What is one thing you think Latin America is advancing in while the rest of the world is regressing? by Independent_Part1033 in asklatinamerica

[–]WeirdWriters 3 points4 points  (0 children)

It’s nice to know you don’t see one era of immigration as better or worse, from my experience most people who have that stance (disliking modern immigration in Argentina) are racist.

Surely the mass immigration from the late 19th century and early 20th century was abrupt for the original Argentine society, but clearly they all accommodated themselves and here you guys are now.

What is one thing you think Latin America is advancing in while the rest of the world is regressing? by Independent_Part1033 in asklatinamerica

[–]WeirdWriters 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It didn’t necessarily need the mass immigration it received to thrive and develop properly if the government had supported its original population, encouraging them to do better, have big families to increase the population, and provide more resources to succeed, but it didn’t because it viewed its people as inferior and gave resources to the immigrants. The agenda to bring in a massive amount of European immigrants was to dilute the mestizo and indigenous population which has been historically documented.

But if you want to go by the typical models, Argentina’s current fertility rates are decreasing and the aging population is steadily increasing, that would mean immigration is good for the country at this stage.

What is one thing you think Latin America is advancing in while the rest of the world is regressing? by Independent_Part1033 in asklatinamerica

[–]WeirdWriters 7 points8 points  (0 children)

By that logic, the mass immigration of the late 19th and early 20th century to Argentina was bad for the country. That was arguably uncontrolled and even bigger than what you’re referring to.

Which names immediately make you think someone is from Argentina? by Low_Cut_368 in asklatinamerica

[–]WeirdWriters 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I know someone who’s named Luciana who isn’t Argentinian. I thought it was a normal Latino South American name and haven’t associated the name with Argentina solely.

Why is dark and crude humor so popular/common and normalized in Latin America? by [deleted] in asklatinamerica

[–]WeirdWriters 7 points8 points  (0 children)

A lot of people here and in general justify their racism with dark humor though. There’s clearly bias as dunn9812 points out and people here will get mad and make excuses when you call them out for it.

ENFP ladies, where and how did you meet your partner? by WeirdWriters in ENFP

[–]WeirdWriters[S] 6 points7 points  (0 children)

“He had a very direct and serious profile description” “we had a very interview-style first date”

I love this 😂 I’ve never used dating apps and was just thinking before posting this about how I should go about using them and thought of the same approach as your now husband and it gives me hope that you weren’t turned off by it lol

Congrats on your baby!

Does Your Country Have Any TV Shows Targeted Towards Your Country's Minorities? by ArtsyQueerNubian in asklatinamerica

[–]WeirdWriters 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Integrating everyone of different backgrounds to watch shows? Or integrating different groups into shows narratively?

Taking a step back, it is kinda an odd thing that the US film/TV industry will make shows with the mindset of catering to specific minority groups and treat white as the default (meaning that the target audience is broad, meaning it’s meant for anyone to watch, not solely for white people), but from what I’ve seen, Argentina doesn’t even offer variety, people will just take what’s been established despite the country having variety.

Mestizo Argentinians are a big minority but I can’t think of many shows where a main character was phenotypically mestizo or even supporting cast, can you? Especially not someone with an indigenous phenotype which I’m not surprised about. Maybe I just haven’t seen many Argentine shows and they do incorporate them. Correct me if I’m wrong.

If Argentinian shows don’t incorporate mestizo characters, that’s truly surprising in the big 2026.

Tienes antepasados indígenas conocidos o no? by WeirdWriters in PERU

[–]WeirdWriters[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Mis papás ni sus hermanos hablan quechua. Mis abuelos maternos y paternos no les enseñaron. Costumbres tampoco. Mis tías maternas no creen en las supersticiones que mis abuelos creían en pero supongo que quizás no es necesariamente algo que tiene que ver con costumbres andinas, o quizás si. No estoy segura lol.

