Quote:I'm so sick of hearing this sh!t. For one, everyone needs to stop using the euphemism "undocumented" to refer to illegal immigrants. Secondly, the entire concept of "you need them" in reference to people who are breaking the law, and leaching of our entitlement and medical systems, is such a crock of sh!t it's pathetic that people even repeat it.
Any loss, however, will be a loss for the Arizona economy, Gutierrez suggests.
“Latinos...are a highly flexible, highly exploitable work force, a buffer to economic downturns,” he says. “Many of the industries here – agriculture, service industries, low-end manufacturing, construction – are massively dependent on undocumented workers.
“If I were able to conduct an experiment and pay all of Arizona’s undocumented workers to not work for two weeks, the economy would come to a screeching, crashing halt instantaneously.”
INFIDEL wrote:..... This always makes me question things.....
Latinos........ WTF does it have to do with ITALITY?!
Or ROME, Other then being Catholic?
If it has it has to do with being Catholic and of a Latin based Language... are Italian’s\Spanish (from Spain) or even the French, "Latinos"?
Rant over.
Chris
R.W.E. of the J.B.O. wrote:
This is not racist, it's truth. Latinos are hard workers, and the legal immigrants are a great asset to the country. The illegal ones are not, and people need to stop thinking otherwise.
INFIDEL wrote:KK
Just wanted to be sure I was not the only one that saw it that way.
But then, based on this, they are of "Caucasian" descent. (Caucasians being the tribe that settled in to Italy to latter make Rome.)
Chris
Mr.Goodwrench-G.T. wrote:Actually the term "Latino" was never used to describe people of European decent. It was not a term that was distorted. The term actually comes from South America, originating in the Spanish language there. Talk to someone from that continent who speaks Spanish, and they will tell you it means from their area, not from Europe. They use the term similar to the way we use the term "American". It's who they are, based on where they are from, not their racial heritage.INFIDEL wrote:..... This always makes me question things.....
Latinos........ WTF does it have to do with ITALITY?!
Or ROME, Other then being Catholic?
If it has it has to do with being Catholic and of a Latin based Language... are Italian’s\Spanish (from Spain) or even the French, "Latinos"?
Rant over.
Chris
Yes, technically and by world standards you are indeed correct. Spaniards, Italians, Portuguese, Brazilian, Greeks, South Americans, Central Americans, Sardinians are in fact "Latinos." Basically the Mediterranean area will be included in that category. It stems back with the Latin language to then later spread the vernacular dialects known as French, Spanish, Italian, Romanian, Portuguese, Greek today.
It is the sheer ignorance of the US as they try to rewrite the definition to an example of a latino being a five foot, brown human, usually central American decent that only speaks Spanish. At least that's what the US Census in conjunction with media is portraying.
Quote:
While the term Latin America does come from the roots of the languages
INFIDEL wrote:Quote:
While the term Latin America does come from the roots of the languages
Yes, but as far as RACE,
They are MUTT'S just like the rest of the America's!
They are a Mix of the people that ran to "people riding deer" and the Conquistadors that raped and murdered them.
I prefer we call "them" Illegals. and that's all we call them, I don't care if they come from Germany, if your here illegality, get out!
Then "race" is not even in the equation.
Chris
R.W.E. of the J.B.O wrote:Actually the term "Latino" was never used to describe people of European decent.
Quote:
The term actually comes from South America, originating in the Spanish language there.
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Talk to someone from that continent who speaks Spanish, and they will tell you it means from their area, not from Europe.They use the term similar to the way we use the term "American". It's who they are, based on where they are from, not their racial heritage.
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People with roots in the Spanish- and Portuguese-speaking Americas today increasingly identify themselves as Latino.
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1: someone from Mexico, Central America, or South America who speaks Spanish or Portuguese
2: a citizen of the US whose family was originally from Mexico, Central America, or South America
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1: a native or inhabitant of Latin America
2 : a person of Latin-American origin living in the United States
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1. A Latin American.
2. A person of Hispanic, especially Latin-American, descent, often one living in the United States.
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1. somebody from Latin America: somebody who comes from a country of Latin America
2. Latin American living in U.S.: somebody of Latin American descent who comes from the United States
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Latino refers to people living in the US of Latin American nationality and their US-born descendants. Latin America refers to countries in South America and North America (including Central America and the islands of the Caribbean) whose inhabitants mostly speak Romance languages, although Native American languages are also spoken there. Most frequently the term Latino is restricted to immigrants from either Spanish or Portuguese speaking countries and their descendants, but the French-speaking areas of Haiti, French Guiana, and the French West Indies may also be included as Latinos.
A person of Hispanic, especially Latin-American, descent, living in the United States. The feminine form of the word is Latina. "Latino" is a shortened form of the Spanish word for a Latin American individual, "latinoamericano."
