MovieChat Forums > Anger Management (2012) Discussion > Differentiating Indians from Whites?

Differentiating Indians from Whites?


In one episode of this show, Lacey tells Ed that, "White people work for us now."

That's not scientifically accurate, as she's claiming that she, as an Indian, is not a White person. If you look at the races of Indian, they've always been White.

I am not trying to make this into a battle or anything, but why would Lacey, being White, differentiate herself from Whites as a whole just because she has a background in East India?

Also, in another episode, a joke/line references, "How many QuinceaƱeras can a White lady go to?" I do not know who writes these lines, but most Spanish people are White, and in origination, all Spanish are White.

Do any question these lines, and whether or not White actor Charlie Sheen takes them seriously?

Studies have found a cure for postpartum-depression: postpartum-cunnilingus.

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B/c to 97% of the people watching, none would think that.

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[deleted]

Zanity has a terrible grasp on history.

Early America classified most Indians as whites. It wasn't until after World War 1 that they were labeled non-whites. Even then, Indians were grouped with East Asians. Certainly not blacks:

http://www.bhagatsinghthind.com/court.php

Europeans are far more likely to label South Asians "black". Desi immigrants to America are disproportionately educated & wealthy, including Muslims. Contrast that with Desi immigrants to Europe, who are disproportionately uneducated & poor.

And the term "Hispanic" was created by President Nixon to unify people of Spanish-speaking heritage behind the well-organized, anti-Communist Cuban refugees. If anything, it encouraged Americans to see dark skinned people as part of a 'white' demographic.

These terms are HILARIOUS and so very sad to Europeans.


Get over yourself.

PS-the Nazis were 100% Germany's fault. Deal with it.

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Americans are SO racist, they even invented the term 'Hispanic' to imply people of Spanish decent are 'black'. These terms are HILARIOUS and so very sad to Europeans.

The term Hispanic was used to differentiate Latin Americans from Spaniards from Spain. Nothing really racist about it. It's the same as differentiating a red-head from a blonde.

And I have no idea what goes on in the fly-over states. But here in NY, no one calls people who look Latino or Indian as Black OR White. There are some West Indian islanders that are black from Guyana, Jamaica and Haiti, and some Latinos From Colombia and Dominicans that are black. But for the most part, you're labeled what you loook like. And not for any nefarious racial reasons, just for simple identification.

Black, white, Asian, Hispanic(or the more PC Latino) and Indians. Pakis and Mid-Eastern people get thrown in the Indian bin a lot. Must be pretty annoying for them. And a lot of Indians that wear turbans are looked at as terrorists when they're not even Muslim. That's pretty racist, on two fronts.

I am Italian, I get confused for Jewish all the time. Should I call all those people Ignorant Racists?

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@VUP

East Indians have never been "white"-----that's just what white people want to call anybody who isn't of African descent. Y'all always assume everyone who isn't black must be white like you---how arrogant and stupid that is. I don't know where you get off claiming East Indians are "white" when they have their own unique culture which is completely different from white Anglo-Saxon culture. And no, most Spanish people aren't white---in Spain,maybe, but definitely not in the Caribbean, the U.S., or Cuba, the Dominican Republic, or Central/South America,where they are mostly people of color. Do your research,please.

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If you're going to call everyone who speaks Spanish, Spanish. Then I will call every American or Australian a Englishman/Englishwoman.

If you come from cuba you are cubian not spanish, if you come from Brazil you are brazilian not spanish etc etc.

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In U.S., based on my decades of professional experience -- Indians (from India) have never been treated as "black" -- but in fact welcomed in the more scientific fields because of their perceived greater expertise in mathematical analysis.

On the other hand, "blacks" in America were usually treated as incapable of any mathematical ability leading to decades and generations of American "blacks' developing an (unwarranted) mathematical phobia that is only in recent years becoming finally undone.

One would find plenty of Indians (from India) in many of the scientific professions where you would not find a single "black."

Growing up in an academic family and being an academic myself -- I never thought of, and neither did anyone I know, think of Indians (from India) as "black."

However, when I was younger doing the customary summer travel through Europe, I was surprised about the constant references to "blacks' and the discrimination against them in England when I rarely saw any "blacks" (as we used the term in US for -in US - African Americans) in England at all, let alone enough to be discriminated against.

It came as a shock to my young eyes that British viewed Indians (from India) as "blacks" and treated them in the same disrespectful manner that the US treated African Americans - with comparable slurs, employment discrimination, ghettoizing and so forth.

So who is "black" is in the eyes of the cultural beholder. Indians are not "black in US but are (or at least were) in Great Britain.

With respect to Hispanics -- thought it was a term developed to characterize Spanish speaking populations in the Western Continents -- it was really coined to characterize individuals who were the lineal product of inter-marriage between the Spaniard (from Spain) settlers and the "Indians" (from North and South America) who spoke Spanish.

Culturally-speaking, people who were directly from Spain were (and are ) called Spanish or Spaniards and not Hispanic - though using the definition of being Spanish-speaking for Hispanics created a conundrum for U.S. when they meant the term to refer to Puerto Ricans, Mexicans, Latinos etc but realized that technically, under the definition of Spanish speaking, people from Spain would have to be call Hispanic as well -- but that was never the intention of the term. The term was to capture another discriminated-against group who were different from "blacks" (African-Americans) but not to include any Europeans (in particular not to include the Spanish-speaking people from Spain - who were considered "culturally acceptable" Europeans.)

So who are the "inferior" groups are very much in the (cultural) eyes of the beholder.