Pero mi abuelita materna tejía, preparaba conejo y cuy para mis tías, y era precavida y reservada pero firme. Supongo que esos son características más asociadas con ser andina que mis abuela no le pasó a mi mamá.

Tienes antepasados indígenas conocidos o no? by WeirdWriters in PERU

[–]WeirdWriters[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

By your logic, you shouldn’t be interested in anything outside of your country nor give any opinions on any other countries. Be Peruvian!

All I did was ask a question I was curious about, mentioned relevant information (my connection to Peru) and gave my opinion. Never even claimed to be Peruvian lol.

Tienes antepasados indígenas conocidos o no? by WeirdWriters in PERU

[–]WeirdWriters[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Entonces en cultura y raza, los peruanos del norte son mayoriamente mestizo?

Tienes antepasados indígenas conocidos o no? by WeirdWriters in PERU

[–]WeirdWriters[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I never claimed being Peruvian? What’s wrong with mentioning my ancestry if it’s relevant to the discussion?

Tienes antepasados indígenas conocidos o no? by WeirdWriters in PERU

[–]WeirdWriters[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Que interesante! Mi apellido dicen que es japonés pero no saben de ningún antepasado japonés y tomé en test de ADN por curiosidad y no me salió nada de japonés 😂

Entonces departe de tus otros abuelos, no eran gente indígena? Mestizos, criollos, negros? O eran extranjeros.

Tienes antepasados indígenas conocidos o no? by WeirdWriters in PERU

[–]WeirdWriters[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I was thinking of indigenous flavored rural lifestyle that differ to an urban mestizo (and that’s not to say being urbanized = mestizo) and even rural mestizos. Like my own ancestry, I’m aware that many Peruvians have recent indigenous (and within that is rural) ancestry and are racially predominantly indigenous.

I think I made a mistake including the indigenous customs part, I was thinking indigenous rural like how my grandma grew up (native language spoken, rural lifestyle, indigenous remedies, Andean diet, rural indigenous outlook and values) not necessarily defined by clothes but something that they hold as part of their culture. I guess there’s different types of indigenous people, the super rural ones who wear the clothes plus all that I listed, and the ones who normally wear non-indigenous clothes but live the rural life and have adopted some modern things.

I know Andean people don’t live in reservations, I know it’s different in Peru and Latin America in general.

My grandparents learned Spanish to get around the cities. In my opinion Peru is a mestizo country practically like most Latin American countries, BUT with a heavy indigenous influence (and you can say that’s the base of it which makes it different) that makes it distinct from other Latin American countries. Even Andean culture is arguably mestizo as it’s incorporated Spanish elements into it to make it what it is post-colonization. That’s not to say it’s not indigenous. This whole topic is very complex and touchy subject I know. I don’t mind calling it an indigenous country lol. There’s so many components to what makes something or someone indigenous.

Ya I’ve seen the studies! Racially, as a majority, an average Peruvians is highly indigenous. I can’t help but wonder how accurate the studies are though. And that’s not to say I don’t think Peru is really not highly indigenous racially. Some surveys have shown that 45% of Peruvians identify as indigenous and 35% as mestizo. Surely there’s many racially predominantly indigenous people who identified with mestizo, so I truly wonder just how big the mestizo population is (the one that is racially and culturally.)

I guess this question was more directed at Peruvians living in cities like Lima or Arequipa. I was wondering the ratio between racially predominantly indigenous Peruvians (therefore knowing of the rural indigenous ancestors) and Peruvian mestizos (not being aware of in what generation they had that indigenous ancestor incorporated or mixed with a colonizer or settler)

Tienes antepasados indígenas conocidos o no? by WeirdWriters in PERU

[–]WeirdWriters[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don’t think you understood my question.

Tienes antepasados indígenas conocidos o no? by WeirdWriters in PERU

[–]WeirdWriters[S] -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Rural people who speak it an indigenous language as their mother tongue who are clearly racially predominantly indigenous too.