R.W.E. of the J.B.O. wrote:LOL. Goodwrench, you'll argue anything as if you are somehow more educated than the rest of the world.
Here, take your pick of sources:
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Latino: People with roots in the Spanish- and Portuguese-speaking Americas today increasingly identify themselves as Latino. It is a term most commonly used within the United States to unite this ethnically and culturally diverse population. In order to disown the legacy of colonialism, this broader term is sometimes used as a replacement for Hispanic.
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1. the language that people spoke in ancient Rome. Modern European languages such as Italian, Spanish, and French developed from it. 2. someone from a European country such as Italy or Spain whose language developed from Latin
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Etymology: Middle English, from Old English, from Latin Latinus, from Latium, ancient country of Italy
1 a : of, relating to, or composed in Latin b : romance
2 : of or relating to Latium or the Latins
3 : of or relating to the part of the Catholic Church that until recently used a Latin rite and forms the patriarchate of the pope
4 : of or relating to the peoples or countries using Romance languages; specifically : of or relating to the peoples or countries of Latin America
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1.
a. The Indo-European language of the ancient Latins and Romans and the most important cultural language of western Europe until the end of the 17th century.
b. The Latin language and literature from the end of the third century b.c. to the end of the second century a.d.
2.
a. A member of a Latin people, especially a native or inhabitant of Latin America.
b. A Latino or Latina.
3. A native or resident of ancient Latium.
adj.
1. Of, relating to, or composed in Latin: a Latin scholar; Latin verse.
2.
a. Of or relating to ancient Rome, its people, or its culture.
b. Of or relating to Latium, its people, or its culture.
3. Of or relating to the languages that developed from Latin, such as Italian, French, Spanish, and Portuguese, or to the peoples that speak them.
4.
a. Of or relating to the peoples, countries, or cultures of Latin America.
b. Of or relating to Latinos or their culture.
5. Of or relating to the Roman Catholic Church.
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1. ancient Roman language: the extinct Indo-European language of ancient Rome and its empire, adopted in medieval Europe as the language of education, culture, religion, and government. The Romance languages developed from Vulgar Latin, and its prominence during medieval times led to Latin-derived words entering the vocabularies of other European languages.
2. somebody from ancient Latium: somebody who came from ancient Latium in west central Italy
3. somebody speaking Romance language: somebody who speaks a language derived from Latin, especially somebody living in Latin America or southern Europe
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After the collapse of the Roman Empire, Latin evolved into the various Romance languages. These were for many centuries only spoken languages, Latin being still used for writing. (For example, Latin was the official language of Portugal until 1296 when it was replaced by Portuguese.)
The Romance languages evolved from Vulgar Latin, the spoken language of common usage, which in turn evolved from an older speech which also produced the formal classical standard. Latin and Romance differ (for example) in that Romance had distinctive stress, whereas Latin had distinctive length of vowels. In Italian and Sardo logudorese, there is distinctive length of consonants and stress, in Spanish only distinctive stress, and in French even stress is no longer distinctive.
Another major distinction between Romance and Latin is that Romance languages, excluding Romanian, have lost their case endings in most words except for some pronouns. Romanian still has five cases (though the ablative case is no longer represented).
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In Europe, the term "Latin" refers to the inhabitants of Latin Europe, which draws from the culture left there by the Roman Empire, thus including the use of a Romance language, and Roman Catholicism or Orthodoxism in case of Romanians.[1] The descendants of these peoples are the ethnic groups Spanish, Catalan, Portuguese, French, Italians, Sicilians, and Corsicans. Latin Europe is distinguishable from Germanic, Slavic and Greek ethno-linguistic influenced Europe.
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of or relating to the ancient Latins or the Latin language; "Latin verb conjugations"
any dialect of the language of ancient Rome
relating to people or countries speaking Romance languages; "Latin America"
an inhabitant of ancient Latium
a person who is a member of those peoples whose languages derived from Latin
Latin (lingua lătīna, ) is an Italic language originally spoken in Latium and Ancient Rome. With the Roman conquest, Latin was spread to countries around the Mediterranean, including a large part of Europe
Quote:From the moron who continues to throw around the phrase "you illiterate son of a bitch" when he's losing an argument. Good job!
...your words does not exemplify...
INFIDEL wrote:Tangent.........
All I am saying is this, other then fitting in to the political correctness of the term, why do we still use it?
I don’t go around yelling and screaming for everything to be in Celtic or German.... or DEMAND that I be recognized as such, I am content with being known as an American.
Chris
INFIDEL wrote:...why do we still use it?It's all part of the mentality that by identifying minorities, they can take groups which can be claimed as being discriminated against, and which need extra help, affirmative action style plans, etc....Take your pick on the reasoning, but the mentality is the same. There is always talk about a colorblind society. The government is extremely hypocritical in this matter. Private entities are not allowed to ask race, but damned near every government document is allowed to ask.