Data about 47% - 49% percentage of "light-skinned Mexicans" edit

Dear @Pob3qu3: I would be grateful if you could tell me exactly where in the documents you share as a reference that 47% -49% of Mexicans are light-skinned.--Kodosbs (talk) 01:10, 21 September 2023 (UTC)Reply

47% reference edit

I read the entire a Encuesta Nacional sobre Discriminación en México 2010 document and nowhere does it mention that 47% of Mexicans are light-skinned.

Please explain me clearly where you get the 47% as a reference, indicating page and textually where they say it. If in one week there is no conclusive answer, the text will be modified as it is.--Kodosbs (talk) 01:10, 21 September 2023 (UTC)Reply

It's here in the page 7 [1]
Dear @Pob3qu3:, I appreciate that all your comments are signed according to Wikipedia conventions. Second on page 7 nowhere does it say 47%. Do we agree on that to continue the conversation?--Kodosbs (talk) 14:10, 21 September 2023 (UTC)Reply
Not sure what do you mean, in the page 7, middle paragraph on the right it is stated that 54% of women and 40% of men self-identified with the lightest skin tones, that leads to a 47% for all. Pob3qu3 (talk) 00:29, 22 September 2023 (UTC)Reply
Dear @Pob3qu3, Although you yourself are indirectly saying so, I appreciate you confirming that nowhere on the page you shared with me does it say 47%.  There are two flaws in your concept, first it is not true that the publication says 47% and second you yourself assume a simple rule of 50-50% to assign yourself the % between men and women. Do we agree on that to continue the conversation? Kodosbs (talk) 12:55, 22 September 2023 (UTC)Reply
I am getting somewhat confused with the way you are conducting yourself in this discussion, is there a particular reason for which you are not able to do simple mathematical tasks such as getting the average between the numbers 40 and 54? Pob3qu3 (talk) 23:40, 22 September 2023 (UTC)Reply
Dear @Pob3qu3:,
I carefully reviewed the document, specifically page 7. Textually said: ... La mayoría de las mujeres mexicanas(54%) tienden a decir de sí mismas que tienen tonos de piel más bien claros; esto comparado con un 40% de hombres que respondió lo mismo. Puede ser que esto quiera decir que a las mujeres de nuestro país –influenciadas por una publicidad francamente racista en los medios de comunicación y por los prejuicios que México aún arrastra contra la tez morena ... the Translation to English ... The majority of Mexican women (54%) tend to say of themselves that they have rather light skin tones; this compares with 40% of men compared to 40% of men who responded responded the same. It may be that this may mean that women in our country -influenced by influenced by frankly racist media publicity and the media and by the prejudices that Mexico still harbors against dark complexions, women in our country -influenced by frankly racist advertising in the media and by the prejudices that Mexico still harbors against dark complexions ... I have noted your utilization of a straightforward 50-50 rule for population allocation. However, my concern lies in the assertion that 47% of the population is categorized as light-skinned. It is imperative to clarify that the reference explicitly delineates these figures as proportions of individuals selecting the lightest skin tones, which differs from categorizing them as inherently light-skinned. Furthermore, designating this reference as the upper limit for white Mexicans appears incongruous.
It is essential to emphasize that the document refrains from explicitly stating that 47% of Mexicans possess light skin; rather, it signifies their choice of the (3 http://www.conapred.org.mx/userfiles/files/Enadis-2010-RG-Accss-002.pdf see pages 40 and 41) lightest skin tones. The calculation you mentioned represents a mathematical mean derived from these percentages, yet it may not faithfully encapsulate the dataset. Furthermore, asserting a strict 50-50 gender distribution in any given country may require further verification.
Moreover, the document does not posit that individuals identifying with lighter skin tones are necessarily synonymous with 'white' Mexicans. Precise terminology is paramount, and it is unwise to infer ethnicity based solely on skin tone. Light-skinnedness should not be conflated with European ethnicity or 'whiteness.'
In order to preserve precision and objectivity within the article, instead, I propose to indicate exactly the proportion of women and men who identify themselves with the 3 lightest colors of a scale of 9 colors, but not to indicate that 47% are light-skinned, which is not correct, and therefore modify the 47% ceiling of white Mexicans that appears in the article. If there exist alternative pertinent statistics or information within the document that merits inclusion, I welcome your input for further discussion I also appreciate any comments from @Clear Looking Glass: , @Vipz:, , @Gcjnst:, , @Xuxo:, , @Yesthatbruce:.
Thank you for your understanding, and I look forward to resolving this matter amicably.
Best regards Kodosbs (talk) 13:12, 4 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
Regarding your complaint about using a 50-50 mean, there are slightly more women than men in Mexico, so we can adjust to that but it would increase the percentage to 48%, do you actually want that? I also notice that when this discussion started, you were complaining about the percentages of light skin and where did they come from and now that your doubts have been settled you are asking "Why light skin is synonymous with white" (which I address more carefully on my reply below) when that wasn't your original inquiry, why is that? Pob3qu3 (talk) 23:51, 4 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
Dear Pob3qu3,
I appreciate your engagement with the points raised in my previous messages. To synthesize our discussion and provide a comprehensive response, I propose the following:
Firstly, it would be advantageous to specify the proportions of women and men who have chosen the three lightest shades from a nine-color skin tone scale. Additionally, incorporating a reference to the global percentage of the Mexican population can offer readers a broader context to better understand the significance of these proportions. I will tomorrow send a proposal. your mention of adjusting the percentage to 48% does not reflect my primary concern. I prioritize the accuracy of the data derived from the source material. If the source indeed supports a 48% figure, it should be represented faithfully. My goal is to maintain fidelity to the source and avoid any misinterpretation. Then stay tuned to my new sentence proposal.
Regarding the shift in focus from the original inquiry, I want to clarify that my intent is not to divert from the initial topic. Rather, it is to ensure a meticulous and accurate discussion. The question of why light skin is sometimes equated with being "white" is certainly relevant, but it merits a separate and more in-depth exploration, and that´s I will open a new dialogue about it.
Kodosbs (talk) 13:00, 5 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
You are simply refusing to get the point: You acknowledge that the document mentions the figures 40% and 54% yet base your entire argument on refusing to get the average of these two numbers, because of this now you've shifted your focus on "Why having light skin is being equated with being White" pretending that I haven't addressed that point multiple times in the subsection you opened below, in fact, yesterday I put several sources together in a single reply (and gave you a page number [2]). Pob3qu3 (talk) 21:08, 5 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
