Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I thought they were considered to be Asian.
+1
Why would you think that? They don't look Asian at all.
Because Asia is a continent and their countries are in Asia.
But they don't have Asian features.
Anonymous wrote:Are white and caucasian the same?
Are people from the Middle East, like Iran, Iraq, Syria, etc considered to be 'white' by the general world population?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I thought they were considered to be Asian.
+1
Why would you think that? They don't look Asian at all.
Because Asia is a continent and their countries are in Asia.
Anonymous wrote:I find it all quite weird. I have colleagues from the Middle East who definitely describe themselves as people of color. Many have and do experience discrimination on the basis of their ethnic/cultural/religious identity. And yet for the purposes of our diversity statistics (which our organization tracks closely) they are considered white.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes. Except in certain parts of the country. There are places in the U.S. where Italians are not considered white.
Hello 1935.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I thought they were considered to be Asian.
+1
Why would you think that? They don't look Asian at all.
Anonymous wrote:According to the US census, yes. Obviously, American racial categories can't always be neatly applied to the rest of the world. Socially speaking, there are plenty of Middle Easterners (blonde hair, blue eyes, fair skin, etc) who would be read as conventionally white and many others who wouldn't.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I thought they were considered to be Asian.
+1
Anonymous wrote:I find it all quite weird. I have colleagues from the Middle East who definitely describe themselves as people of color. Many have and do experience discrimination on the basis of their ethnic/cultural/religious identity. And yet for the purposes of our diversity statistics (which our organization tracks closely) they are considered white.
Anonymous wrote:Are white and caucasian the same?
Are people from the Middle East, like Iran, Iraq, Syria, etc considered to be 'white' by the general world population?