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Showing posts with label Despite. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Despite. Show all posts

Friday, March 8, 2013

Europe Snow Storm: Despite The Travel Chaos, We Wish We Could Be There Right Now (PHOTOS)

While we love Paris, London and Amsterdam any time of year, there's something incredibly romantic about the notion of those famed European cities blanketed in snow.

The snow has caused massive travel headaches at Heathrow (with 262 flights canceled on Sunday and 130 on Monday), Paris' Charles de Gaulle and Orly airports (where 40% of flights were canceled), Frankfurt's airport (180 flights canceled due to ice on Monday), and Munich (200 flights were canceled Monday), but no matter--the snow is beautiful.

Herewith, some of our favorite European spots covered in crisp white snow.

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Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Latino Is Not A Race, Despite The Census Debate (PHOTOS)

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More people of African descent live in Brazil than any country in the world except Nigeria.

Peru's authoritarian ex-President Alberto Fujimori is one of the 80,000 Peruvians of Japanese descent.

A massive wave of Italians, Spaniards, Germans and other Europeans immigrated to Argentina, where the population is largely white.

Ever wonder why Shakira belly dances? It's because her paternal side emigrated from Lebanon.

A majority of the people of Bolivia are indigenous, with 30 percent identifying as Quechua and 25 percent as Aymara.

About a quarter of Cuba's population is of mixed-race descent, according to government figures, generally of both European and African ancestry.

Most of the population of Mexico identify as mestizo, people of both indigenous and European heritage.

The Census Bureau has sparked debate with a proposal to redefine Latinos as a racial category. The agency’s exploration into a new classification system stems from concern over the fact that some 18 million Latinos declined to identify their race in 2010.

But whatever new system emerges from the debate won’t change one key fact: "Latino" is not a race.

The term “Latino” refers to people of Latin American origin, and the countries of Latin America are diverse, multiracial and generally racially mixed. Most social scientists agree that race doesn't actually exist -- it's a social category invented to keep people apart. The diversity of Latin America makes it clear how hard it is to neatly classify people.

From Mexico to Patagonia you’ll find white people, black people and indigenous people, and all the possible combinations -- not to mention many people of Asian and Middle Eastern backgrounds. More than 67 languages are spoken in Mexico alone. More people of African descent live in Brazil than any country in the world, except Nigeria.

To understand why so many Latinos have trouble identifying a race on the Census, it helps to take a look at the restrictive options available: white, black, Asian, Pacific Islander and American Indian/Alaska Native.

Most Latin Americans, however, come from a mixed-race background -- most commonly mestizo (a person of both indigenous and European descent) or mulato (a person of both European and African descent, more commonly referred to in the United States as “biracial.”) So it’s not surprising that 37 percent of Latino respondents ticked off “some other race” -- making the category the third largest in the country, according to Fronteras Desk.

To cite one example, people of Mexican descent are by far the largest group of Latinos in the United States. And yet, most Mexicans do not clearly fit any of these racial categories.

According to the CIA World Factbook, some 60 percent of Mexicans identify as “mestizo” -- a person of both indigenous and European descent -- and another 30 percent as either “Amerindian or predominantly Amerindian.” The same is true of most Central Americans and many South Americans.

But while race may be a more fluid concept for Latinos than it is for many Americans, racism against people with darker-skin undeniably continues to exist across the Americas. In Latin America as well as the United States, those with lighter skin hold a disproportionate amount of the wealth and political power.

As columnist Esther Cepeda writes:

Now, you need only look at pictures of my Ecuadorian father and grandparents to see there's probably some indigenous Quitu in my blood -- and hooray for that. But to claim myself as Native American on the census -- the main tool used by the government to set policy and determine investments in infrastructure -- wouldn't be very helpful or particularly accurate.

Lumping all Latinos together in the U.S. Census, however, won't make it easier to identify socioeconomic injustice. Instead, it will paper over the ethnic and racial divisions within the Latino community by cramming everyone into one category.

Get to know the Latino mosaic in the slideshow above.

Also on HuffPost:


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Friday, December 21, 2012

Despite APIcalypse SEOs Still Need Rank Tracking Data

Part of your Web Presence & SEO Strategy is a Good Idea by Krista LaRiviere, gShift Labs

As you may have heard, Google is clamping own on how tool owners use their APIs. For many businesses these policy changes raise some serious concerns, and for many SEOs, the moved seemed to herald the end of their world. 

Hearing about Raventools dropping support for rank tracking next year, got me mulling over some questions. How valuable are rankings? Will our clients be upset without this data? How do we use rankings anyway? 

I’ve been doing SEO for 7

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