Blog: I’m Having a Race Crisis.

As y’all are aware of from Friday’s post, I have graduated high school, which means that it’s now imperative that I get a job. I have been searching for a job for three years but unfortunately was never able to find anyone wanting to hire me. I sent in my resume and applied to numerous places, and most of them never got back to me. Obviously, this isn’t ideal in any situation, but it especially wasn’t great since my choices were limited. I was too young to work in many places, including retail (I was turned down a cashier job at Home Depot because I wasn’t 18), and my various severe food allergies excluded me from working at many entry level jobs, such as fast food or grocery stores.

However, since I am now legally an adult, more job opportunities have become available and as I’ve been trying to find a job, I have become aware that my race is more complicated than I thought it was.

For those of you who don’t know, I am a melting pot of various ethnicities and races. Yes, quite a bit of my DNA is from Europe and it’s very apparent if you look at me, but I’m also Navajo, Hispanic, Puerto Rican, Cherokee, Iroquois, and possibly some other stuff that I’m unaware of. And, no, with the exception of the Iroquois ancestry, this isn’t a super small part of my genetic makeup, either. We’re talking almost the entire maternal side of my family being a mix of Navajo, Hispanic, Puerto Rican, and some other things. The Cherokee blood came from my paternal great-grandmother.

Basically, I have a better claim to a job at some prestigious university based on my ancestry than Elizabeth Warren does.

That said, when filling out job applications, when they’re asking for my race or ethnicity, I typically laugh at it. However, when filling out my most recent application, when asked for my ethnicity, it asked if I was Hispanic/Latino or not.

Why there were only those two options available, I don’t know, but it gets worse.

When asked about my race, I had numerous options, including:

  • Hispanic/Latino
  • Caucasian (Not Hispanic/Latino)
  • Black (Not Hispanic/Latino)
  • Asian (Not Hispanic/Latino)
  • Pacific Islander or Hawaiian Native (Not Hispanic/Latino)
  • Native American or Alaskan Native (Not Hispanic/Latino)
  • Mix of two or more races (Not Hispanic/Latino)

If you’re wondering why I have, in parenthesis, “Not Hispanic/Latino,” isn’t me trying to be super specific. This is how it was actually laid out on the application.

Now, this isn’t the first time I have seen this stupidity. The first time I saw it was on a government job application form when I was applying for a job as a toll booth attendant at a state park. I laughed at it, thought it was weird, but, what else can you expect from the government, especially in a blue state? But to see it on a job application for a private company? Why is this necessary? And why are Hispanics/Latinos excluded from every group except their own?

Seriously. For the groups that aren’t part of that category, I can understand it somewhat, though it should go without saying. But for people who are mixed race? I’m sorry, but are mestizos not a thing? Why are we excluding people who are part Hispanic/Latino, especially since White/Latino marriages are the most common interracial marriages in America? What’s going on here? And how are those of us who have one mixed race parent supposed to answer? Do we just go off of how we look or our actual ancestry?

Even worse were the definitions given to further specify who is actually part of a specific racial group. One example of this was their definition of who is White/Caucasian. According to the application, if you are from Europe, North Africa, or the Middle East, you count as white.

You read that correctly. If you’re from North Africa or the Middle East, you count as white. I wish I was kidding.

Another example of the application’s ridiculous definitions was what constitutes as Native American. Apparently, you can’t just be genetically Native American, from any number of tribes from North, Central, or South America. You have to still be affiliated with your tribe to count as Native American.

My Navajo great-grandmother would be offended.

Because of how these definitions work, I once again have to wonder where mestizos or those who have mestizo ancestry fit in. Do I go off of how I look when answering this, or do I go off my actual ancestry? How does that work if I’m related to Native Americans, but they don’t affiliate themselves with their tribe? None of this makes sense.

The simple solution to this problem is to stop asking people this question in the first place. Who cares about your race if you can do your job well? We shouldn’t have to feel pressure to answer this question lest we be discriminated against because we didn’t pick a race or we picked one that’s not desirable in today’s workplace DEI culture.

Until next time,

M.J.

#Blog #Employment #Funny #Genetics #Hispanic #JobHunt #life #Mestizo #NativeAmerican #OpinionPeice #Race #Racism #White #Writing

La Llorona

Also called: The Crying Woman, the Weeping Woman, or the Wailer. She’s a vengeful ghost in Hispanic American folklore who’s said to roam near bodies of water mourning her kids whom she drowned in a jealous rage after discovering her husband was unfaithful to her. Whoever hears her crying either suffers misfortune, death, or their life becomes unsuccessful in every field.

The Full Story:

A beautiful but poor woman (often named Maria) falls in love with a wealthy man (either a Spanish conquistador or a nobleman). After bearing him some kids, the man rejects her. This was either to marry a woman of his own high social class or because he had grown tired of her.

