Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m Latina and this never has never happened to me once in DC.
OP is trolling.
Uhhh it happens to my husband and he is Asian, but people assume Hispanic. His name is like John, but gets called Andres, Pablo and Diego.
People we assume are Hispanic also do speak Spanish to him.
The only people who do that IME are Latinos, not white people.
Ummmmm.
Whatever. There’s cultural DC whites and there’s Spanish speaking Latinos. I’m Latino and in the middle of those two camps. Call it what you want.
Just saying Hispanics can be "white". In fact many are considered to be white. Don't be racist.
Anonymous wrote:I would expect it to be rude to have an expectation either way - that you do speak fluent English or that you don't. As you say, plenty of people have English less clear than yours, so why should I expect based on skin color that someone is or isn't fluent?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would expect it to be rude to have an expectation either way - that you do speak fluent English or that you don't. As you say, plenty of people have English less clear than yours, so why should I expect based on skin color that someone is or isn't fluent?
I don’t think it’s rude to have the assumption that someone living and working in the us speaks English.
Agree!
It’s normal to assume that someone permanently living and working in USA speaks, reads, and writes well in English.
Why wouldn’t that be the case??
Anonymous wrote:What is a "moderate" Hispanic? I assume anyone in the US speaks at least rudimentary English.
Anonymous wrote:If I meet someone and haven't heard them speak and they are obviously Hispanic, I might deliberately enunciate more clearly and use smaller words for the first few sentences. There are many recent immigrants here. But then when I hear them speak English well, I'll talk to them like anyone else. I would do the same for anyone who is a tourist here from a country where English is not the first language. I want people to be comfortable and be able to communicate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would expect it to be rude to have an expectation either way - that you do speak fluent English or that you don't. As you say, plenty of people have English less clear than yours, so why should I expect based on skin color that someone is or isn't fluent?
I don’t think it’s rude to have the assumption that someone living and working in the us speaks English.
It should be a normal assumption but alas…. Press 1 for Spanish.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m Latina and this never has never happened to me once in DC.
OP is trolling.
Uhhh it happens to my husband and he is Asian, but people assume Hispanic. His name is like John, but gets called Andres, Pablo and Diego.
People we assume are Hispanic also do speak Spanish to him.
The only people who do that IME are Latinos, not white people.
Ummmmm.
Whatever. There’s cultural DC whites and there’s Spanish speaking Latinos. I’m Latino and in the middle of those two camps. Call it what you want.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't think they assume that, I think they prefer to speak Spanish if they think you know Spanish.
So most non-hispanics prefer to speak Spanish to me huh
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m Latina and this never has never happened to me once in DC.
OP is trolling.
Uhhh it happens to my husband and he is Asian, but people assume Hispanic. His name is like John, but gets called Andres, Pablo and Diego.
People we assume are Hispanic also do speak Spanish to him.
The only people who do that IME are Latinos, not white people.
Ummmmm.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m Latina and this never has never happened to me once in DC.
OP is trolling.
Uhhh it happens to my husband and he is Asian, but people assume Hispanic. His name is like John, but gets called Andres, Pablo and Diego.
People we assume are Hispanic also do speak Spanish to him.
The only people who do that IME are Latinos, not white people.