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	<title>Comments on: Stereotyping Serves No Purpose But to Hurt</title>
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		<title>By: Nina</title>
		<link>http://www.ronalfy.com/stereotyping-serves-no-purpose-but-to-hurt/#comment-59780</link>
		<dc:creator>Nina</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 10 Jul 2010 23:55:31 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>very insightful article. I wish everyone else in America would be on the same page.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>very insightful article. I wish everyone else in America would be on the same page.</p>
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		<title>By: inspirationbit</title>
		<link>http://www.ronalfy.com/stereotyping-serves-no-purpose-but-to-hurt/#comment-5897</link>
		<dc:creator>inspirationbit</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 15 Jun 2007 12:17:17 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.ronalfy.com/2007/06/15/stereotyping-serves-no-purpose-but-to-hurt/#comment-5897</guid>
		<description>Ranjani, you could marry one of the guys who created and worked on Photoshop, just check their names on the Photoshop banner when the program is loading - you&#039;ll see the list with all their names :-)  
 
Now, back to serious stuff. I can completely relate to what you wrote about. We can&#039;t judge the nation or race based on certain incidents. I&#039;ve recently experienced this prejudice against people with different colour myself.  
 
I&#039;m Caucasian, but I&#039;m very mixed, with dark wavy hair and brown eyes. Greek people think I&#039;m Greek, Iranians think I&#039;m Persian, Spanish people think I&#039;m one of them, but most people say that I just look different. When checking in at the Vancouver airport, back home from my business trip, I was standing in line, waiting for my turn to show my passport and go home. There was an old Iranian couple in front of me. They didn&#039;t speak a word in English and couldn&#039;t understand what that customs lady is screaming at them about. She was asking them, &quot;Where are you coming from?&quot;. Couldn&#039;t she see that from their passports? That poor Iranian woman came running to me, asking for help. I apologized in English, saying that I don&#039;t speak Farsi. The lady officer was yelling at her - &quot;where did you go, come back here, come back&quot;. Finally she let them go.  
 
Then it was my turn, and I had to pay the price for looking different. The customs lady was interrogating me for 5 min - where I&#039;m coming from, why did I go to Europe, what&#039;s the name of the company I&#039;m working for in Vancouver, where do I live, and so on. Afterwards I asked my colleague (who&#039;s blond), was she asked so many questions too. No, she answered, she just showed her passport and was let go. </description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Ranjani, you could marry one of the guys who created and worked on Photoshop, just check their names on the Photoshop banner when the program is loading &#8211; you&#039;ll see the list with all their names <img src='http://www.ronalfy.com/wp-includes/images/smilies/icon_smile.gif' alt=':-)' class='wp-smiley' />   </p>
<p>Now, back to serious stuff. I can completely relate to what you wrote about. We can&#039;t judge the nation or race based on certain incidents. I&#039;ve recently experienced this prejudice against people with different colour myself.  </p>
<p>I&#039;m Caucasian, but I&#039;m very mixed, with dark wavy hair and brown eyes. Greek people think I&#039;m Greek, Iranians think I&#039;m Persian, Spanish people think I&#039;m one of them, but most people say that I just look different. When checking in at the Vancouver airport, back home from my business trip, I was standing in line, waiting for my turn to show my passport and go home. There was an old Iranian couple in front of me. They didn&#039;t speak a word in English and couldn&#039;t understand what that customs lady is screaming at them about. She was asking them, &quot;Where are you coming from?&quot;. Couldn&#039;t she see that from their passports? That poor Iranian woman came running to me, asking for help. I apologized in English, saying that I don&#039;t speak Farsi. The lady officer was yelling at her &#8211; &quot;where did you go, come back here, come back&quot;. Finally she let them go.  </p>
<p>Then it was my turn, and I had to pay the price for looking different. The customs lady was interrogating me for 5 min &#8211; where I&#039;m coming from, why did I go to Europe, what&#039;s the name of the company I&#039;m working for in Vancouver, where do I live, and so on. Afterwards I asked my colleague (who&#039;s blond), was she asked so many questions too. No, she answered, she just showed her passport and was let go.</p>
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