this post was submitted on 24 Nov 2023
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Digital Nomads

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Tired of constantly having conversations like this:

"Where are you from?"

"USA"

"But where are you really from?/But whats your nationality?/Are you actually american?... like.. full american?"

American isnt a race! American =/= white. Yes im "full american" even though im ethnically latino! If you want to know my ethnicity/race then just ask me that instead of implying im not a "real" american.

I know most people asking this arent doing so from a place of malice, but damn does it get tiring after the 100th time.

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[–] Acceptable-Amount-14@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago (22 children)

I have a friend who are Asian but became German

He didn't became german, he got german citizenship.

German is a nationality and an ethnicity that goes back thousands of years. You don't magically become a german because you live there 7 years.

[–] Warum208@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago (11 children)

A friend of mine's grandparents immigrated to Germany in the 50s. We both grew up in the same village, both speak German natively, both went to the same school. Still he is considered Turkish and I am German.

How exactly is thousand years of history important for my personal life? I don't have memories of bashing in roman heads in Teutoburg, chasing Latvians out of newly conquered Teuton land or putting Jews into gas chambers. I learned about all of these in school, just as my friend. Why me may or may not having ancestors who may or may not have done that is now important to be considered part of the in-group is not something I will ever understand.

[–] Acceptable-Amount-14@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago (8 children)

Still he is considered Turkish and I am German.

Because he is turkish.

Turks in germany are not germans, they vote for Erdogan in the elections and they keep their citizenship.

They have turkish names, they name their children turkish names, they follow a turkish religion, when they gather at home they eat turkish food and they often speak with each other in turkish.

They're turks.

[–] Warum208@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

I know Germany is stereotypically that country with strict rules for everything, but you will be happy to learn that it does not actually police its citizens about what they can eat and how they can communicate.

I do enjoy Turkish food a lot as well, though Korean food is probably still my favorite. :)

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