In America, you're just an American. You're accepted. It doesn't matter that you're of whatever race. If anything, I'm British, and that's it. So let's just get on with it, really.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
We come from a very mixed family. We're a bunch of different races, my family. So it's very normal for us. I don't know why we're accepted. Are all of us accepted or just me?
In Britain, you never get away from the fact that you're a foreigner. In the U.S., the view is it doesn't matter where you come from.
I accept you, and you get the same respect from me whether you are black, white, gay straight, Asian, bisexual, Australian, tall, fat, whatever it is. We are all people, and I look at the people of the world the same way, as my brothers and sisters.
I feel like decades ago it was either you're black, white, Asian or Hispanic, or whatever, but today we see more of an acceptance for people with multi-nationalities.
I am certainly not racist; I even like the British.
I'm accepting of who I am and how diverse I am and honoring that.
I am not an African. I am an American.
Everyone in America thinks I'm American - and everyone in England seems to think I'm American.
I am an African-American in America. That will never change. But I don't have to be defined by that.
I'm definitely an American, because I grew up here. But I've lived very happily in Britain.
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