El Negrito, El Negro, y Nigga

May 31, 2010 23:31


I very much lament that I haven’t kept better (any) record or documented any of the almost constant observations parading through my consciousness over the last two years. Comparisons shuffle through the mind of an expatriate like the cars racing to and fro in Frogger. Doubtless, I have already lost to the whims of time countless moments that, ( Read more... )

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compassion vs. confrontation anonymous June 1 2010, 06:11:52 UTC
I think a lot of the difference is that in the United States, people are really competitive, and in Mexico they are more compassionate. I think these are values that are enculturated at a very early age in both societies ( ... )

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Re: compassion vs. confrontation steedizzie June 2 2010, 02:41:18 UTC
Yes, we have discussed at some points, I think, that there is really no word in Spanish (at least Mexican Spanish) for 'bully.' What a cultural difference.

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Re: compassion vs. confrontation maximumfish June 3 2010, 22:00:28 UTC
Regarding the comparative racism in the US vs. elsewhere, and this will constitute the defensive rant about how we're not racist but, well, we're really not. Not that racism doesn't exist in the US or even that what does exist isn't significant, because it is, but rather that i think there is an enormous disparity between actual American racism and its perceived prevalence in the minds of most Americans. We've been conditioned into a witch-hunt mentality in a massive and long running, akward and hamfisted campaign to preach tolerance and stamp out racism, and much like Germany's "de-nazification" and it's ancestors (which lead to such absurdist legislation as banning the display of the swastika and illegalizing holocaust denial), it's lead more to confusion, racial tension, and an overall unhealthy obsession with race than it has to the best ideals of the civil rights movement ( ... )

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Re: compassion vs. confrontation maximumfish June 3 2010, 22:01:00 UTC
I would also wager that just about every nationality has its own extremists and hate groups, just as we have ours. You could easily live in the US as a non-native citizen and know nothing of the Ku Klux Klan, not to mention the hundreds of less-publicized others that the overwhelming majority of Americans are unfamiliar with. Most Americans haven’t heard of the Baader-Meinhof gang either, even though the profoundly anti-American organization operated in Germany for nearly 30 years and was responsible for airline hijackings, assassinations of police officers and government officials, embassy sieges, murder of US citizens and hundreds of bombings around the country. I knew a lot of Americans who lived there who had never heard of them ( ... )

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spideman June 2 2010, 01:56:45 UTC
I approve of this post, but I'm too lazy to respond with anything cogent.

I blame being in school.

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