect and the older generations refuse to believe the testing.
Although I don't know why it matters, the last book I read by a native Spanish speaker was The Alchemist by Paul Coelho. I've also read The Shadow of the Wind by Carlos Ruiz Zafon. In my years after college, I also read most of what Gabriel Garcia Marquez wrote as well as the novels of Isabel Allende. Oh, I've also read Don Quixote by Cervantes which is actually one of my favorites but I'm a 'classics' kind of girl.
Paulo Coelho is Brazillian and writes in Portuguese not Spanish, smarty pants who doesn't understand the difference.