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And who gets to determine when a spade is a spade and not a club?
free people have that ability.
And who gets to determine when a spade is a spade and not a club?
Your earlier comment regarding Egypt gives clarity to African-American. I believe the nomenclature should refer to Black African Americans as opposed to African Americans. Qaddaffi was a African. Nasser. Mubarak. African American is a poor choice and inaccurate as well.
Your earlier comment regarding Egypt gives clarity to African-American. I believe the nomenclature should refer to Black African Americans as opposed to African Americans. Qaddaffi was a African. Nasser. Mubarak. African American is a poor choice and inaccurate as well.
It is neither a case of 'need' or 'deception' .. it's about what I choose to call myself and identify with .. just as millions Americans have done since this nations inception. It's not about what you may confuse me with .. in fact, it's not about you at all. It's how I choose to identify with my heritage .. which should not be a problem for you or anyone else at all.
How does my identification as an African-American disrupt the harmony of anyone?
What I get from it from it is exactly what it looks like .. an identification with my heritage.
My avatar is my daughter .. who also identifies herself as an African-American .. when it suits the circumstances. She's in the military and a leader, so there are all manner of things she is restricted by circumstance from doing. She recognizes that the military is not society.
I, her father, have no such restrictions.
What changes when I meet someone who identifies themselves as 'Indian-American' rather than 'American?' Answer, absolutely nothing.
If that affects you .. then you have the answer to what disrupts social harmony.
My question for you .. being a conservative .. is when did the right become aware of 'social harmony?' Surely you are aware of the intense adverarial relationship between conservatives and just about everybody else? How does that on-going hate-hate relationship add to social harmony?
Spain is also in Africa and in the Atlantic Ocean (The Canary Islands.).
That's rather debatable. Most people would agree that Spaniards come from mainland Spain, and Ceuta, the Balearics, the Canaries, Melilla, etc., are a bit more like Spanish colonies.
Anyway,it doesn't change the fact that South Americans are (at least in most part) of European descent. You don't call Italian-Americans brown, but you do call Mexican-Americans (and thus by extent Spanish-Americans) brown. Curious.
I wonder, would an Argentine-American be brown or white?
That's rather debatable. Most people would agree that Spaniards come from mainland Spain, and Ceuta, the Balearics, the Canaries, Melilla, etc., are a bit more like Spanish colonies.
Anyway, it doesn't change the fact that South Americans are (at least in most part) of European descent. You don't call Italian-Americans brown, but you do call Mexican-Americans (and thus by extent Spanish-Americans) brown. Curious.
I wonder, would an Argentine-American be brown or white?
Why would diversity be a problem?
Does the rejection of diversity make us 'one people' .. or does it just make us pretend to be blind?
Their ancestors are not African.
History of South Africa - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
They would be South African Americans, or just "mutts" like the rest of us.
She looks mighty Nordic to me.
Diversity is required to maintain the whole. To build a house, you need a variety of materials. If all you had was lumber made from trees, you could build a house, but it wouldn't stand for long. You also need a concrete, brick or stone foundation. And the interior would be difficult to live in if there wasn't any furniture, and it would be a bland place if it wasn't for paint or wall paper or pictures on the wall.
Like the house, our society needs diversity or it wouldn't stand for long, and it would be a bland and uninteresting. It would also be stagnant in its ability to grow and advance.
But also like the house, our society shouldn't be pulling one part against the other(s). If the walls of the house were always pushing away from the roof or the floors, then the house would crumble in upon itself. All of the parts of the house must work together to maintain the structural integrity and also to have an interesting and pleasing environment in which to live.
In our society, we should work as a whole, not as individual parts without regard to how our actions effect the whole. We call a house a house. We should call ourselves Americans. In our houses, we decorate and paint our walls, similarly to how we can recognize the value and contribution to the whole of certain factions of our society. We value our diversity, and should continue to do so. But not the exclusion of a part or parts of that society.
We shouldn't expect our walls in hour house to stand if they were not securely connected with nails, screws and/or bolts to the foundation and roof.
In our society in the US, the nails, screws and bolts that bind us are our citizenship in this country. That citizenship in this society is recognized and secured by what we call ourselves. Calling ourselves something that separates us from other parts of society, is the same as pulling the nails, screws and bolts from the walls that bind them to the foundation and roof.
If those that reject forced segregation, continue to self segregate, they are the cause to the damage done by their actions to themselves and to the society at large.
We should recognize our diversity, and celebrate it. However, we should not do anything that separates or segregates any part of the society from the whole, especially if done in an attempt to gain solidarity of a singular group which only breads a separatist environment within that group and creates a gap between that group and the rest of society.