Dear @Pob3qu3, according to what I told you before, I propose you to update the reference as follows.
"Data from the 2010 INEGI publication reveals that 47.2%[1][2] of respondents (the operation is =(0.514*54)+(40*0.486) and rounded decimals, the values are on page 8 of the 2020 census document Principales resultados del Censo de Población y Vivienda 2020. México (inegi.org.mx).) selected the three lightest shades out of nine options. This preference was delineated as 54% among women and 40% among men. The notable gender-based discrepancy of over 14 percentage points invites scrutiny, potentially attributable to the influence of racially biased media advertising and deep-seated societal prejudices against darker complexions[3]."
Let me know if you agree.
Note: I've noticed that our conversation may have taken a somewhat personal turn, and I believe it's essential to maintain a respectful and constructive discourse. I appreciate it when our focus remains on the arguments and references rather than questioning each other's behavior.
One critical aspect we need to address is the sharing of specific references. It would greatly enhance the clarity and depth of our discussion.
While I understand your point about calculating the average of the figures 40% and 54%, my primary objective has consistently been to gain a precise understanding of the data and its implications. This is why I now agree to share a global percentage, as you suggested. In a similar vein, I believe it's crucial that you acknowledge the distinction between people choosing to be light-skinned and choosing the three lightest tones. My current primary concern is that we establish agreement on this distinction.
Given your concern about the direction of our conversation, I propose that we organize our discussion around three key topics:
  1. Proposing the Removal of the 47% Reference as the Maximum Representation of White Mexicans: I apologize if I gave the impression of initiating a discussion about the equivalence of being white and being light-skinned. To move forward, it's essential to first clarify the topic of the 47% reference. Selecting the three lightest skin tones on a scale of nine tones is distinct from claiming that people identify as light-skinned.
Once this clarification is made, it's important to follow a precise approach, similar to the practice in the United States. There, the population identifying as white plus another ethnicity isn't simply added to the total of whites. To enhance clarity, a supplementary reference could explain the proportion of individuals identifying as light-skinned. This approach allows readers, whether from Latin America, Europe, Australia, or elsewhere, to accurately interpret the data without implying automatic inclusion in the white population.
  1. 47% Reference: The primary objective in this section is to clarify that selecting the three lightest skin tones is not equivalent to being light-skinned.
  2. 49% Reference: Our goal here is to ascertain the origin and relevance of the 49% reference.
I will need at least five days to address your response to the topic "Proposing the Removal of the 47% Reference as the Maximum Representation of White Mexicans" and the "49% Reference" Also I will review the "in fact, yesterday I put several sources together in a single reply (and gave you a page number [2]" commentary. I also appreciate any comments from @Clepsydrae: , @Linda Keita:, , @EvergreenFir:, , @Xuxo:, @Icemoon2k:, @Work permit:, @Sangdeboeuf: Thanks Kodosbs (talk) 14:35, 8 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
The first part of your response is a non-issue, multiple times across the article is mentioned that the 47% figure is based on phenotype, in the section of "Distribution and estimates, the percentage of men and women who choose light skin tones is also mentioned. You also say that an approach similar to the United States has to be followed as on it "the population identifying as white plus another ethnicity isn't simply added to the total of whites" but I looked up the article White Americans and it does. Pob3qu3 (talk) 04:29, 9 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
Dear @Pob3qu3, there should be no further discussion here. The figure of 47% of the white population is not correct because the source says that this proportion chose the 3 lighter colors out of 9, in the same way the article could have said that 60% chose the 4 lighter colors, or that 85% chose the 6 lighter colors. That would make 85% of the Mexicans white then?. Unfortunately, and in spite of the fact that I was as understanding and open to dialogue with you as possible, the answers I received are with texts that are not concrete and give rise to discussion, besides overwhelming me with a lot of texts and without exact pages. Unfortunately and although I do not want to get personal, I perceive a manipulation of figures to increase the number of white people. I understand that in Mexico, the European component is primordial in the mestizaje, and that would make that, without having proof, one could speak of 80% of Mexicans of European descent, but that does not make all white. Following your logic, then all the figures for Latin America are wrong and should be modified. I think the best thing to do here is to discuss the modifications to the article. Finally, In this article, and as it happens in all other countries, the figures should say exactly the number of people who declare themselves as white, and those should be the figures that appear as references, not with manipulations of figures that may give rise to doubts, and unfortunately the article seems to be plagued with inaccuracies and accommodation of words to add the largest number of people who declare themselves as white. Kodosbs (talk) 14:20, 30 December 2023 (UTC) @Xuxo: @Hunan201p:Reply
An explanation for the doubts in the first part of your argument has been given before (two times to be exact), but here it is again: the reason for which "the three lightest shades" are chosen instead of "four" or "five" is found in other documents such as [3](in the last quarter of the document you can see how skin color are sorted on different groups) or [4] on which, in the page seven you can see that skin tones organically group together, this is the closest one can get to a blind analyzis and as an special bonus for you in the page 2 this document uses the term White so you cannot use your erratic argument that "when skin color is surveyed in Mexico it is not being talked about race" aswell. Sources such as [5][6][7] also retake the results of these surveys, so as you can see the treshold the government uses is not random, there is a reason why it is being done this way and common sense has much to do with it (and as another bonus, the use of said criteria is recommended by institutions such as the University of Princeton [8]). You also say in your recent summaries, and throughout this discusion that instead of the 47% figure, it has to be stated that 40% of men and 54% of women choose the lightest shades, I think you are making this to be a much bigger deal than it is, considering that the 49% figure exists and is more solidly supported (I notice you removed it accidentally in your last edits so I'm restoring it and turning it in the main one for the time being). Pob3qu3 (talk) 23:39, 30 December 2023 (UTC)Reply

