• Fushuan [he/him]@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    18 hours ago

    There’s two reasons for those hours.

    1. Timezones, as mentioned by several people here, you can mentally remove 1 hour for it to make more sense, Portugal is right next to us and their times make a little bit more sense. That doesn’t justify all the numbers shown though, and that because…
    2. They are fucking made up. Maybe if you didn’t go to touristic hubs you would find more normal timetables. Work starts at 8 so breakfast joints open at 7 if early, people eat at 2, they have dinner from 8 to 9, 10 if it’s eating out. At 11 people are preparing to go to bed in most of the country.

    We do have family lunches and dinners occasionally, but that’s not an everyday thing, not even a weekly thing. Maybe a yearly thing. Sorry for not having huge houses and doing them at restaurants I guess?

    Restaurants stop serving around 4 and start again after 7-8 because they need to clean between the lunch and dinner service. Wild concept I know. Also it’s not feasible to keep the kitchen staff there when nobody goes to eat.

    The way you present the country is pretty racist to say the least.

      • Fushuan [he/him]@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        7 hours ago

        It presents the ever famous image of “lazy Spaniards don’t work and have lazy hours.nothing is open ever”. That’s racist.

        • Aceticon@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          6 hours ago

          It’s definitelly Prejudice, and since it’s based on nationality rather than on race, it’s not by definition Racism (which is the latter kind).

          • acargitz@lemmy.ca
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            3 hours ago

            But it is based on race, just an older definition of race. There was a time when southern Europeans were classified as the “olive race”. In the bollocks scientific racist hierarchies of the time, that put them below the Aryans, but above the Semites and the blacks. The Nordicist racists of course considered themselves the apex, and looked down on the rest. In the US you guys still remember how the Irish, the Italians, the Greeks, the Poles, the Jews, were very slowly integrated into the category of White, meaning they were not always considered White.

            The caricatures of the lazy southerners are indeed racist stereotypes of this past era and to claim that they do not persist in the modern era is kind of weird, seeing how so many other racist stereotypes persist.

            • Aceticon@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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              3 hours ago

              Yeah, ok, there are Prejudices around Southern Europeans in general and those are on something other than a specific nationality, though whether or not it adds up to Racial Prejudice rather than Cultural Prejudice is unclear.

              I can tell you you that as a Southern European I was an actual victim of Prejudice at times when living in Britain, but only when people actually knew were I came from, since they couldn’t actually tell I was from Southern Europe merelly by how I looked or even from the way I spoke (because I had lived in a Northern European country for almost a decade before Britain and had an unusual accent).

              Personally, I never felt it was because the way I looked (I easilly passed for English) and instead it was entirelly down to were I grew up in and, interestingly, if I mentioned the years I had spent living in a different country in Northern Europe, those prejudiced expections would normally go away.

              That said, I knew of people from my country in Britain who are mixed race and the kind of prejudice they got was very different (and way worse), so maybe there is at least some racial component (i.e. the way they see White Portuguese is different from the way the see Black or Mixed-race Portuguese) in it, but maybe not in the direction the previous poster thinks - it seems to me that Whites only get Cultural Prejudiced whilst those who are Mixed-race and Black get Racist Prejudice.

              • acargitz@lemmy.ca
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                2 hours ago

                Absolutely.

                I would just however push back on the implicit hierarchy in the way you write it, where cultural prejudice is a smaller degree of prejudice compared to racist prejudice. For example, a black American tourist in, say, N. Ireland, will probably face less prejudice than a white Romanian immigrant. It’s all intersections.

          • Fushuan [he/him]@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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            2 hours ago

            I think we agree on viewpoints, we differ more on the definition of racism. I agree that racism classically has been about ethnicity, but in modern days it’s more broad. For example:

            In the Equality Act, race can mean your colour, or your nationality (including your citizenship).

            So if nationality can be qualified as a race, discrimination about nationality should be called racism.

