Anonymous wrote:DH is Caucasian and when we met for the first time he "assumed" I was Asian. He asked me about my nationality on our 4 date. By then it was too late too change his mind LOL. We have been married for 10 years.
So, the answer to your question is YES
Anonymous wrote:
Latina is an ethnicity, not a race. Did you mean your husband may have dated a non-white Latina?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I get your question OP--like the black guy who marries a white woman with much lower qualifications than himself. No way would say Jim Vance be married to a black female equivalent of his wife, for instance. This is a very real phenomenon. In interracial marriages, the partner of color tends to be of a much higher status than the white spouse--
DH is white and makes more money and is slightly more educated. They say I'm better looking.
Anonymous wrote:I still think this is an impossible question, other than to say my husband and I have only dated caucasians (I think - my husband might have dated a latina at some point? He's not big into talking about his high school days). It doesn't mean we're horrible, racist people in any way - it just happens to be who we are both attracted to. We found each other, and we are who we are - I just think it is a dumb premise to begin with.
The friend of the OP sounds like an idiot, anyway - who says something like that?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's not an impossible question. There are black people who look Asian, white people who look black, Native Americans who look Asian (well, NAs are of Asian descent, but you know what I mean), and so on.
The OP asked if everything about you were the same except race, would your spouse have married you. All of you blabbering on about how it's an impossible question are just refusing to answer.
Sure, there are a few black people who look Asian, but for the majority, that's not the case.
BTW, the fact that you can't seem to wrap your mind around the idea that my ethnic identity (Asian) affects who I am suggests to me that you are either 1) your skin color allows you to blend into your community without much thought, or 2) you just haven't had to think very much about how race affects "everything" else.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I get your question OP--like the black guy who marries a white woman with much lower qualifications than himself. No way would say Jim Vance be married to a black female equivalent of his wife, for instance. This is a very real phenomenon. In interracial marriages, the partner of color tends to be of a much higher status than the white spouse--
DH is white and makes more money and is slightly more educated. They say I'm better looking.
Anonymous wrote:I get your question OP--like the black guy who marries a white woman with much lower qualifications than himself. No way would say Jim Vance be married to a black female equivalent of his wife, for instance. This is a very real phenomenon. In interracial marriages, the partner of color tends to be of a much higher status than the white spouse--
Anonymous wrote:It's not an impossible question. There are black people who look Asian, white people who look black, Native Americans who look Asian (well, NAs are of Asian descent, but you know what I mean), and so on.
The OP asked if everything about you were the same except race, would your spouse have married you. All of you blabbering on about how it's an impossible question are just refusing to answer.