Topic: White african-american suspended | |
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Ex-Student Says NJ Medical School Discriminated MOUNT LAUREL, N.J. (AP) -- A former student claims in a lawsuit that the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey discriminated against him for the way he described his background in classroom discussions on cultural diversity. Paulo Serodio said that in 2006, he told a professor and classmates that he was ``white, African, American,'' which he says accurately reflects the fact that he was born in Mozambique but later became a U.S. citizen. He said some classmates and staff members at New Jersey Medical School found it offensive that a Caucasian man would call himself ``African-American'' and that the fallout led to harassment and eventually his suspension from the school. Serodio, who lives in Newark, said some school employees and students told him not to describe himself as ``African-American.'' In the aftermath of his comments, Serodio said, flyers were hung around the school mocking him, he was assaulted and his car was vandalized. His lawyer, Gregg Zeff, said Serodio eventually was suspended for ``conduct unbecoming'' a student. The suspension came directly from his remarks in class, Zeff said. Serodio filed the lawsuit in U.S. District Court in Newark on Monday. He is seeking damages from the university and several faculty members and administrators. University spokesman Jeffrey Tolvin said he could not comment because the university had not seen the lawsuit. http://www.1010wins.com/Ex-Student-Says-NJ-Medical-School-Discriminated/4374417 How moronic of the university. The student doesn't have a right to be proud of his birth country? Technically he has more of right to call himself African-American than most blacks in the U.S. who have never even stepped foot in Africa, let alone being born there. IMO the only people who have right refer to themselves as whatever-Americans are those who were born outside of the U.S. and hold a dual citizenship. Otherwise you are just American. |
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like a college professor once said to me...I'm a black american...not african-american because I don't have dual citizenship.
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Like I said in another thread recently.. I'm an American born Mick.
I claim only a bloodline that came from Ireland, not that I'm an Irish-American. |
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I'm an american mutt then
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People are offended too easily anymore
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If African American means only 'black' people, why not call them 'black'?
All of my black friends are not bothered by that description... as a matter of fact, they themselves use it... prefer it. This is not an isolated case... it happens often actually. If a caucasion is born in Africa he is not allowed to put on his paperwork African-American. It makes no sense to me. |
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IMO...african-american isn't a race. it is a citizenship
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I'm an american mutt then ![]() Most people are anymore. |
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Edited by
Atlantis75
on
Tue 05/12/09 05:24 AM
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I'm a trio-citizen. Most Europeans are already dual citizens due to the European Union is also offering a citizenship. I'm an American-EU-Hungarian citizen and I'm also a European mutt, because I know my ancestors mixed left and right within Europe.
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ok...I don't get that....you have citizenship in eurpoe and hungary??? isn't hungary in europe??? that's just not fair
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I agree...if....Africa were a country.......but Alas, it is an entire continent, right?....
So, if he called himself a Mozambique-American, would have that been acceptable??? I am a North American American. IMO...african-american isn't a race. it is a citizenship |
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Technically he has more of right to call himself African-American than most blacks in the U.S. who have never even stepped foot in Africa, let alone being born there. IMO the only people who have right refer to themselves as whatever-Americans are those who were born outside of the U.S. and hold a dual citizenship. Otherwise you are just American.
I've been saying this for years, but nobody ever listens to ME! ![]() |
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This whole "politically correct" business is a pain.
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