            In any case, you can replace racist in my original comment with prejudicial (although racist sounds way more heavy, which is why I prefer it) and it’s true anyway.

            • Aceticon@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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              2 hours ago

              Yeah, I’ve seen some Legal Acts were discrimination on nationality was defined as Racism.

              I am very wary of using Racism for discrimination based on nationality because, having been victim of discrimination based on my Nationality whilst being an immigrant abroad and having the same “Race” as the people in that country (basically I look the same as they do) and also having seen the discrimination in that same country against acquaintances of mine with the same Nationality as me but not the same Race, the treatment I got was not the same as they got, prejudices against me were was far less frequent and those against them were far worse (though, this one time, negative culturally prejudiced expectations about me did snowball into something huge and highly damaging to me).

            • Aceticon@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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              3 hours ago

              Two points:

              • Sadly, in the minds of most people there are several physical characteristics which they see as making people different, so de facto there are various races because most people mentaly divide mankind into such partitions. Good that you don’t, but you yourself don’t get to deny that a certain way of viewing others that most of people hold exists, just because you don’t like or share it.
              • Raceism (or in Spanish Racismo) - literally has no meaning if it’s root word, Race (or Raza), has no meaning.

              Your “argument” is both egotistic and illogical.

              • dontbelievethis@sh.itjust.worksB
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                4 hours ago

                My point is that people equate nationality to a race. So when they are talking negative about a nationality they are indeed racist by the standart of common speech.

                If we get scientific and say people are only racist when they talk negative about a race, then the thing falls apart because there is just the human race.

                I’m arguing that not just physical appearance is a race in the minds of people, as you say, but nationality too.

                • Aceticon@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                  3 hours ago

                  My experience - as a Southern European - having lived in various countries in Europe is that people did not see me as having a different race.

                  They saw me as a having a different Culture, but not actually race, and whilst on more than one occasion when living abroad people expressed prejudiced opinions about me when they didn’t knew me well as a person but knew where I came from (which they couldn’t tell from the way I looked or even my accent, since I looked like them and my accent was the product of living in multiple countries), when I mentioned that I had lived for almost a decade elsewhere, in Northern Europe, suddenly those prejudices would vanish, all of which leads me to believe it was about the dominant Culture in my life rather than any racial markers.

                  Further, those people I knew abroad who grew up in the same Culture as me (so, Portuguese) but had a race other than White got an entirelly different treamtment (significantly worse) than I did and which was pretty similar to other people of the same race and not to other Southern Europeans.

                  Hence why I think that there is Cultural Prejudice which is different from Racial Prejudice and what I read in these posts here sounds a lot more like the former than the latter, though I grant you that it’s unclear where one ends and the other starts.

    • MrMakabar@slrpnk.net
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      6 hours ago

      Also hot weather means you eat later. You can see that comparing say Germany and Italy.

      • Fushuan [he/him]@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        2 hours ago

        I usually eat at 2, which accounting for timezone is 1pm in Portugal (best country to compare to, next to us and without the timezone nonsense). Is that late for you?

        • MrMakabar@slrpnk.net
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          1 hour ago

          I usually would eat at 12:00 and then dinner at 18:00. That often changes, but that would be the norm.

    • kcuf2@lemmynsfw.com
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      12 hours ago

      What does race have to do with anything said? Is Spanish (or Spaniard idk what’s correct) a race?

      • Tja@programming.dev
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        8 hours ago

        It’s not only not a race, the whole thing is not even negative. It’s a clear example of “everything I personally don’t like is racism”.

      • chaitae3@lemmy.world
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        3 hours ago

        Light-skinned people are not a race either and they still treat people with darker skin as if they belonged to a different race.

    • wieson@feddit.org
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      18 hours ago

      I was on Tenerife recently. I arrived early in the morning (still night) and searched for a place to have breakfast. Most would open at 7 but I found one that opened at 6. The other customers were people on their way to work and pensioneers or people who just liked to get up early.

      Delicious bocadillos and coffee and freshly pressed orange juice.