Racial Pride
Posted: Sun Apr 05, 2020 4:46 pm
IDK "why" but before I got to thinking of my friend.
I'll call him Frank.
He's German American - his father is German descent and his mother is German German, right from Germany - whether or not a "war bride" IDK.
Frank's wife is first generation American born Norwegian.
Both are blue eyed and Frank's wife's hair was flaxen, almost a white blonde color.
All three boys have blue eyes and blonde hair.
Racial pride?
I'm getting there!
A long winded story.
Frank and his wife have three sons.
Two went to Virginia tech where the oldest met and began going out with a Japanese student.
She's very intelligent, very polite and well mannered and very pretty BUT on with the story, after college they were still an item.
Being years later ICE informed her that the student visa is up, got to go.
Frank's son married her so she could stay in the United States.
Well, they ended up having a son and here's where the "racial pride" comes in ∙∙∙
They give the boy a Japanese first name (IDK the names) and Scandinavian middle name so (hypothetically) "Isoroku Freydís Schultz".
I just thought "how ironic" that both are so proud of their heritage that they chose to name their son with traditional names but didn't choose their own kind to reproduce with.
I'll call him Frank.
He's German American - his father is German descent and his mother is German German, right from Germany - whether or not a "war bride" IDK.
Frank's wife is first generation American born Norwegian.
Both are blue eyed and Frank's wife's hair was flaxen, almost a white blonde color.
All three boys have blue eyes and blonde hair.
Racial pride?
I'm getting there!
A long winded story.
Frank and his wife have three sons.
Two went to Virginia tech where the oldest met and began going out with a Japanese student.
She's very intelligent, very polite and well mannered and very pretty BUT on with the story, after college they were still an item.
Being years later ICE informed her that the student visa is up, got to go.
Frank's son married her so she could stay in the United States.
Well, they ended up having a son and here's where the "racial pride" comes in ∙∙∙
They give the boy a Japanese first name (IDK the names) and Scandinavian middle name so (hypothetically) "Isoroku Freydís Schultz".
I just thought "how ironic" that both are so proud of their heritage that they chose to name their son with traditional names but didn't choose their own kind to reproduce with.