US 'Not OK': Younger generations confront immigrant parents on race, Black struggle

'Not OK': Younger generations confront immigrant parents on race, Black struggle​

Latinos raised in the U.S. are challenging older relatives who are not as familiar with the nation's history — and its persistent racism.
By Carmen Sesin and Cora Cervantes
MIAMI — After growing up with progressive Cuban American parents who eventually divorced, Natalee Rivero was surprised at the reaction of her mother’s boyfriend, who got up during a July 4 barbecue and went inside after seeing Rivero and her husband's T-shirt that read “Cuban Americans for Black Lives Matter.”

Rivero, 30, tried to have a conversation with her mother about it, “but she wasn’t hearing it,” Rivero said, surprised her mother defended her boyfriend's reaction.


Around the same time, Sandra Portal-Andreu found herself explaining to her parents why the death of George Floyd was a tipping point for many Black Americans.

“It was an interesting conversation and it was frustrating at times,” said the 41-year-old artist, who felt her parents were being “fed information” that equated the protests over Floyd’s death with violence, looting and antifa.

Across the U.S., the racial reckoning following Floyd's death has led to uncomfortable and at times heated conversations in immigrant families, where younger generations are pushing parents over stereotypes, assumptions and even outright racism against Black Americans.

Portal-Andreu, born and raised in Miami, said her Catholic high school exposed her to different cultures and made her dreadfully aware of pervasive racism toward Black people. By contrast, her Colombian-born mother and Cuban-born father were less knowledgeable about the buildup to the protests that gripped the country.

After much discussion, she and her parents concluded that though violence is not an answer, "we came to an agreement that protests are necessary."


Most Americans are only now learning about seminal events in Black history. Despite the fact that the Tulsa Race Massacre was one of the worst outbreaks of racial violence in American history with enduring repercussions, it received little to no attention in U.S. history books or school teachings. Many Americans first heard of it from the recent HBO series “Watchmen.” In Florida, the Rosewood Massacre and the Ocoee Massacre are historically significant but receive scant attention in school curriculums.

There's even less knowledge among immigrant families about the persistent racism and discrimination against Black people in the United States.

University of Miami sociology professor Jomills Braddock said many immigrants "come with a cultural perspective about African Americans that has been exported from the U.S." It's usually based on popular culture and, more recently, social media.

"It's quite understandable that their knowledge of African Americans and African American experience is not just limited," Braddock said, "but also slanted in a particular way that is unfavorable to African American individuals and the African American community in this society."

The legacy of racism, colonialism


Beyond the lack of knowledge and stereotypes around the Black American experience, there is widespread racism embedded in Latin American countries that immigrants can bring along with them when they migrate. The legacy of colonialism and slavery left social, economic and political consequences that persist to this day.


Across Latin America, people have claimed for years to not have the same racial divisions that plague the U.S., saying they never had Jim Crow laws or segregation in public spaces. But in reality, Afro descendants and Indigenous people tend to be at the bottom of the barrel in terms of education, income and positions of power.

“Latin Americans will often tell you, 'We're not racists; we're just classist.' But of course, social class intersects race. People with higher economic levels tend to be white, while those with lower economic levels tend to be of color,” said Eduardo Gamarra, political science professor at Florida International University. “Most of our societies are fundamentally racist against darker people.”


Gamarra said democratization in Latin America in recent decades has done more than import American movies and music: It has also brought on the American debate on racial relations. Afro Latino and Indigenous social movements have expanded, and countries like Brazil and Colombia have instituted affirmative action programs based on race.

In Miami, a city that is 70 percent Latino, the average fair-skinned Latino does not get discriminated against — and that contributes to a lack of understanding about persistent violence and inequities against Black people.

"Because of racial divisions, because of segregation and not having shared experiences, because of the limited and distorted history of the way race is covered, Blacks and whites have different exposure, different views and different understandings of the state of racial relations," Braddock said. It also means they have different understandings about how much racial progress has been achieved and how much more needs to be done, he said.

'Things aren't like that'


Because of the nation's racial reckoning and the broad appeal of the HBO series "Watchmen," many young people in particular have taken the initiative to do research about the Tulsa massacre and educate themselves.

