Girino
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- Jan 1, 2014
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What's the local sensitivity to racism and how is the PC protocol when discussing this in public?
Fact #1: An Argentine family member was talking about her friends complaining about how "negros" (indios) are "invading" the cities and spreading criminality. Is this a shared opinion or is it just the snob white elitism of her friend? Are the people of European heritage considering themselves "better" than the natives?
Fact #2: Another Argentine family member was commenting about the lack of house care (no cooking, cleaning or tidying) of a friend, and added "she must be of Spanish heritage" (the speaker was of Italian heritage)
Fact #3: I was in Italy with a group of Italians I never met before at a food festival to raise money for Ethiopia. They were selling tickets for a draw. One of the ticket seller approached our table, he was an African teenager and an Italian native speaker. They *jokingly* told him they were buying tickets just to give him money to return him home. Not funny, imo, and the guy didn't seem offended.
Fact #4: Same evening as above, a drunk lady kept saying she wasn't understanding what I was saying in my "foreign language". We have the same native language, the place was noisy, she was drunk and I look like a foreigner. Why on earth did she think this was funny?! She repeated that line three times in the evening and nobody told her to shut up.
Am I becoming oversensitive?
Fact #1: An Argentine family member was talking about her friends complaining about how "negros" (indios) are "invading" the cities and spreading criminality. Is this a shared opinion or is it just the snob white elitism of her friend? Are the people of European heritage considering themselves "better" than the natives?
Fact #2: Another Argentine family member was commenting about the lack of house care (no cooking, cleaning or tidying) of a friend, and added "she must be of Spanish heritage" (the speaker was of Italian heritage)
Fact #3: I was in Italy with a group of Italians I never met before at a food festival to raise money for Ethiopia. They were selling tickets for a draw. One of the ticket seller approached our table, he was an African teenager and an Italian native speaker. They *jokingly* told him they were buying tickets just to give him money to return him home. Not funny, imo, and the guy didn't seem offended.
Fact #4: Same evening as above, a drunk lady kept saying she wasn't understanding what I was saying in my "foreign language". We have the same native language, the place was noisy, she was drunk and I look like a foreigner. Why on earth did she think this was funny?! She repeated that line three times in the evening and nobody told her to shut up.
Am I becoming oversensitive?