Ethnic Identities
Why is it that in our society, whenever we make reference to a person identified as a member of a “minority” group, we always feel compelled to identify his ethnicity? As a minority, I find this practice very annoying, for it serves no purpose but to perpetuate and reinforce the “us and them” illusion of many in the majority group.
I am referring to Ben Yandell’s article (Op-Ed Page, April 18), which I otherwise thoroughly enjoyed. Had the “middle-aged Latino” he saw taking the contents out of his recycling containers been Anglo would he have referred to him as a “middle-aged white man”? I suspect I know what the answer would be had the man been black.
Minorities are often criticized for transforming our country’s melting pot into a salad bowl, but how can we be expected to join the mainstream when we are constantly being reminded of the existence of two groups and our non-acceptance into the larger, dominant group.
ARMANDO DE LA O
Alhambra
More to Read
Start your day right
Sign up for Essential California for news, features and recommendations from the L.A. Times and beyond in your inbox six days a week.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.