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Stakanov 11 月 20 日 上午 8:24
Why do we still say “African-American”?
I’ve always wondered why people in the US keep using the term “African-American.”
If someone is born, raised, and fully shaped by American culture, why attach another label on top of “American”?
If we’re going to be consistent, shouldn’t we also say “European-American,” “Asian-American,” and so on?

I’m African myself, and I’m saying this without hostility: we have nothing in common culturally with people in the US who are labeled “African-American.”
They’re Americans.
In Africa, they are instantly recognized as Americans, not as Africans, and that’s just reality.

So why keep using a term that seems to divide instead of unite?
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Echo 11 月 20 日 上午 8:29 
I've a better question, why are you still here lmao
I thought you was Chinese before? now you're African. Give your AI bot a rest.
最后由 Echo 编辑于; 11 月 20 日 上午 8:29
Jetstream Seum 11 月 20 日 上午 8:29 
Does anyone still say that? To my knowledge, it fell out of favor and we returned to "Black" like 10 years ago.

Anyways, labels and categories are not inherently divisive in the political sense. "Italian-American" and "Irish-American" are still used especially in historical contexts to describe distinct cultures within the American melting pot.
Stakanov 11 月 20 日 上午 8:34 
引用自 Echo
...

I’m African, and I also have a bit of Chinese ancestry.
Does that somehow bother you, or are you just trying to deflect because you ran out of arguments?
Wild Child 11 月 20 日 上午 8:34 
It was long form trolling. It was to make people so instinctively pc that when they were overseas they'd still use the term and look silly.
steven1mac 11 月 20 日 上午 8:43 
It is for political reasons more than cultural ones. Easier to to manipulate people if they are easily put into groups, a similar group would be Hispanic, even though most might come from different areas and have little in common. Although Hispanic people do tend to integrate with the population after a couple generations and consider themselves as American over their previous nationality fairly quickly, and become a less uniformed voting bloc.

Of course it would be easy for the subject to get political, even if you show it from from multiple viewpoints, but it is not worth getting OT upset when speaking of the obvious.
最后由 steven1mac 编辑于; 11 月 20 日 上午 8:44
Echo 11 月 20 日 上午 8:45 
引用自 Stakanov
引用自 Echo
...

I’m African, and I also have a bit of Chinese ancestry.
Does that somehow bother you, or are you just trying to deflect because you ran out of arguments?

So you're French, African, Chinese anything else? ROFL
Grug 11 月 20 日 上午 8:48 
引用自 Jetstream Seum
Does anyone still say that?

Liberal white women, mostly.
apryl♱ 11 月 20 日 上午 8:49 
this comment section is funny
apryl♱ 11 月 20 日 上午 8:49 
引用自 Grug
引用自 Jetstream Seum
Does anyone still say that?

Liberal white women, mostly.
eyyyy im a proud conservative woman
Grug 11 月 20 日 上午 8:52 
引用自 apryl♱
引用自 Grug

Liberal white women, mostly.
eyyyy im a proud conservative woman

They use the term "the blacks".
Because it's a social category that is deeply ingrained in human society.
最后由 EndangeredPootisBird 编辑于; 11 月 20 日 上午 8:58
Altimely 11 月 20 日 上午 8:55 
you should probably seek out and ask black people who prefer the use of "african american" instead of a bot ridden honeypot.
Poyzo 11 月 20 日 上午 8:56 
Did y'all know that Elon Musk, an African-American, is the richest man in the world!? :Monopoly_HAT:
Stakanov 11 月 20 日 上午 8:56 
引用自 Echo
引用自 Stakanov

I’m African, and I also have a bit of Chinese ancestry.
Does that somehow bother you, or are you just trying to deflect because you ran out of arguments?

So you're French, African, Chinese anything else? ROFL

I’m not French, that’s just something you invented.
I’ve lived in several European countries, mostly Spain, and right now I’m in Belgium.
Believe whatever you want, but my background is simple: I’m African-Turkish with a bit of Chinese ancestry.
The idea of people moving around or living in different places seems foreign to you, apparently...

引用自 steven1mac
It is for political reasons more than cultural ones. Easier to to manipulate people if they are easily put into groups, a similar group would be Hispanic, even though most might come from different areas and have little in common. Although Hispanic people do tend to integrate with the population after a couple generations and consider themselves as American over their previous nationality fairly quickly, and become a less uniformed voting bloc.

Of course it would be easy for the subject to get political, even if you show it from from multiple viewpoints, but it is not worth getting OT upset when speaking of the obvious.

It just feels strange from my point of view because this kind of labeling seems very specific to the US.
In Europe, we don’t really do that. When I lived in Spain, no one called me “African” or “African-Spanish.” People just said I was Spanish because that’s where I lived.
The idea of separating people into sub-categories like that doesn’t exist the same way here.
Yew Nough 11 月 20 日 上午 8:58 
引用自 Stakanov
So why keep using a term that seems to divide instead of unite?
"Nationalism" and "Heritage" seems to have that effect on people.
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