49% reference edit

I read the entire Módulo de Movilidad Social Intergeneracional 2016 document and nowhere does it mention that 49% of Mexicans are light-skinned.--Kodosbs (talk) 01:10, 21 September 2023 (UTC)Reply

Please explain me clearly where you get the 49% as a reference, indicating page and textually where they say it. If in one week there is no conclusive answer, the text will be modified as it is.--Kodosbs (talk) 01:10, 21 September 2023 (UTC)Reply

It's here in the page 7 [9], in regards to your second inquiry, that source shows how many Mexicans identified with every skin tone but that's about it, other sources, such as [10] are the ones on which it's shown how the government splits Mexicans on different groups depending of their skin color, have a nice day. Pob3qu3 (talk) 01:27, 21 September 2023 (UTC)Reply
Light-skin is not the same as being "white". These sources are being manipulated. Xuxo (talk) 02:45, 21 September 2023 (UTC)Reply
The question on this section was about "light skin" not about "being white" for which sources exists aswell [11][12][13][14][15]. Pob3qu3 (talk) 03:46, 21 September 2023 (UTC)Reply
Dear @Pob3qu3:, I appreciate that all your comments are signed according to Wikipedia conventions. Second, the two links you shared with me do not correspond to the link that accompanies the 49% reference ([16]). Do we agree on that to continue the conversation? Kodosbs (talk) 14:13, 21 September 2023 (UTC)Reply
Well for starters that's not the source for the 49% percentage but sources like this ones [17][18] one is the percentage of mexicans that identified witheach skin color, the other tells you how many White Mexicans there are in the country. Pob3qu3 (talk) 00:29, 22 September 2023 (UTC)Reply
Dear @Pob3qu3, I appreciate that in order to have a more assertive conversation, let's gradually clarify basic concepts and doubts that I have, before sending me links that I did not ask for. The positive thing about your answer is that you yourself agree that the Módulo de Movilidad Social Intergeneracional 2016 is not the source of the 49%. In that sense the link that currently appears on the page is erroneous. Do we agree on that to continue the conversation? Kodosbs (talk) 13:01, 22 September 2023 (UTC)Reply
Is there a particular reason for which you are unable to add up the number of people that identified with tones "H" to "K" and then obtain the percentage out of the total? is not really a difficult thing to do, In fact you don't even need to convert to percentages, as the resulting number from adding up the tones from "H" to "K" is almost half of the total. Pob3qu3 (talk) 23:40, 22 September 2023 (UTC)Reply
Dear @Pob3qu3, I don't understand why I have to add from the "h" to the "k" tone, explain me why I have to do that? . Besides, I´m asking if you agreed or not that the reference mentioned do not said anything about the 49% people being light skin Kodosbs (talk) 13:24, 4 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
You have to add these tones because that's the standard the Mexican government uses[19][20][21][22][23] this is because when you illustrate the results on graphs such as the one in the page 7 of this document, the colors H to K consistently group together [24] which indicates the prescence of a well delineated ethnic group, any other assortment of skin tones would produce inconsistences and lead to problems such as the invisibilization of social disadvanteges groups such as Mestizos or Indigenous peoples face. Other institutions such as the Princeton University use said standard aswell[25] (I mention to them because I heard you were saying that I have no academic back up). Pob3qu3 (talk) 23:51, 4 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
Dear @Pob3qu3 . I wanted to express my appreciation for taking the time to send me the various documents for review. Having access to references is crucial for a thorough review, and I value your effort in providing them.
However, I'd like to suggest a small adjustment for future reference requests. I understand that gathering and sharing information can be time-consuming, and given that our time is limited, it would be incredibly helpful if, when you send documents, you could also include the exact page numbers and specific phrases where the relevant information can be found.
By providing this additional detail, it will make the review process more efficient and effective. It ensures that I can locate the pertinent information quickly, which in turn allows me to provide you with more prompt and precise feedback. This way, we can respect each other's time and work together more effectively.
I will certainly will review the references you've sent this time. I'd like to stress the importance of time and respect in our collaboration. Moving forward, I kindly request that references be provided with specific page and text information. This will help streamline our work, and I believe it will be the last time I need to make such a request. Please stay tuned for my review of your references.
Also, I appreciate your clarification regarding the mention of academic backup. To be clear, my intention was not to suggest that you lack academic support. Rather, I have been seeking more precise information and a nuanced understanding of the topic under discussion. I believe that a robust academic discourse benefits from a rigorous examination of data and concepts, and sometimes, I have expressed reservations about what seemed like overly simplified assumptions. My aim in our discussion is to ensure the accuracy and depth of our analysis, and I value your input and expertise in achieving that goal. Thank you for your ongoing engagement in this academic exchange.--Kodosbs (talk) 13:38, 5 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
This is a bizarre request to make, despite being small documents I've directed you to the exact pages when I've linked them on this discussion (in fact in my previous reply I did it aswell), you are being intentionally evasive. Pob3qu3 (talk) 21:08, 5 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
Dear @Pob3qu3 Here I have nothing more to add, the text that accompanied the 49% did not say this anywhere. Any further discussion will be made as modifications are made to the article. @Xuxo @Hunan201p Kodosbs (talk) 14:25, 30 December 2023 (UTC)Reply

References

  1. ^ Cite error: The named reference conapredEncuesta was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  2. ^ https://www.inegi.org.mx/contenidos/productos/prod_serv/contenidos/espanol/bvinegi/productos/nueva_estruc/702825198213.pdf
  3. ^ Cite error: The named reference conapredEncuesta2 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).