“That knowledge, among the younger generations, isn't knowledge that's coming from schools or formal forces of information," Braddock said.

Across the country in Los Angeles, younger Latinos are challenging older family members in a city known for its diversity — as well as racial tensions.


"There are times where my mom has gotten mad at me — she said something that was racist toward Asian folks and I said it was not OK, and she will sit down and talk about it later," Esthefanie Solano, 27, of Long Beach, told NBC News.

"I won’t apologize for having conversations about race. I let her have her feelings but we sit down," Solano said. "I try to share what is happening around us and connect how other communities are impacted, like how Chinese families are scapegoated with Covid and how they are blamed, and I give her examples of how we are scapegoated as immigrants. I create comparisons."


Saul Ríos, 64, admitted his two daughters have had many conversations with him where they tell him, “No, pa, things aren’t like that; they are like this.”

Ríos, who emigrated from Mexico in the 1980s, said his daughters, ages 27 and 38, reprimand him when he makes “inappropriate jokes” that make fun of another group or race.

"I think jokes are a way we deal with things, in Mexican culture," Ríos said. "My daughters tell me that even with jokes, we make things that are not good seem like they are OK, because it is like we make them less serious."

Ríos said his daughters have taught him about the need to support the Black community.


"While we Latinos face discrimination, to be a person of color in this country, specifically to be Black, is something that comes with a lot," Ríos said, "that at times we have a hard time recognizing because we are so wrapped up in our own experience."

Ongoing conversations are important in a country that still resists learning its real history, Braddock said.

"Because of the political divisions that exists today, there are contemporary efforts to keep knowledge about Black history —which is really American history — from being fully documented and vetted," he said. He pointed to the ongoing opposition to teach the New York Times' seminal "1619 Project," which threads slavery into all aspects of the country's history, and the debate over critical race theory.

Jeremy Perez, 18, who lives in L.A., challenged the idea that it's only older generations who need to rethink their views on the legacy of racism and discrimination, saying this is also an issue among his peers.

"I have seen some really f----- up messaging group text with things they think are just funny about race, women and some stupid stuff. I don’t think my generation is woke like you all like to say," Perez said. "I think we just need to lead by example and try to keep talking with each other."

Carmen Sesin reported from Miami and Cora Cervantes reported from Los Angeles.
Article archive
 
“It was an interesting conversation and it was frustrating at times,” said the 41-year-old artist, who felt her parents were being “fed information” that equated the protests over Floyd’s death with violence, looting and antifa.
I suppose the "information" being referred to here is the bill for damages to Minneapolis alone, as well as the death toll.
 
Careful! This might cause divisions that will disrupt the One Struggle against the white devils.
That may be so but let’s not forget white = voting Republican. Only true minorities vote for Progressivism™️. You may be as black as asphalt but if you voted for Donald Trump you’re a bourgeoise race traitor. Any minority that votes against their interests is an Uncle Tom and/or a house slave complicit in the abuse that they perpetuate against true minorities like Demigendered plural systems…
 
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challenging older relatives who are not as familiar with the nation's history

"Abuela I know you fled Cuba on a raft made out of a wooden door and stolen innertubes so you and tio could set up this shop that paid for the rest of the family's college educations, and that you now have for additional locations all across south Florida, but as I am almost sixty years your junior and raised by cell phone and internet, let me tell you how oppressive and racist this country is."
 
That may be so but let’s not forget white = voting Republican. Only true minorities vote for Progressivism™️. You may be as black as concrete but if you voted for Donald Trump you’re a bourgeoise race traitor. Any minority that votes against their interests is an Uncle Tom and/or a house slave complicit in the abuse that they perpetuate against true minorities like Demigendered plural systems…
Yeah, if you vote for a Republican, no matter what color your skin is, it signals that you're white inside.

Nothing else matters, everything else drops away to reveal an ivory-white core.
 
"Abuela I know you fled Cuba on a raft made out of a wooden door and stolen innertubes so you and tio could set up this shop that paid for the rest of the family's college educations, and that you now have for additional locations all across south Florida, but as I am almost sixty years your junior and raised by cell phone and internet, let me tell you how oppressive and racist this country is."

