RE: Two Israeli Embassy Workers Assassinated Outside D.C. Jewish Museum
May 22, 2025 at 11:16 pm
(This post was last modified: May 22, 2025 at 11:19 pm by TheWhiteMarten.)
(May 22, 2025 at 11:06 pm)Rev. Rye Wrote:(May 22, 2025 at 10:21 pm)TheWhiteMarten Wrote: The influx between 1990-2020 was what needed to be covered; as already demonstrated in this thread, I was told I was "wrong" for what you just acknowledged as accurate and that "whites" in the traditional American history sense make up over 50% rather than 70% of the population.
At least where I grew up the Mexican-American population was largely of Spanish descent rather than Indigenous Mexican - like my ancestors they settled in the area in the mid 1800s due to successive dictators styling themselves in the image of Napoleon and other liberal Aristocratic reformers. They fled here under the reign of Benito Juarez, who committed mass ethnic cleansing against Christians - so if I had to guess, it's because the Mexicans in America before 1970 were largely of that Spanish stock fleeing political persecution and we've since been more exposed to the modern Latinos in America long enough that people care what that even means.
I don't mind looking up those demographics when I get the chance to see if that is the case, but I am more concerned with how it has shifted political meaning in the last few decades.
Also worth noting, the percent of Latinos identifying as white in 2000 was about 48%, and in the 2010 census, it was only up to 52.8%. Not much of an increase. And in 2020, it plummeted down to about 20%. And it's not because a bunch of Indigenous Mexicans came flooding in. It's because more and more Hispanic people are seeing the complexities of their ethnicities.
Right; I have no problem with the Latino population identifying with white if that's what their primary cultural identifier is and don't think there would be much change - rather it's the fact that "white, non-Hispanic" is dismissed as it's own unique category and lost in the numbers by design when even the census itself clearly represents it.
Latin America remains incredibly socially segregated, and a lot of that social segregation still remains along ethnic lines, so I really think the option of "white" or "Latino" would be the most inclusive way to ensure both cultures are not inadvertently erased as unique entities.