Proposing the Removal of the 47% Reference as the Maximum Representation of White Mexicans edit

Dear @Pob3qu3 . I appreciate your active participation in our ongoing discussion. I would like to direct our conversation towards a particular aspect that has been of concern - the utilization of the 47% reference as the maximum representation of white Mexicans.

It is imperative to underscore that attributing the 47% figure as the upper limit for white Mexicans might not accurately reflect the underlying data. This percentage originates from individuals selecting the three lightest shades on a nine-tone skin scale, but it does not inherently denote self-identification as white Mexicans. Thus, equating this 47% with the proportion of white Mexicans may require further clarification. I carefully reviewed the document a Encuesta Nacional sobre Discriminación en México 2010 and specifically page 7. Textually said: ... La mayoría de las mujeres mexicanas(54%) tienden a decir de sí mismas que tienen tonos de piel más bien claros; esto comparado con un 40% de hombres que respondió lo mismo. Puede ser que esto quiera decir que a las mujeres de nuestro país –influenciadas por una publicidad francamente racista en los medios de comunicación y por los prejuicios que México aún arrastra contra la tez morena ... the Translation to English ... The majority of Mexican women (54%) tend to say of themselves that they have rather light skin tones; this compares with 40% of men compared to 40% of men who responded responded the same. It may be that this may mean that women in our country -influenced by influenced by frankly racist media publicity and the media and by the prejudices that Mexico still harbors against dark complexions, women in our country -influenced by frankly racist advertising in the media and by the prejudices that Mexico still harbors against dark complexions ...


In this context, I would like to inquire whether you agree with the proposition to remove this reference as the maximum representation of the white population in Mexico or if you have an alternative perspective on how this data should be presented. Your insights into this matter are highly valued as we strive for precision and accuracy in our academic discourse. Thank you for your continued dedication to this academic exchange.

Thank you for your continued engagement in this academic exchange. I welcome your input for further discussion I also appreciate any comments from @Rsk6400:, @WindTempos:, @Dimadick:, @Johnsoniensis:, @Hunan201p:, @Rjensen:, @Suntooooth:, @Dhtwiki:,@Clear Looking Glass:, @Vipz:,, @Gcjnst:, @Xuxo:, @Yesthatbruce:.Kodosbs (talk) 13:20, 5 October 2023 (UTC)Reply

