Anonymous wrote:Well, you know in your heart this is not why affirmative action was created. Imagine how you'd feel if your child was admitted and her name was forwarded to the campus Latino organization to ask if she wanted to join. This happened to my friend in college and she was mortified. She knew she'd just checked the box to get in to the school and sheepishly ignored the email invitations from the Latino student group.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Affirmative action breeds the sort of cringe inducing cynicism on display here. In my case, some of my relatives can be traced to Spain. My kid is in an immersion school. We are not Hispanic.
That's right, you're not. You're Spanish. Hispanic and Spanish are different. Much like English and American are different, even though we both speak the same language.
Hispanic refers to people who speak Spanish, that includes Spain and the Latin countries but not Brazil. Latinos refer to people of geography. That includes the Southern and Latin continents, including Brazil but not Spain.
Anonymous wrote:If your kid isn’t Hispanic enough to have realized it before now, he’s not Hispanic.
And if your school registration paperwork says he’s white, and you try to change it now- huge red flag.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Affirmative action breeds the sort of cringe inducing cynicism on display here. In my case, some of my relatives can be traced to Spain. My kid is in an immersion school. We are not Hispanic.
That's right, you're not. You're Spanish. Hispanic and Spanish are different. Much like English and American are different, even though we both speak the same language.
Anonymous wrote:effing hate this sh*t. you got upper middle hispanic and back families gaming the system. Affirmative action should be based on income and first-gem status, not race. This is cringeworthy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So here's another one for DCUM along the same lines:
I married into a Catalan family. My wife grew up in California as an American but my MIL grew up in Spain until her parents fled with her and she came to the US as a refugee. MIL's parents were part of the anti-Fascist resistance until they fled Spain. They arrived in the US in poverty, but now the family is doing okay financially. The family history is violent (relatives killed by the Fascists among other awful things) and you can still see the impact on the family. (My MIL will not speak of that time; we know she saw people killed in front of her when she was young.)
My DD does not speak Catalan very well at all but is immersed in Catalan culture from the extended family and identifies as Catalan in addition to American (but not as Spanish although she has Spanish citizenship). DD is white (blonde hair, blue eyes).
Two years ago DD felt strongly about putting Hispanic down on the HS enrollment form because she feels her Catalan heritage is a strong part of her identity (which it is) and she qualifies as per the 1/4 definition. She plans on talking about her relationship with her grandmother in her college essays.
What do you think, DCUM?
Catalan is not Hispanic.
How is Catalan not Hispanic? Hispanic means having origins in the Iberian peninsula. That peninsula, referred to as "Hispania" by the Romans, includes Catalonia.
Hispanic means Spanish speaking. Catalans are not Hispanic in the same way that Brazilians are not Hispanic.
Hispanic does not mean Spanish speaking. What is your cite for that assertion?
Hispania was the Roman word for the Iberian peninsula, which included and still includes Catalonia and Portugal. So Catalans and Brazilians are indeed Hispanic.
So lovely and yet so clueless.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So here's another one for DCUM along the same lines:
I married into a Catalan family. My wife grew up in California as an American but my MIL grew up in Spain until her parents fled with her and she came to the US as a refugee. MIL's parents were part of the anti-Fascist resistance until they fled Spain. They arrived in the US in poverty, but now the family is doing okay financially. The family history is violent (relatives killed by the Fascists among other awful things) and you can still see the impact on the family. (My MIL will not speak of that time; we know she saw people killed in front of her when she was young.)
My DD does not speak Catalan very well at all but is immersed in Catalan culture from the extended family and identifies as Catalan in addition to American (but not as Spanish although she has Spanish citizenship). DD is white (blonde hair, blue eyes).
Two years ago DD felt strongly about putting Hispanic down on the HS enrollment form because she feels her Catalan heritage is a strong part of her identity (which it is) and she qualifies as per the 1/4 definition. She plans on talking about her relationship with her grandmother in her college essays.
What do you think, DCUM?
Catalan is not Hispanic.
How is Catalan not Hispanic? Hispanic means having origins in the Iberian peninsula. That peninsula, referred to as "Hispania" by the Romans, includes Catalonia.
Hispanic means Spanish speaking. Catalans are not Hispanic in the same way that Brazilians are not Hispanic.
