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To: Metacomet who wrote (85477)1/2/2012 6:21:53 AM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 220253
 
I raise from the only racial democracy in the planet. Besides I am now in my 12th year in Africa, working and living among the negro.




To: Metacomet who wrote (85477)1/2/2012 6:24:41 AM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 220253
 
Brazil's new face has no white color anymore. We finished the negro off by interbreeding.

Brazil's new face has no white color anymore

12.12.2011

The white race in Brazil has found itself in the minority. Young people in the country refer to themselves to those whose blood is a mixture of different races. The idea of the biological predominance of the white race has never been popular in the country. However, social inequality based on ethnic affiliation has not gone anywhere. The phenomenon still exists under the guise of the myth about racial democracy.

The first population census was conducted in Brazil in 1872. Back in those years, the local population was divided into two categories - free people and slaves. There were Africans among the second category - they made approximately 15 percent of the population. White people were in the majority.

The population census of 2010 opened Brazil's new face: negroes, mulattoes, halfbreed, Indians and other mixed races, which are generally referred to as "Pardu" or "brown" in Brazil. All these races have left the white race behind. More than 50 percent of the Brazilian population (50.7%) declared their affiliation to those races. Ninety-one million of Brazilians out of 191 million think of themselves as white people - 47.7 percent of the population. Fifteen million are black (7.6%), 82 million are mixed (43.1%), two million are "yellow" (natives of Asia, 1.1%) and 817,000 (0.4%) are Indians.

The "Pardu" presumably live in the north and in the north-east of Brazil. They make up 97 percent in several provinces. In the midwest of Brazil, the share of the "brown" races reaches 75% and 37% in the south-east. The white are the majority only in the south, where the "Pardu" races make up only 2.3%. Sao Paulo is the city where the number of black and brown people is the largest (4.2 million). Rio and Salvador follow next with 3 and 2.7 million respectively.

As for the negroes, the leadership belongs to Salvador - the black "capital" of Brazil (80 percent of local residents are black). The white "capital is a town in Santa Catarina.

Brazil is one of the most developed countries from the point of view of racial democracy, although it is not a perfect country, of course. Many of the things that are traditionally referred to as social inequality are historically connected with vestiges of slavery. However, unlike in the United States or in South African Republic, Brazil has never popularized the idea of the biological predominance of the white race.

The word "negro" is not an insult in Brazil. The politically correct term - "African Brazilian" - does not enjoy popularity there at all. The races are mixed with each other, so one may not say that there is one pure race in the country. Many white people in Brazil have black ancestors.

Such a considerable increase of the people who think of themselves as "Pardu" (from 44.7 to 50.7 percent in ten years) means that the majority of Brazilians are proud of their African and Asian roots. However, the social inequality based on the ethnic affiliation has not gone anywhere. About 97 percent of respondents said that they did not have any racial prejudice. However, 98 people said that they know the people who share such prejudice.

The population census has proved that social inequality is still associated with skin color. The white population of Brazil declared the monthly income of 1,538 reais a month. Negroes declared a smaller monthly income of 834 reais, whereas mulattos and halfbreed - 845 reais. It is worthy of note that the "yellow" receive more than the "white". This is connected with the fact that many of them are the natives of Japan. They live on compact areas and work as "white collars."

About 16.2 million Brazilians live below the poverty line - 8.5% of the population. Negroes make up 70.8 percent of this amount. The wages of the white and yellow population of the country are 2.4 times higher than those of the blacks. The lifespan of black people is traditionally shorter. Many blacks live in the slums where the crime level is extremely high and where healthcare is considered luxury.

The majority of those Brazilians, who die either violent deaths or as a result of accidents, are black (aged 15-29). They also have a high level of illiteracy in the age group above 15 - about 26 percent. 57.2 percent of those who received higher education before 24 years of age are white people. Only 18.4 percent of them are black.

The state has been trying to improve the situation. The state tries to introduce racial quotas in state-run universities and give special student loans. As a result, the percentage of black students in the country has skyrocketed from 4 to 16.4 percent in 1998-2008. Young people therefore refer to themselves as "Pardu" because of such policies. In 2010, 18.5 million out of 34 million people declared themselves as dark-skinned.

However, the majority of them still feel like a non-standard element in the Brazilian society. There is no racial hatred, but a colored individual is subconsciously regarded as a crime-prone person with a low level of education and limited financial means. Employers pay first priority to white job-seekers.

Therefore, the Brazilians will continue to celebrate the Black Awareness Day for a long time. The holiday is marked on the anniversary of the death of Zumbi dols Plamares - a Brazilian from Angola, who fought for the rights of the slaves. He started a slave-free village and was killed on November 20, 1695.



To: Metacomet who wrote (85477)1/2/2012 6:26:58 AM
From: elmatador2 Recommendations  Respond to of 220253
 
And here's the result of our racism.
Emanuela de Paula , talking about her multiracial origins . This hot Victoria secret’s angel was born on April 25, 1989 in Brazil (Cabo de Santo Agostinho) from a White Brazilian mother and a African Brazilian father.



To: Metacomet who wrote (85477)1/2/2012 8:43:59 AM
From: Hawkmoon3 Recommendations  Read Replies (5) | Respond to of 220253
 
You are an amazingly candid racist.

There are plenty of negroes that are family oriented and don't run away.

It's not a racial matter, but a cultural one. It just happens to be that, in Angola, and many other countries, the individuals may happen to be Negro.

But I have a brother who fathered 4 children over his life, and never took responsibility for any of them.

So what El Matador is saying may sound racist, but it's just a reflection of the cultural and ethnic demographics of that particular country.

He may have intended a racial angle in his comments. But the reality requires him be a bit more specific, IMO.

Hawk



To: Metacomet who wrote (85477)1/2/2012 12:28:54 PM
From: Maurice Winn6 Recommendations  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 220253
 
That's not racism. It's a generalisation. Racism is when an individual is treated like the generalisation whether it's true or not. Italians are short, Dutch are tall - that's another generalisation, not racism. And it's true, You only need to stand on a railway station platform in Milan or in Schiphol airport to see for yourself.

You are so caught up in the racism thing that you are unable to use statistics. Actually, you almost certainly have no idea about statistics, from a statistical point of view, knowing how many people have actually studied statistics. Most people have such a limited understanding of statistics that they will say they know an Angola family which has had a continuous chain of known fathers for 10 generations, as though that proves the generalisation untrue, which it doesn't.

I'm not racist either. Heck, some of my best friends work in Angola.

Mqurice [who knows almost nothing about Angola families or whether Angolans are tall or short]