Your whole premise is flawed from the start, the article states various times that the percentage of White Mexicans in the article is based on phenotypical traits (in this case skin color, there's also two sources that use blond hair as the reference point), it is also shown, with sources how and why Mexico's government uses for this end, distribution of skin colors is found here (page 7) [26] here is shown how skin colors form groups with each other (page 7)[27], here can be seen the government providing different kinds of results per skin tone group (this one is huge, but the skin color results start appearing at the last quarter of the document)[28], this ids a document by the princeton University which recomends the phenotype-based standard Mexico's government uses (the first half of this small document is specially insightful)[29] this sources are examples of articles that pick up the results of the aforementioned documents [30][31][32], I've presented all of this sources to you already on this discussion, multiple times, yet you pretend to not see them, looking at your behavior it seems you are betting on tagging editors who may not be familiar with all this material in hopes of impressing them with your "apparently rightful and concerned" posture (and I say "apparently rightful and concerned" because you just came out of a block for using proxies [33]). Pob3qu3 (talk) 21:45, 5 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
Your ping might not be working, as I wasn't notified of this discussion in that manner. Your argument seems motivated by the need to denigrate those who would identify as white, as many here seem also to do, as if ethnic pride is either not allowed or allowed only to certain ethnicities. Dhtwiki (talk) 04:51, 6 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
Kodosbs, I agree. The information must be removed. Xuxo (talk) 20:48, 20 December 2023 (UTC)Reply
Putting aside the fact that you are agreeing with "another editor" who is blocked due proxy usage[34][35] I think you have to understand for once that personally not agreeing with text within an article is not a valid ground to remove such text, specially not when its so strongly sourced. Pob3qu3 (talk) 23:19, 20 December 2023 (UTC)Reply
Why isn't this removed yet? It's one of the most blatantly misrepresenting things on Wikipedia arguably. Analyticalreview (talk) 06:29, 1 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
It is not removed because that it is "one of the most blatantly misrepresenting things on Wikipedia..." is a personal opinion and goes against the sources in use in the article, putting it simply there's recent field research made by Mexico's government, the lowest estimates are from ENADIS surveys from 2017[36] and 2022[37], with 29% and 31% (it also has to be considered that these surveys make clear that they were conducted with a special focus on people on socially disadvantaged situations such as indigenous peoples or afro-mexicans) and then there's surveys such as the ENADIS 2010/12 with 47%[38] and the MMSI by the INEGI with 49%[39] and that's it. Besides this there's other sources such as [40] who make clear that it is being talked about White people and different press articles that do so aswell[41][42][43]. I don't quite understand why you so insistently complain about these percentages being innacurate, if anything, the real outlier nowadays would be the 9% figure from the World Factbook, which is also not an official source. Pob3qu3 (talk) 01:04, 2 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
Literally, all the editors disagree with you. Even @PedroDonasco who you definitely know is not a "personal enemy" of yours. We will come to a resolution later and deal with this. Analyticalreview (talk) 01:25, 2 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
The main problem is you are pretending saying you have "lighter skin" is the same thing as saying you are "White." Those are not equivalent statements. Imagine putting everyone that identifies as "dark skin" being thrown into the Black category? See the problem here? Analyticalreview (talk) 01:28, 2 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
Did you miss this ones that I just linked [44][45][46][47] where "White" is mentioned multiple times? its always the same with you, its as if any information that contradicted your personal opinions was totally, literally imperceptible to you, this is also true when you mention that "literally everybody disagrees with me" as a look to this articles' history will reveal that editors that try to remove this data are reverted by editors other than just me. Regarding Uruguayan989 I already got a positive consensus with him about using a weighted average, which could be done here aswell to eliminate outliers such as the World Factbook, so he doesn't exactly disagree with me. Pob3qu3 (talk) 01:47, 2 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
So let's go one bye one:
1) Can't access citation 44 for some reason.
2) Citation 45 is just a news opinion (it says it on the top "OPINION"). The word White is mentioned several times but what does this have to do with anything? All it is talking about is how the "more White" your skin is the more privileged you are in society generally. In this context, a person who is in the middle of the skin tone range is "more white" than a person who is on the darkest end, that still does not make the medium skin tone White.
3) Citation 46 is more clear in its categorization clearly putting H in the "White" category. However, this is a FORBES article, not an official publication by the government.
4) Citation 47, another opinion piece that does not say much but I want you to click on the part that says "El INEGI reveló nuestra pigmentocracia" It links to another article that says H is in the Dark category!
"Si consideramos que de las escalas A hasta la H una persona puede ser considerada como morena, tenemos que casi el 88% de los mexicanos son morenos." So one of your sources links to another one that blatantly contradicts what you are saying.
The biggest problem with your logic is the official survey the government released only has 1 in 10 Mexican self-identifying as the word "Blanco." Over 60% Identified with the word "Moreno." Self-Identification should easily be the metric that matters the most here. Analyticalreview (talk) 02:26, 2 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
The article mentions 88% being considered Moreno, that means 12% is "other" (mainly White).
This figure comes really close to the 1 in 10 Mexicans that self-identify as "blanco." Analyticalreview (talk) 02:29, 2 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
For the point 1 I don't know why it doesn't work for you, even Wikipedia recognizes it as a PDF file, try to set your browser to open non-https pages. In point 2 It seems that you acknowledge that this one mentions "White" a lot so that's progress, you may have seen also that the source states that nearly half of the population is White. For point 3 you dismiss it as a Forbess opinion piece, but it is important to remark that it uses the same standard that Mexican government's publications use, this is relevant aswell on point 4, this one is more about backing up that the surveys speak indeed about White people (as you've tried to imply before that they don't) albeit indeed the writer does not use the standard Mexico's government uses while Frobess writer does, although it is important to remark that "moreno" and "blanco" are not mutually exclusive, there's a source in the article that talks about that. Pob3qu3 (talk) 02:50, 2 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
I'm going to try to get the first source to work but source 2 actually does not say half the population is White.
"En cambio, una de cada cuatro personas de la mitad más blanca cuenta con al menos estudios universitarios."
This translates to "Whiter half." Meaning, it is more white than the darker half.
For example, president Obama is half African and half White. If you look at family photos he is clearly more White than his entire Kenyan family. However, this only makes him more White in proximity, it does not actually make him White. Analyticalreview (talk) 02:59, 2 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
Now you are just trying hard to misinterpret the source, whose title for starters is "Being White" not "Being Whiter." Pob3qu3 (talk) 03:28, 2 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
Okay the links are now working (for the most part)
Citation 36) The word "blanco" is not used once (although as you mentioned H is in the "more clear" skin tones category).
Citation 37) The word "blanca" is stated twice just asking survey takers if they agree with white skin being superior essentially.
Citation 38) Doesn't work for some reason
Citation 39) The word "blanco" is not stated at all.
Citation 40) The word "blanco" or "blanca" is stated four times. One sentence is saying how Mexicans tend to identify their skin tone as more White than what it really is (which kind of hurts your argument funnily enough). It also mentions how the electorate is more likely to vote for white candidates over brown candidates. The rest was hypothetical discrimination scenarios. That's it.
Now you are just trying hard to misinterpret the source, whose title for starters is "Being White" not "Being Whiter."
I'm not misinterpreting it at all, also I'm kind of laughing at your comment because I have no idea what point you were trying to make by the title.
Can you please send me a link of the Mexican government stating close to 50% of the population identifies as (or is) "blanco?" If not we can hurry up and fix this situation already! Analyticalreview (talk) 03:42, 2 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
"Citation 40) The word "blanco" or "blanca" is stated four times. One sentence is saying how Mexicans tend to identify their skin tone as more White than what it really is (which kind of hurts your argument funnily enough..." It doesn't really hurt my argument, specially considering the table in the page 7 where colors align by themselves, in fact I would like it if you copied and translated the content on this talk page for all to see, you say you want to fix this situation already, that seems like a good way to do it, also, just in case it is not clear the citation 39 is directly related to the citation 40. The article titled "Being White" to which you are just givig evasives to now is directly related to these two aswell. Pob3qu3 (talk) 04:16, 2 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
It doesn't really hurt my argument, specially considering the table in the page 7 where colors align by themselves
What's the point of this statement?
in fact I would like it if you copied and translated the content on this talk page for all to see
Can the others not see our conversation? I'm new to Wikipedia editing. I'd gladly love to hear their input.
The article titled "Being White" to which you are just givig evasives to now is directly related to these two aswell
You did a typo there. Not sure what you mean by that. Either way, an opinion piece is not relevant at all. It should only matter what the government states the "White" population is. Send a link where the government states half of Mexicans are identified as White. Analyticalreview (talk) 04:55, 2 April 2024 (UTC)Reply