Seriously.

these children have never had to struggle with more than their internet being out and not enough people liking their tweets/mean words on the internet.

Put them in the situations their elders had to endure to gain freedom and they'd just break down immediately because they are jello ass weak from being raised on social media and feels.
 
Mexican Americans hate blacks
No amout of Liberal progressive platitudes are going to change that go to any barrio in America or any place where there's predominant amounts of Hispanic Americans and you will see their's almost no niggers. Ask them yourself and they will tell you they hate niggers
 
Mexican Americans hate blacks
No amout of Liberal progressive platitudes are going to change that go to any barrio in America or any place where there's predominant amounts of Hispanic Americans and you will see their's almost no niggers. Ask them yourself and they will tell you they hate niggers
I can vouch for this, well at least in the case of my dad. He's Beaner American and hates blacks. Hates the way they talk, walk, and act in general. I think he used to tolerate them before some ghetto niggers stole the copper piping in a house he rents out. Never heard him call them niggers when I'm present but he does use the word "Crow" in its stead.
 
Mexican Americans hate blacks
No amout of Liberal progressive platitudes are going to change that go to any barrio in America or any place where there's predominant amounts of Hispanic Americans and you will see their's almost no niggers. Ask them yourself and they will tell you they hate niggers

The gun guy on youtube, that kid who did the Russian impression? God, hilarious stuff...anyway I guess he got busted for possession and did a couple months in the federal lockup because he got sent drugs in the mail. His name's Kyle and he does a stream with other youtubers and talked about being in the clink and how his best friend was this Mexican dude who absolutely hated black people. Funny though, he (the Mexican) according to Kyle never said "nigger", ever, and even stopped himself from saying it in a private conversation between the two but otherwise, yeah, hated them.
 
In the 90s and 2000s, Hispanic gangs outright tried to force blacks out of their neighbourhoods by attacking and killing them

from 2007:







But given how an increase in blacks always leads to more crime and lower quality of life and happiness for everyone else, I don't blame them tbh
 
University of Miami sociology professor Jomills Braddock said many immigrants "come with a cultural perspective about African Americans that has been exported from the U.S." It's usually based on popular culture and, more recently, social media.
Who writes this nonsense?

Immigrants view of black people is shaped by immediately being victimized by them as soon as they stepped off the boat.

The origins of virtually every Latino gang including the ultra violent MS13 was to protect themselves against black people.
 
Who writes this nonsense?

Immigrants view of black people is shaped by immediately being victimized by them as soon as they stepped off the boat.

The origins of virtually every Latino gang including the ultra violent MS13 was to protect themselves against black people.
Or it stems from their “country of origin”…
 
That may be so but let’s not forget white = voting Republican. Only true minorities vote for Progressivism™️. You may be as black as concrete but if you voted for Donald Trump you’re a bourgeoise race traitor. Any minority that votes against their interests is an Uncle Tom and/or a house slave complicit in the abuse that they perpetuate against true minorities like Demigendered plural systems…
The Democrats are a possessive Cluster-B ex-girlfriend.
 
Are these not the same people who claim that because they're latino, they're also indigenous (because Spaniards supposedly raped their women despite local tribes actively helping Cortez fuck the Aztecs over)?

So do they not have more victimization points than blacks? Why should Colombians of today give a flying fuck about black sharecroppers getting screwed 100 years ago?
 
Who writes this nonsense?

Immigrants view of black people is shaped by immediately being victimized by them as soon as they stepped off the boat.

The origins of virtually every Latino gang including the ultra violent MS13 was to protect themselves against black people.
The absolute insanity of that quote is hard to wrap my mind around. The US is responsible for the world's perspective on blacks now? This is beyond even the old "too stupid to get a voter id reasoning". Now it's "our powerful white country has informed all of your dumb brown citizens on this issue, because you guys obviously have no culture or original thoughts".

When presented with the reality that latinos in their own countries with latin majorities/cultures hate blacks without ever stepping foot in a white country, they still blame whites. They couldn't come to the logical conclusion that if all cultures/races hate niggers, maybe the problem is niggers. They didn't even go to the cope logic of "latinos just be racist". No it's still somehow my fucking fault. FUCK.
 
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