(And I keep characterizing Indians from India because when the western continents were "discovered" by the European Explorers -- who did not know the western continents existed -- initially though they were landing in India, having sailed around the world "in the other (western) direction" to reach India "from the other side". They concluded therefore that the people they encountered living on these continents were Indians (from India).

Though eventually Europe realized its explorers had in fact discovered entire new continents, the term "Indians" stuck and remained so until the last 60 years or so -- when the term "Native Americans" was coined to acknowledge that the "Indians" who lived in the Western Continents were in fact indigenous to the areas in which they lived (live) and bore no relation to what is culturally thought of as "Indians" from India.

What amazes me- as I get on in years -- is that all of this history - which was pretty much well-known and not even questioned (except for the debates on how to define "Hispanic" and who counted as "African American") among those who came of age (i.e., age 18 or so) in the 40's, 50's, 60's and 70's has been pretty much "lost" culturally among younger generations.

But as amazing as it is to me -- that the origins of these terms and issues are being culturally "lost" among the Younger general population -- it also is gratifying. Because - though young people today may not think so -- it reflects a waning of racial discrimination. (And "waning" does not mean "gone" -- it just means that it is not as severe and pronounced and overt as it was 50 years ago.)

The battle against discrimination must still go on -- but it is gratifying for those of us (such as myself) who battled so hard against discrimination from the '60's & '70's forward- to see that our efforts did indeed have impact -- even tho there is much more to accomplish.

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I think everyone on this message board has been too Starbucks way too much. I will bring up though how come a crime dramas they always use Caucasian skull? Theirs three types mongoloid, African, and Caucasian and they always use Caucasian. Doesn't matter who the victim is. Come on people archeology is fun get your act together.

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If you're going to be pedantic so will I....

whats archeology got to do with murder victims remains?

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No they are not. They are asian.

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Indians are not white however they are Caucasian since their facial features put them in the Caucasoid race as opposed to the Mongoloid or Negroid races. While these classifications may be politically incorrect, physical anthropologists can tell an East Indian from an African or Asian person based on skull features alone.

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Just wow at this thread.

I honestly don't even know who's right or who's wrong, but the bigotry spewed is pitiful.

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Hello, rogun-35750. You are right -- the bigotry here is evil like a curse.

Basically all I did was point out an overlooked inaccuracy regarding the complex research that goes on to determine genetics, ethnicity, race, etc.; something real information professionals ought to find out easily.

Ethnicity's complex & takes many years to master; something Mensa members can talk about, maybe?

Fat shaming babies is not cool.

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While posting with an avatar wearing a white sheet.

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It is a ghost. I was in a movie about ghosts, so I advertise for publicity.

The good thing you must know is that evil spirits exist, and they are among us; just grab your nearest erutang and run for Hollywood Hills before you make up your mind and decide you're a magical bookkeeper. The worst thing a person can do is accuse another of rape; would you not agree?

The daughter wanted her some fine Muslim ass.

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Sorry for the insinuation, then. It just seemed a little odd, but I believe you.

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No hard feelings; like a distinguished, right-wing man with a cup of warm Scotch, we are good.

She wasn't easy, but that spook in camp was.

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"White" in the American (and Western) sense means someone who's descended from indigenous Europeans or who looks typically European.

It's true that (East) Indians have basically the same facial structure and hair texture as Whites, as they basically look like colored Caucasians. And it's also true that the Indo-European languages family does suggest a common ancestry as well as the Aryan history of India's higher-castes of yesteryear.

BUT... Indians are now easily distinguishible from Europeans, and that's especially true of the southern Dravidians. So I would say that although they're racially closer to Whites than, say, black Africans, they're still not White.

As to that cleaning lady thing, I think she had in mind a Latina and not a Spaniard. Latinos in the American continents, although they speak Spanish, have considerable Amerindian and African ancestry, and so most of them aren't white.

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These race politics really confuse me.

There are no white or black people, for example. I mean, sure, maybe if you find some albino with extremely white skin, you can try to classify them as white, although the rest of their body isn't going to be white anyway (whose muscles are white? whose heart, blood vessels, brain, etc. are white? Even then, it'd be purely physical body's things, not what you really are, because you are not your body!), and actual black skin is also pretty rare.

It's stupid to classify people based on skin color, as their true self is pure energy, and it has no permanent color like that, there are also chakras and meridians, all fluctuating in various colors, then there's physical body, which has all kinds of colors, then there's skin that covers that physical body - and THAT is how we classify people??

I mean, someone, whose physical body has a skin covering it that is brown in color, is somehow classified as 'black'. What kind of sense does that make?

SOmeone else, whose physical body has a pink skin coverin it, is somehow classified as 'white'.

Pink is not white, brown is not black, and then we suddenly jump to a DIFFERENT classification when it comes to 'asians', because we don't want to use the word 'yellow'? WHY NOT, if we're calling people living in pink-skinned bodies white, people living in brown-skinned bodies black, why is there a problem with calling people living in orange-skinned bodies yellow? Because it also means cowardice?

Why can't we use the word 'caucasian' instead of 'white', if we use 'asian' instead of 'yellow'? Oh, because then we'd have to use some N-word for 'black' (which is now 'colore..', whops, sorry, 'people OF color' (how is this different from 'colored', exactly?)?

This is ALL so filled with hypocrisy, that trying to simply look at how things ACTUALLY ARE and make LOGICAL SENSE out of all these 'eggshell-walking, tiptoeing, let's not offend anyone'-style 'how to classify people', makes you crazy!

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