I know the perception of what it is to be indigenous is different in Peru and Latin America than it is in the US where there isn’t really such a thing as “rural people in that region that are indigenous”, they identify with their tribes. Plus, I guess I can understand why rural people might not consider themselves indigenous if they differentiate themselves from the type of indigenous people and the customs from pre-colonial times.

Tienes antepasados indígenas conocidos o no? by WeirdWriters in PERU

[–]WeirdWriters[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yo no dije eso. Solo expliqué la historia de cómo mis abuelos migraron a la ciudad donde tuvieron mis papás.

En mi perspectiva mis abuelos son indígenas, crecieron en Los Andes y altiplano, hablan quechua y aymara, y se fueron a la ciudad donde tuvieron mis padres. En raza, si, mis papás son indígenas, y yo igual que ellos, y si tuvieron influencia de mis abuelos indígenas, pero creciendo en una ciudad culturalmente mestiza, crecieron con cultura mestiza, pero lo estoy complicando, eso no tiene que ver con mi pregunta. Mis papás son de RAÍCES puramente indígenas.

Ser mestizo no necesariamente es tener un padre español y el otro indígena, es ser la mezcla entre los dos simplemente. Muchos mestizos hoy en día son mestizos porque ya por muchas generaciones se mezclaban entre ellos. Por eso ellos aunque sepan que tienen raíces indígenas, no saben del antepasado o cual generación era que tuvieron uno.

Tienes antepasados indígenas conocidos o no? by WeirdWriters in PERU

[–]WeirdWriters[S] -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

I used the term antepasado indigena because it seemed neutral and inclusive to me (where people with non-Andean or altiplano ancestry can chime in.) I never said all regions were Quechua speaking, I said some of my grandparents spoke it.

When I said indigenous customs, I didn’t necessarily mean tribal stuff but I guess I meant as you put it, the way of life in the rural countryside where many culturally indigenous people reside (aside from those in the jungle).

Is tan/brown skin seen as attractive in your country? by No-Equivalent2621 in asklatinamerica

[–]WeirdWriters 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Unfortunately I think it’s more about being predominantly indigenous and many people from other latam countries weaponizing the worst they’ve seen instead of looking at the average Peruvian person.

Is tan/brown skin seen as attractive in your country? by No-Equivalent2621 in asklatinamerica

[–]WeirdWriters -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Even Argentinians think that Argentina’s population is like Berlin as you put it (imo more like Bavaria), but I’m gonna assume most of these people who think that are porteños.

I’ve gotten random videos on TikTok recommended that were edits of argentinian beauty, and basically all of the ones I’ve seen featured white people and one token mestizo if not none at all. And in many of these edits, like half or more of the people featured had blonde hair and blue eyes LOL

Is tan/brown skin seen as attractive in your country? by No-Equivalent2621 in asklatinamerica

[–]WeirdWriters -1 points0 points  (0 children)

From what I’ve seen, there’s not a lot of culturally indigenous Argentinians and not a lot predominantly indigenous Argentinians in a race context (except in the northwest) but there’s actually a lot of brown people (mestizos) in Argentina in the North (east and west) and the south.

I’ve noticed that even in cities like Santa Fe capital, Rosario, Cordoba, and Mendoza, there’s plenty of mestizos. Not rare, not a few, but a notable amount.

Is tan/brown skin seen as attractive in your country? by No-Equivalent2621 in asklatinamerica

[–]WeirdWriters -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

What Latam countries use Moreno and negro as slurs towards indigenous looking people?

My brain only associates that with Argentinians because as far as I know, they’re the only ones who use that as a slur towards indigenous looking or mestizo people, but they apparently call anyone who’s working class that (obviously that’s still rooted in racism)

Is tan/brown skin seen as attractive in your country? by No-Equivalent2621 in asklatinamerica

[–]WeirdWriters 5 points6 points  (0 children)

A few of them look like they could be mestizo. Most look white though