Shut uppa your face. :) As you can guess, I'm Italian, too. It'll be interesting to see how your little experiment comes out. I've had to put up with the Dago/Wop/Guinea thing all my life, but nobody seems to freak out about those as much as certain other ethnic slurs.
2006-10-10 10:42:39
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answer #1
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answered by solarius 7
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I thought dago was spelled with an A.
So, what IS it with all you crackers, honkies, ofays, peckerwoods, gringos, goyim and shiskas, and palefaces?
Seriously, your average American white ethnic group goes through its phase of arrival, discrimination, and some form of acceptance. Some stereotypes linger; not everyone loves The Sopranos or The Godfather. I've even heard a complaint against Olive Garden commercials. However, the average white ethnic could hide his/her identity with a simple name change. Who knows if Mr. John Rose, if he's white, was really Mr. Giovanni Rossini or Mr. Johann Rosenbaum? But if Mr. John Rose is Black, Hispanic, or Native American, you can usually see it, and the discrimination continues.
BTW, I grew up among quite a few Italian-Americans. The pastor of my church today is an Italian-American.
BTW, what are we going to do about those WASPs? : D
2006-10-10 11:31:16
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answer #2
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answered by MNL_1221 6
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I'm not sure what a dego wop guinea is? Does it lay eggs? My grandma used to raise some I think. I'm not sure if that makes me predjudiced. I think the eggs were green.
Now there's a lot of stinkin' hispanics and blacks that work for Tyson chicken at the chicken ranch though, here in Arkansas. The eggs is white tho.
2006-10-10 10:44:25
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answer #3
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answered by luperith 2
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Not true. Full blood Italians stick out from wasps.
2006-10-10 11:49:40
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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Italians are not white.
2006-10-10 13:58:01
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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fugedabouddit!
2006-10-10 10:42:29
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answer #6
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answered by kent_shakespear 7
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