Hispanic does not mean Spanish speaking. What is your cite for that assertion?
Hispania was the Roman word for the Iberian peninsula, which included and still includes Catalonia and Portugal. So Catalans and Brazilians are indeed Hispanic.
So lovely and yet so clueless.
Anonymous wrote:effing hate this sh*t. you got upper middle hispanic and black families gaming the system. Affirmative action should be based on income and first-gen status, not race. This is cringeworthy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So here's another one for DCUM along the same lines:
I married into a Catalan family. My wife grew up in California as an American but my MIL grew up in Spain until her parents fled with her and she came to the US as a refugee. MIL's parents were part of the anti-Fascist resistance until they fled Spain. They arrived in the US in poverty, but now the family is doing okay financially. The family history is violent (relatives killed by the Fascists among other awful things) and you can still see the impact on the family. (My MIL will not speak of that time; we know she saw people killed in front of her when she was young.)
My DD does not speak Catalan very well at all but is immersed in Catalan culture from the extended family and identifies as Catalan in addition to American (but not as Spanish although she has Spanish citizenship). DD is white (blonde hair, blue eyes).
Two years ago DD felt strongly about putting Hispanic down on the HS enrollment form because she feels her Catalan heritage is a strong part of her identity (which it is) and she qualifies as per the 1/4 definition. She plans on talking about her relationship with her grandmother in her college essays.
What do you think, DCUM?
Catalan is not Hispanic.
How is Catalan not Hispanic? Hispanic means having origins in the Iberian peninsula. That peninsula, referred to as "Hispania" by the Romans, includes Catalonia.
Hispanic means Spanish speaking. Catalans are not Hispanic in the same way that Brazilians are not Hispanic.
Hispanic does not mean Spanish speaking. What is your cite for that assertion?
Hispania was the Roman word for the Iberian peninsula, which included and still includes Catalonia and Portugal. So Catalans and Brazilians are indeed Hispanic.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Affirmative action breeds the sort of cringe inducing cynicism on display here. In my case, some of my relatives can be traced to Spain. My kid is in an immersion school. We are not Hispanic.
That's right, you're not. You're Spanish. Hispanic and Spanish are different. Much like English and American are different, even though we both speak the same language.
Hispanic refers to people who speak Spanish, that includes Spain and the Latin countries but not Brazil. Latinos refer to people of geography. That includes the Southern and Latin continents, including Brazil but not Spain.
Here you go...from the College Board website:
NHRP's Definition of Hispanic/Latino
To be eligible, you must be at least one-quarter Hispanic/Latino. Hispanic/Latino is an ethnic category, not a racial category, so you can be of any race.
You must have ancestors from at least one of these countries: Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Puerto Rico, Spain, Uruguay, or Venezuela.
https://collegereadiness.collegeboard.org/psat-nmsqt-psat-10/scholarships-and-recognition/national-hispanic-recognition-program
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So here's another one for DCUM along the same lines:
I married into a Catalan family. My wife grew up in California as an American but my MIL grew up in Spain until her parents fled with her and she came to the US as a refugee. MIL's parents were part of the anti-Fascist resistance until they fled Spain. They arrived in the US in poverty, but now the family is doing okay financially. The family history is violent (relatives killed by the Fascists among other awful things) and you can still see the impact on the family. (My MIL will not speak of that time; we know she saw people killed in front of her when she was young.)
My DD does not speak Catalan very well at all but is immersed in Catalan culture from the extended family and identifies as Catalan in addition to American (but not as Spanish although she has Spanish citizenship). DD is white (blonde hair, blue eyes).
Two years ago DD felt strongly about putting Hispanic down on the HS enrollment form because she feels her Catalan heritage is a strong part of her identity (which it is) and she qualifies as per the 1/4 definition. She plans on talking about her relationship with her grandmother in her college essays.
What do you think, DCUM?
Catalan is not Hispanic.
How is Catalan not Hispanic? Hispanic means having origins in the Iberian peninsula. That peninsula, referred to as "Hispania" by the Romans, includes Catalonia.
Hispanic means Spanish speaking. Catalans are not Hispanic in the same way that Brazilians are not Hispanic.