Well, our girl Maria didn’t handle this too well. In a fit of blind rage, & despair, Maria drowns her kids in a river to hurt the man who abandoned them. Immediately realizing what she’d done, she spends the rest of her life (& afterlife) wandering the riverbanks, dressed in white, wailing: “Ay, mi hijos!” (“Oh, my children!”)

Before the Spanish arrived, Aztec mythology spoke of Cihuacoatl, a goddess who abandoned her son at a crossroads. She was often heard at night, wailing, & shrieking through the streets of Tenochtitlan. The earliest documentation of La Llorona is traced back to 1550 in Mexico City.

The legend of La Llorona is traditionally told throughout Mexico, Central America, & northern South America. Many scholars link La Llorona to Malintzin (La Malinche), the indigenous woman who served as an interpreter & mistress to Hernan Cortes.

In Mexican history, she’s a complicated figure. She’s seen by some as the “mother” of the Mestizo race & by others as a traitor. La Malinche is considered both the mother of the modern Mexican people & a symbol of national treachery for her role in aiding the Spanish.

La Llorona is a soul denied entry into Heaven until she finds her kids. She serves as a “living” (or undead, depending on how you look at it) example of the Stations of the Cross gone wrong. A figure of eternal penance who cannot find the absolution of the Church. Because her sin (infanticide) is so grievous.

Unlike the Lavandieres, who are often punished for working on a holy day (the Sabbath. Also check out our post about the Lavandieres.), La Llorona is punished for her passions. She’s a more visceral, emotional figure, representing the “shattering family” rather than “forbidden labor.”

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Donate yearly #1550 #AztecMythology #CentralAmerica #Cihuacoatl #Crossroads #HernanCortes #HispanicAmericanFolklore #Infanticide #LaLlorona #LaMalinche #LesLavandieres #Malintzin #Mestizo #Mexico #MexicoCity #NorthernSouthAmerica #Spain #Spanish #SpanishConquistadors #StationsOfTheCross #Tenochtitlan

Mallazo celebra el primer aniversario de “Otra noche más” con su lanzamiento en formato físico

https://fed.brid.gy/r/https://arainfo.org/mallazo-celebra-el-primer-aniversario-de-otra-noche-mas-con-su-lanzamiento-en-formato-fisico/

Joe Bataan - Mestizo

YouTube

ESKORZO [25,70 €]

Tollhaus, Saturday, October 18 at 08:00 PM GMT+2

ESKORZO

„Historias de Amor y otras mierdas“

Wer energiegeladene und schweißtreibende Livekonzerte, musikalische Vielfalt und Bands wie The Cat Empire, Manu Chao, Gogol Bordello oder Chico Trujillo liebt, sollte Eskorzo auf keinen Fall verpassen. Die bereits 1995 gegründete Band aus Granada gilt als Vorreiter der Mestizo-Bewegung in Spanien und vereint so unterschiedliche Stile wie Cumbia, Afrobeat, Gypsy-Punk, Reggae, Ska, Funk und Jazz. Beeinflusst von Künstlern wie Fishbone, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Talking Heads, The Clash, Mano Negra oder Los Fabulosos Cadillacs, sind die sieben Musiker von Eskorzo heute selbst eine Referenz für authentische musikalische Fusion auf höchstem Niveau.

https://keepkarlsruheboring.org/event/eskorzo-2570-euro

"they've been hopping across borders and genres since day one of their party starting mission, which was probably inspired by the ripples in time and space caused by Manu Chao's Clandestino album"
https://www.theslowmusicmovement.org/post/monsieur-et-madame-loops-à-toi-aussi-ça-peut-t-arriver-self-release

Find Monsieur et Madame LoOps in the End of Week Freak Playlist:
https://www.submithub.com/link/end-of-week-freak

#mestizo #dub #fusion #independent
#artist #slow #music #occitanie

Educational Infographics – Sharing Some Of The Work Of Zachary Ammerman
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https://www.zacharyammerman.com/portfolio/infographics <-- shared infographic examples, including maps…
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[I do not know Zachry personally or professionally, but these examples of his work are TOO dang good not to share 😊 ]
#GIS #spatial #mapping #alldataisspatial #cartography #education #infographics #FirstNation #history #ancienthistory #StoryOfAmerica #USHistory #K12 #schools #designer #NativeAmericans #mestizo #culture #migration #geography
@ZacharyAmmerman
kekspee's Drive Time

Playlist · ohrenweide · 2000 items · 70 saves

Spotify
Orgullo de mi mestizaje... #Mestizo #MastoArt #MastoArtist

Les vengo a recomendar un buen libro está en PDF, epub y formato impreso de igual forma, me parece muy bueno para entender con profundidad la relación entre los proyectos para acercarse """" a la burguesia nacional como el mestizaje

#books #mestizaje #mestizo #mexico #latam #spain #españa