Hey... this Euro-American doesn't care what you call yourself. If you think it's important for people to know you're of African descent and worry they might not be able to figure it out without you adding "African-hyphen" to the "American" label, it's all good. You wouldn't want to be mistaken for someone of Swedish descent. That would be a very bad thing.The more we can focus on how different we are, the better it is for everyone.
:0) I like you brother .. like talking to you .. but you think about YOU way too much. Whatever I call myself has absolutely nothing to do with you or anybody else. YOU, whomever you may be, don't (eb) count.
I'm enjoying being who I am.
When I'm thinking about why it's so important to YOU to call YOURSELF an African-American, I'm not thinking about me. I'm thinking about you. I'm thinking about what it is going on in that head of yours that makes it so important that you label yourself as African American. I'm wondering what this country would be like if everyone had the same issues going on. Would we have....
Cuban-Americans
English-Americans
Homosexual-Americans
Female-Americans
Vietnamese-Americans
Samoan-Americans
etc. etc. etc.
Why what the hell.... if you ain't got a hyphen, you ain't nobody, LOL. We have to make sure everyone in every other group knows that they aren't the same as we are and by applying these labels, not only do we make sure they know it, but that they know it's damned important to us that they know it. And people wonder how we end up with racist cliques. Of course, everyone has a right to be as racist as they want. What goes on in peoples' own heads is their own business. Doesn't make it something to aspire to but it's certainly everyone's right if that's how they want to think and be.
It's an honest question that you ask brother, and I'll answer as honestly as I can. Why is it important to me to call myself an African-American? The complete answer would takes pages, the short answer is because I grew up in the sixties and I've lived during a most exciting period of life this country. I've lived and felt all the history of what people of African descent could not do. I not only watched it, I internalized it. History must ask why did it take 264 years for black Americans to be granted basic human rights in this country? Is that a racist question to ask .. or is it an uncomfortable question based on a statement of fact?
Without boring you with the long story :0) Suffice it to say that I remember a time when 'black' was a bad word .. even in the black community. Declaring myself African-American feels like triumph to me. Triumph over all that we weren't supposed to be. Survival through all that has been heaped upon African people from the moment we arrived at these shores.
I love this country, love its people, and want to see a better future for us all. I have zero problems with white people or any people. But I understand the fight is not over.
The difference is perspectives.
Well, they are, if you go back far enough.
Duh. Do you think anyone does not know that?
Using such to negate the existence of nations is stupid nihilism. Common elementary trolling. BS.
Did I mention hyphenated nouns are divisive?
German American Clubs and Greek festivals are not divisive.
Do you think the song god bless Texas is divisive, because its not saying God bless America?
Maybe instead of the Chicago Bears, Cincinnati Bengals, and New York Giants, etc. we should we have American Bears, American Giants, etc. unless you find calling American, American something or other, then we will just call them The Bears, The Giants, etc.
Who said anything about truth being an adversary of social harmony? Do you really think it would be deceptive NOT to use hyphenated-American labels? Do you need to stick an "African-Hypehen" in front of your "American" label in order for me to not confuse you with "Euro-Americans"?
What benefit do we get from that except proper maintenance of the "us vs. them" mentality such labels help ensure? Whether your avatar actually reflects your status in active duty or not, assuming you are on active duty, do you think it's important that you describe yourself as a "female soldier" instead of just a soldier? It's the truth, isn't it? If you were a doctor, would you insist on being called a "female doctor"? Or an "African American Doctor"? It's the truth, so why not? As long as it's the truth, it can't be adversarial to social harmony, right?
Think about it.
If he wants to be called African American, why does it bother you?
I know somebody from Korea. She wants to be called Korean, not Asian, not Oriental, and she will get really pissed of you call her Chinese or Japanese. So I call her Korean out of personal respect for her.
If she told me call her Asian, I happily would call her Asian.
For the life of me, I cannot understand why so many of you insist people wanting to be called xyz are divisive.
To refuse to call her Korean and expect her to confirm to my beliefs
as to what she should be called, that is actually divisive.
Some people want to be called Hispanic, some want to be called Latino, etc. There is a huge difference between Mexico and Columbia, Japan and Korea, and when you cannot see the obvious differences and talk to the people from those places as if they are all the same, be ready to piss some people off and look extremely ignorant in the process.
And there nothing wrong with saying you're a woman soldier either. There is nothing wrong with saying you're a mother and a daughter versus father and son.
I don't believe for a second that you don't identify as a man or a male, and that you fail to reason that it is and isn't acceptable for you to do certain things because of your gender.
As I've already said just about everyone on this planet has African ancestors if you look back far enough.
"The only race on this planet is the human race."
:0) TRUTH be told .. everybody on this board and who has ever lived as a modern human is of African descent.
Truth be told, a sample of your mitochondria would reveal what region of Africa YOU come from. :0)
You could call yourself an African-American and have a point. :0)