This is exactly why I asked you to copy and translate the citation 40 (please do it), because the Mexican government uses skin color research as ethnic research given that they have observed it yields more accurate results than plain self-identification, it is also recomended by the Princeton University, who created the color palette that Mexico's government uses. In this document in the first pages it is stated that White people tend to identify with the tones H to K[48]. Pob3qu3 (talk) 05:17, 2 April 2024 (UTC)Reply

This is exactly why I asked you to copy and translate the citation 40 (please do it), because the Mexican government uses skin color research as ethnic research given that they have observed it yields more accurate results than plain self-identification,
Okay then, show me the source where the Mexican government explicitly states the White population then!
By the way, the Princeton University also shows there is an overlap of identification:
"self-identified whites are in the 1-4 skin color categories, mestizos are 3-5"
So there are many "Mestizos" that identify with skin color number 3 aka "H." It does not make any mention of it being an exclusively White category. The actual categories that seem to be going exclusively for Whites are 1-2, which if you are paying attention, a very small percentage of Mexicans identify with.
As stated earlier, find the source where the Mexican government states half the population is considered "White." If not that false information will be removed very soon. Analyticalreview (talk) 05:47, 2 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
"Okay then, show me the source where the Mexican government explicitly states the White population then..." Its the citation 39, where they show how many Mexicans identify with each skin tone, here's another one[49] this one is related to the citations 39, 40 and the article "Being White", scroll down and you'll find a graph where White is mentioned.
"So there are many "Mestizos" that identify with skin color number 3 aka "H." It does not make any mention of it being an exclusively White category..." In any case it'd be Mestizo who are predominantly White, furthermore, as can be seen on the way Mexico's government splits the categories on sources such as ENADIS 2017, they treat them as a single group. There's also a huge contradiction on you "asking for a source exclusively from Mexico's government while wanting to use only the source from the World Factbook in the infobox, you realize this right?. Pob3qu3 (talk) 21:23, 2 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
I'm not using the World Factbook. I'm using the amount of Mexicans that identify as "White." By the way, thank you for providing me all these sources because they completely dismantle your argument. Analyticalreview (talk) 21:37, 2 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
See? this is why we have to discuss in the talk page first, the source you are talking about (ENADIS 2010 I believe) used other words that are also used to refer to White people in Mexico such as güero, claro, aperlado, cinnamon etc. not just White, furthermore I don't see how the source I just provided, which uses clearly the word White, or all other sources I've provided disprove my argument, would you like to elaborate on it?. Pob3qu3 (talk) 22:00, 2 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
You are twisting yourself into a pretzel trying to defend your decision. The statement on Wikipedia literally describes those as "words that may or may not refer to a white person depending on the case." However, let's pretend and have it your way. Let's assume all those words 100% mean White (which we have no evidence to support this). The source states:
¿Cómo le llamaría usted a su tono de piel?
Blanco: 10.9%
Claro 5.4%
Güero 2.1%
Aperlado: 1.7%
If you add up all these words and assume every single one means you identify as White, that still only means 19% of the population in total is identifying as "White." So you're still wrong. Analyticalreview (talk) 22:11, 2 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
You missed quemadito, bronceado, apiñonado, amarillo and canela, which would near 30%, I also notice that you added this ENADIS 2017 to the main text[50] without specyfying that it was performed focussing on disadvanteged groups (hence the lower percentages) so I think we can agree that the lowest realistic estimate would be 30% instead of just 9% right?. Pob3qu3 (talk) 22:43, 2 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
quemadito: .4%
bronceado: (which literally means bronze or tan): .3%
apiñonado (which basically means tan): 4.3%
amarillo: .6%
canela: .5%
So adding everything together we have: 26%.
That is being very generous and assuming everyone who is "bronceado" (and others) is also identifying as White (which is almost certainly not the case). The lowest estimate is 10% (since Mexicans self-identified with that word) and the highest is 26% if we are being extremely generous and using every single definition that could potentially mean light skin. Analyticalreview (talk) 23:05, 2 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
"That is being very generous and assuming everyone who assuming everyone who is "bronceado" (and others) is also identifying as White (which is almost certainly not the case)..." I don't see why it wouldn't be the case, you forget that we have actual sources who point out that many Mexicans don not identify as Mestizo [51][52], with no mention that Mestizo does not appear in the survey at all. You are also forgetting the Brittanica source, which points (albeit on an unconventional manner) that about two fifths of Mexico's population do not have mixed or indigenous ancestry, so that's about 40% and the population, and finally the MMSI and ENADIS sources with 47% (same survey you seem to trust per your last two replies) and 49% (and its related sources which you say you can refute but you haven't yet). Pob3qu3 (talk) 23:17, 2 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
Wait, you legitimately believe 40% of Mexicans are purely European? Do you think it is still 1600? Even back then only 20% of the population was purely European. There has been centuries of interracial mixing since then. Not a single genetic study supports that claim. Even the most extreme cases (I.E Mennonites) are becoming Mestizos in recent decades. It is utter nonsense to believe Mexico is almost as European as the USA. Analyticalreview (talk) 23:23, 2 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
There you are again trying to shift the discussion to personal opinions/beliefs when confronted with sources yuo can't refute. Please lets stay focused on sources. Pob3qu3 (talk) 23:33, 2 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
Find a genetic study or government published source that states the population of Mexicans that have pure European ancestry. In terms of genetic studies, look at the Monterrey study in the 1990s, that was the closest one we have to ever suggest a "pure Spanish" population and even that was still around 10% Indigenous DNA (nowadays they are a lot more Indigenous via recently published studies). I will now be out enjoying the rest of my day. Have fun looking for sources! Analyticalreview (talk) 23:38, 2 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
So the official documents where White is mentioned that I've posted on this discussion[53][54] here are not enough for you and now you shift focus to genetic studies when I just sent you links twice where Mexican geneticists themselves state why genetic studies cannot be used for such purposes[55]? Just say that you concede defeat. Pob3qu3 (talk) 23:52, 2 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
Citation 53 literally contradicts you.
"De las personas que se autoclasificaron en las tonalidades de piel más claras (de la “I” a la “K”),"
So here the skin tone most Mexicans identify with (H) is not put in the "lightest skin tones category." Every source you ever put only hurts your arguments. You are incorrect, find sources that support your obviously wrong beliefs. Until then,
Have a good day! Analyticalreview (talk) 00:05, 3 April 2024 (UTC)Reply

