she said in essence magzine she was black it was last januray copy i still have it so why would she lie about race? wats
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mdelion — 18 years ago(August 27, 2007 10:43 AM)
I am not sure what the point of this post is. She is of Puerto Rican decent. And if you know anything about Puerto Rico than you know that a large part of the population are mixed with black and Spanish. And that is what she is! So what the hell is your point.
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patriotssbchmp02 — 18 years ago(October 23, 2007 06:55 PM)
I'm a white American, not of hispanic descent. I can move to Puerto Rico and become a Puerto Rican, or Cuba and become a Cuban, etc. I can't move to Africa and become black. I can't move to China and become racially asian. I hope that explains the difference between race and nationality.
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vicious22 — 18 years ago(November 23, 2007 01:02 PM)
"I'm a white American, not of hispanic descent. I can move to Puerto Rico and become a Puerto Rican, or Cuba and become a Cuban, etc. I can't move to Africa and become black. I can't move to China and become racially asian. I hope that explains the difference between race and nationality."
PERFECT EXPLAINATION.. ADLEAST WE HAVE SOME 1 WITH SOME SENSE. THANK YOU. -
Gluis281 — 18 years ago(December 04, 2007 12:56 AM)
Rosie is a Puerto Rican latina who has African, European (Spanish and French), and Taino Native American ancestry. If you watched her documentary, Yo Soy Boricua, she tells of her family's heritage, shows pictures of her relatives and even shares screen time with them. Latinos can be any race but many are biracial or even triracial. In Latin American countries including Puerto Rico, the one drop rule on African ancestry does not exist like in the United States. Truthfully, many latinos especially in the Carribean have African ancestry, but know they are mixed and identify mainly with their country of origin, hint terms used such as Mexican, Colombian, Puerto Rican. The African roots are fused into most Latin cultures particularly through music, food, oral family traditions, etc. Besides, Rosie mentions in her film that she is Puerto Rican and is sick of being asked what is her race.
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dtrea3n605 — 18 years ago(March 02, 2008 03:46 PM)
All ya'll need to stop the madness! Rosie Perez is HUMAN! Just like you, me, and everyone else walking the planet! Why do we need labels? Does it make us better or worse as a people? After reading some of these post, I've already received my answer!
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bamf_90 — 17 years ago(April 17, 2008 06:14 PM)
oh my gosh not all puerto ricans are black or mulatos. thats the nuyorican view of a puerto rican. if you actually go to puerto rico there is a more white and mestizo population. there are still blacks and mulatos there but they are not the majority. its the same thing here in the united states the puerto ricans in new york are mostly black and mulatto because that was the main place during the migration in the 50s and most of the puerto ricans who migrated there were mostly black and poor while the puerto ricans of european ancestry stayed in puerto rico. also in orlando, where there is a recent immigration of educated professionals in puerto rico, they are mostly white. its all really about demographics and economics
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bamf_90 — 17 years ago(June 04, 2008 06:57 PM)
rosie perez is nothing what a puerto rican is. real puerto ricans are people like luis fonzi, ricky martin, giselle blondet, etc. rosie perez is not from puerto rico she is from NEW YORK! she is nothing like what the puerto ricans are real puerto ricans are diverse in when it comes to style. over there people like rock, rock en espanol, pop, rap, evertythign the only thing the nuyoricans like is rap and reggaeton and they probaly dont even understand it because most of them dont even speak spanish or they speak a very ghetto kind of spanish. puerto ricans are class, well educated people and rosie perez does not represent what a puerto rican is
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Jane_Doe01 — 17 years ago(August 23, 2008 11:33 AM)
Rosie Perez, being of fully PRican descent, does in fact represent one type of Puerto Rican, while your classy homeland "white" ones (and whether you like it or not, the NYRican "ghetto types" you bemoan do also exist on the homeland) represent another, and I'm sure there other types in-between. There is no one "Puerto Rican identity" just as there isn't for any other country or land on earth. Drop the arrogance.
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victor_adame — 17 years ago(August 24, 2008 10:46 PM)
Guys the Puerto Ricans in the mainland are mostly of mixed or of predominantly Afro ancestry.
Whites in Spanish speaking American countries (with the exceptions of Argentina and Cuba) are never poor. ( This is why we never see Mexicans like Diego Luna or Alicia Villarreal working at Jose's Tacos in Los Angeles. )
If you ever have the opportunity to visit P.R. you would know that Whites and Mestizos outnumber the Afrocentric and Mulatto Ricans. -
tampaMr — 17 years ago(September 08, 2008 08:20 PM)
she wouldn't be considered black in Caribbean latino society. She'd be considered mulata, because her parents are probably both mixed indian/black/spanish. You have to be pretty dark to be considered black. I've seen way darker ricans than her! One's that don't deny they're black. I think it's also a generation thing. Back in the day, old school latinos who were mixed denied their black ancestry, today we're proud to admit who we are.
honestly, if you're guajiro, boricua, or platano you probably aren't gonna be able to trace you're entire ethnic beginnings, and it's cool, it decreases the hate. Most of us are mixed and proud to be uniquely latino no matter what color we are.
take it from a proud cubana.
http://www.matchflick.com/member/3739 -
Jane_Doe01 — 17 years ago(August 23, 2008 11:30 AM)
Hey, stupid. Not one person in this thread was claiming that all Puerto Ricans were either black or mulatto. Stop being paranoid.
The real problem lies within 80-90% of the majority Mulatto/Mestizo/Triracial PR population trying to identify as white merely by (lucky) means of a less than pitch-black skin hue allowing them to believe they can get away with it. Of course since this is actually encouraged by the island's backwards government, it probably isn't totally their fault. Some probably
are
raised believing that they're actually white, even after looking at their dark-skinned blood predecessors. Latin America in general has a severe, long-standing insecurity about this that they need to fu**ing get past already. This is way more of a problem than the so-called one with a few Americans mistaking Latino/Hispanic as a racial designation.