Actually, in the page 15 of the document[56], in the first paragraph (right above the one you quoted), it is specified that the light skin category goes (from "F" to "K"), I mean come on I don't think you didn't see that. Pob3qu3 (talk) 00:26, 3 April 2024 (UTC)Reply

Analyticalreview as I said on my previous edit summary here[57] you are currently misunderstanding the source[58], as the questionaire did not only use the term White but many other words that are synonyms to White in Mexico (such as Claro, Güero, Aperlado, Quemadito, Bronceado, Apiñonado etc.) you acknowledged this yesterday[59][60], so I do not understand why you are currently planted on reverting to a number that you know its wrong. Furthermore the question, found in the page 42/43 is titled "What would you call your skin color" meaning that the research was based on skin color, just like the other sources I've brought by the Mexican government that you keep removing. Put it simply: why do you accept one survey about skin color but reject the other survey about skin color? they're about the same thing. Pob3qu3 (talk) 20:33, 3 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
Dear @Analyticalreview , After carefully reviewing the entire conversation, it's evident that @Pob3qu3 arguments lack substance. Allow me to summarize the key points and address them one by one.
  1. Firstly, it's imperative that @Pob3qu3 familiarizes themselves with scientific literature. I recommend reading the article [61] where you can learn that citing notes from web pages from newspapers like those you cite from Forbes and other news agencies are not scientific literature, these documents are written by people who do journalism and did not study to explain data but to inform. Please stop citing data from newspapers, and go to official sources (INEGI, CENSUS, etc.) or scientific articles.
  2. Regarding @Pob3qu3 shares references from the INEGI, as it has been told a thousand times, a person choosing a skin tone IS NOT THE SAME as self-defining a race or ethnicity. When someone questions him about this, his answers are the same: He gives many references to documents where the INEGI mentions the word "white", but he does not share any document where the INEGI mentions that choosing a color tone is the same as being white. After reviewing the multitude of documents sent, there is only one reference, when opening this link [62], like @Analyticalreview the page has problems opening, however in the link they mention Presentacion_MMSI2016 , when searching for this presentation on the internet it does appear, and is found in this link [63] which is from INEGI itself. In the document they do mention the word white, on page 30 (because it is important to clearly state the page, not like @Pob3qu3 who almost always sends documents without indicating the clear pages, or worse, places things like "... in the last quarter of the document...") but literally they say in Spanish "Distribución porcentual de la población de 25 a 64 años por autoadscripción étnica, según percepción de cambio en su situación socioeconómica actual respecto a la de su familia de origen", it is In other words, it does not say anything about choosing the 3 lightest colors being the same as calling yourself white. Here it is important to note that if the INEGI itself indicates the self-perception word "white" it is because it has asked, but the number of people who call themselves white is not published by INEGI. Another reference that @Pob3qu3 love to use is this link [64] where on page 32 they indicate that "Un 29.4% señaló tener un tono de piel más claro (H-K)", again the same document says "they indicated having lighter skin, not that they identify as whites are identified.
The truth is, with all these arguments, not why continue a discussion with @Pob3qu3what is necessary is to start editing Wikipedia and remove the number of 47% where they never say that they call themselves white. Personally, I will write to INEGI about it, since it is quite sad that someone subjectively implies that a country as beautiful and multiethnic as Mexico is whiter than the state of California in the US. As soon as INEGI responds to me, I will share that document here in the discussion.
@Analyticalreview @Hunan201p I think it is possible to start making modifications to the article and as soon as @Pob3qu3 starts modifying, report an editing war. Kodosbs (talk) 16:46, 26 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
That you come to write here after months just to repeat the same things that Analyticalreview is saying is kind of pointless in my opinion, you could have saved us some time by addressing the issue Analyticalreview has been having with the sources since weeks ago: the actual issue here is that you, or Analyticalreview or whatever for some reason ignore that all Mexico's recent ethnographic research is based on skin color, in your last reply you even linked this document [65] that talks about how socioeconomic differences are correlated to skin color and ethnic differences, this document even mentions White and Whiteness but you still don't seem to get it (also in the graph in the page 7 it can be seen how skin tones organically form three different groups), you keep peddling that skin color reseach is not related to race/ethnicity in Mexico, why do you keep doing that?. Lets hope that you can answer this question before your proxy gets blocked again [66][67]. Pob3qu3 (talk) 21:49, 26 April 2024 (UTC)Reply

Infobox image edit

The infobox (as of today, 19 March 2024) features this image of three blonde, blue-eyed girls at a fair. What evidence do we have that these are actually White Mexicans (and not just a random group of tourists who happened to be at this fair)? It strikes me that White Mexicans would most likely originate from southern Europe (specifically, Spain, and, to a lesser degree, Portugal), and would be unlikely to be blonde and blue-eyed. It seems unlikely (or at least uncertain) to me that this is a properly representative image for the infobox. WikiDan61ChatMe!ReadMe!! 18:21, 19 March 2024 (UTC)Reply

Agreed. They look like tourists. Xuxo (talk) 19:17, 19 March 2024 (UTC)Reply
Not only do we have no means to know whether they are Mexican citizens, we also don't know whether they self-identify as white. The image description is arguably a WP:BLP violation. AndyTheGrump (talk) 20:17, 19 March 2024 (UTC)Reply
We have the statement of the photographer, who seems to have the cooperation of the photo's subjects, that they're Mexican:
Mexico's European descended population numbers over 16 million and along with Mestizos (those of mixed European/Amerindian ancestry, around 70% of Mexico's pop.) is one Mexico's largest racial groups. These Mexican girls are at a fair in Jalisco, Mexico near Zapopan.
I can't easily determine their eye color, but at least two of them could definitly have brown eyes. Plus, the features of the two on the left look like they could be of Spanish descent.
Their clothes might be something you could buy in a tourist shop, but the meticulous face paint less so, and, depending on the context, might be considered offensively presumptuous if mere pretense.
As far as self-identity, we seem to have the attestation of all in this thread that their genetic make-up must be white. And I don't know that BLP strictures apply to something so incidental to the article's subject. Dhtwiki (talk) 23:43, 19 March 2024 (UTC)Reply
WP:BLP policy applies to anything written about a living person on Wikipedia, whether in articles on talk pages. And no, you absolutely DO NOT have any form of 'attestation' regarding 'genetic make-up'. That is an utterly absurd claim to make, and it would be a blatant violation of WP:OR were we to base article content on our own personal opinions even if we hade expressed them. Which we haven't. AndyTheGrump (talk) 09:24, 20 March 2024 (UTC)Reply
Images of particular persons on infoboxes regarding ethnic groups tend to be avoided, that being said, I don't see why the persons in the image couldn't be Mexicans. All this considered I'd suggest to remove said image from the infobox and place it somewhere else in the article. Pob3qu3 (talk) 23:22, 20 March 2024 (UTC)Reply
"I don't see why the persons in the image couldn't be Mexicans". The same way we don't see why the persons in the image could be Mexicans. How do you assume a person is Mexican only because they are wearing a T-shirt writen "Mexico" in a football game? How can a T-shirt prove someone's nationality? The fact that you moved the imagem to the middle of the article does not erase the fact that you failed to prove their nationality. Yes, they could be Mexican, but they could also be Swedish tourists. You need to bring a source proving their nationalities before claiming those girls are "Mexican", Pob3qu3. Xuxo (talk) 15:15, 23 March 2024 (UTC)Reply
We still have the statement of the photographer that they're Mexican, not just what's written on their jerseys. How much more than that do we have for most photographs on Wikipedia that represent someone or some place? Dhtwiki (talk) 23:14, 23 March 2024 (UTC)Reply
Dhtwiki is right, to ask for a source because you do not believe what the photographer of an image says would impact a huge amount of images used on Wikipedia and diminish the project's quality as a whole. Pob3qu3 (talk) 23:50, 23 March 2024 (UTC)Reply
No, it does not. A picture of the Sugarloaf Mountain one can easily certify it is the Sugar Loaf, but one cannot certify the nationality of people though a random picture. Xuxo (talk) 20:41, 1 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
You are just WP:LAWYERING at this point you know. Pob3qu3 (talk) 01:06, 2 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
@Pob3qu3, @AndyTheGrump, @Xuxo, @WikiDan61: They are very likely to be Mexican, coming from a place like Jalisco as stated by the photographer, and they are very likely descended from Southern-European colonizers who arrived to Mexico way before there was any white people in, e.g. the United States. The idea that Spain or Portugal could not have exported blond, light-eyed people to Latin America is beyond absurd, you need to review your Medieval Germanic migrations 101 history. If you need more evidence, go watch this video wholly devoted to blonde Mexicans in Jalisco. As to whether it is appropriate to display them in the infobox, I would say show us the actual Wikipedia policy on these matters, and apply them consistently (because pretty much every other article on, for instance, Mexican indigenous groups does display an image of that ethnic group in the infobox). isacdaavid 13:41, 5 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
As far as I can tell most articles on White/European people don't do it. Pob3qu3 (talk) 23:31, 5 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
Some counterexamples: Nahuas, Purépecha, Maya peoples, Zapotec peoples. isacdaavid 15:05, 10 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
You might be interested in the first 20 seconds of this video. In some sense you are right. The Visigoths and Ostrogoths who inhabited Italy and Iberia in Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages probably originated in the Gotland island, Sweden; or in Götaland, mainland Sweden. The ancestors of these Mexican girls might have very well lived in Sweden 2000 years ago. isacdaavid 15:00, 10 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
It has always seemed to me that the reason for which articles related to White people avoid using images on their infoboxes is because in average such articles have the most conflicts between editors out of all ethnic groups. Additionally, the image currently complements a paragraph on which research about frequencies of blond hair is addressed so it serves a more direct illustrative purpose in there if I say so myself. Pob3qu3 (talk) 00:42, 11 April 2024 (UTC)Reply

direct translation for sources edit

Hello! I'm Camila Vallejo and I am a bilingual English-Spanish translator!

I have seen the page history of this page and I have come here to offer a direct translation for one of the sources: the ENADIS 2010 Mexican survey for page 3 as I have seen some past difficulties with understanding the context for that page.

Please contact me at my talk page if you want the translation! Camila Vallejo (talk) 23:21, 24 April 2024 (UTC)Reply