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January 12, 2011 at 7:16 AM #653150January 12, 2011 at 8:52 AM #652075briansd1Guest
My experience with Asians is that Filipinos mothers would not be considered “Chineses mothers” by the author of the WSJ article.
Filipinos are happy go lucky people who let their hair down. They have been influenced by the Spanish and Americans and they lack Confucian culture.
The economy in the Philipines is dominated by ethnic Chinese businessmen and crony businesses with connections to the government.
BTW, the Philippines is the country in Asia that copied the American democratic system almost exactly.
The PIs was the most advanced Asian country before and after WWII (because it was an American colony). Now, it’s the most stagnant country and they are having to export their people because there aren’t enough jobs.
That said, I know a Filipina gal who was an advertising executive handling big multinational accounts in Manila. She’s a single mom and sacrificed her carreer to move to America and become a medical assistant. All so that her two daughters could attend university in America. Both daughters are excellent students and got full scholarships.
She’s very well-educated and savvy. Her mothering style is very lovey though. She’s a close friend and confidente to her daughters. Very different from the Chinese mothering model.
January 12, 2011 at 8:52 AM #652141briansd1GuestMy experience with Asians is that Filipinos mothers would not be considered “Chineses mothers” by the author of the WSJ article.
Filipinos are happy go lucky people who let their hair down. They have been influenced by the Spanish and Americans and they lack Confucian culture.
The economy in the Philipines is dominated by ethnic Chinese businessmen and crony businesses with connections to the government.
BTW, the Philippines is the country in Asia that copied the American democratic system almost exactly.
The PIs was the most advanced Asian country before and after WWII (because it was an American colony). Now, it’s the most stagnant country and they are having to export their people because there aren’t enough jobs.
That said, I know a Filipina gal who was an advertising executive handling big multinational accounts in Manila. She’s a single mom and sacrificed her carreer to move to America and become a medical assistant. All so that her two daughters could attend university in America. Both daughters are excellent students and got full scholarships.
She’s very well-educated and savvy. Her mothering style is very lovey though. She’s a close friend and confidente to her daughters. Very different from the Chinese mothering model.
January 12, 2011 at 8:52 AM #652729briansd1GuestMy experience with Asians is that Filipinos mothers would not be considered “Chineses mothers” by the author of the WSJ article.
Filipinos are happy go lucky people who let their hair down. They have been influenced by the Spanish and Americans and they lack Confucian culture.
The economy in the Philipines is dominated by ethnic Chinese businessmen and crony businesses with connections to the government.
BTW, the Philippines is the country in Asia that copied the American democratic system almost exactly.
The PIs was the most advanced Asian country before and after WWII (because it was an American colony). Now, it’s the most stagnant country and they are having to export their people because there aren’t enough jobs.
That said, I know a Filipina gal who was an advertising executive handling big multinational accounts in Manila. She’s a single mom and sacrificed her carreer to move to America and become a medical assistant. All so that her two daughters could attend university in America. Both daughters are excellent students and got full scholarships.
She’s very well-educated and savvy. Her mothering style is very lovey though. She’s a close friend and confidente to her daughters. Very different from the Chinese mothering model.
January 12, 2011 at 8:52 AM #652866briansd1GuestMy experience with Asians is that Filipinos mothers would not be considered “Chineses mothers” by the author of the WSJ article.
Filipinos are happy go lucky people who let their hair down. They have been influenced by the Spanish and Americans and they lack Confucian culture.
The economy in the Philipines is dominated by ethnic Chinese businessmen and crony businesses with connections to the government.
BTW, the Philippines is the country in Asia that copied the American democratic system almost exactly.
The PIs was the most advanced Asian country before and after WWII (because it was an American colony). Now, it’s the most stagnant country and they are having to export their people because there aren’t enough jobs.
That said, I know a Filipina gal who was an advertising executive handling big multinational accounts in Manila. She’s a single mom and sacrificed her carreer to move to America and become a medical assistant. All so that her two daughters could attend university in America. Both daughters are excellent students and got full scholarships.
She’s very well-educated and savvy. Her mothering style is very lovey though. She’s a close friend and confidente to her daughters. Very different from the Chinese mothering model.
January 12, 2011 at 8:52 AM #653195briansd1GuestMy experience with Asians is that Filipinos mothers would not be considered “Chineses mothers” by the author of the WSJ article.
Filipinos are happy go lucky people who let their hair down. They have been influenced by the Spanish and Americans and they lack Confucian culture.
The economy in the Philipines is dominated by ethnic Chinese businessmen and crony businesses with connections to the government.
BTW, the Philippines is the country in Asia that copied the American democratic system almost exactly.
The PIs was the most advanced Asian country before and after WWII (because it was an American colony). Now, it’s the most stagnant country and they are having to export their people because there aren’t enough jobs.
That said, I know a Filipina gal who was an advertising executive handling big multinational accounts in Manila. She’s a single mom and sacrificed her carreer to move to America and become a medical assistant. All so that her two daughters could attend university in America. Both daughters are excellent students and got full scholarships.
She’s very well-educated and savvy. Her mothering style is very lovey though. She’s a close friend and confidente to her daughters. Very different from the Chinese mothering model.
January 12, 2011 at 11:41 AM #652225lifeisgoodParticipantI’m not comparing Phillipine mothers to Chinese mothers on how they raise kids. I am speaking about culture and traditions, in regards to parenting, changing the longer an immigrants from any country lives in the United States. A Chinese family that moves to the U.S. for work puposes and oppurtunity for their children will slowly start to see their children pick up on American culture. Their children will probalbly raise their kids differently than their parents raised them. So on and so on until the old customs, traditions, and culture are completely removed one generation at a time.
January 12, 2011 at 11:41 AM #652290lifeisgoodParticipantI’m not comparing Phillipine mothers to Chinese mothers on how they raise kids. I am speaking about culture and traditions, in regards to parenting, changing the longer an immigrants from any country lives in the United States. A Chinese family that moves to the U.S. for work puposes and oppurtunity for their children will slowly start to see their children pick up on American culture. Their children will probalbly raise their kids differently than their parents raised them. So on and so on until the old customs, traditions, and culture are completely removed one generation at a time.
January 12, 2011 at 11:41 AM #652879lifeisgoodParticipantI’m not comparing Phillipine mothers to Chinese mothers on how they raise kids. I am speaking about culture and traditions, in regards to parenting, changing the longer an immigrants from any country lives in the United States. A Chinese family that moves to the U.S. for work puposes and oppurtunity for their children will slowly start to see their children pick up on American culture. Their children will probalbly raise their kids differently than their parents raised them. So on and so on until the old customs, traditions, and culture are completely removed one generation at a time.
January 12, 2011 at 11:41 AM #653016lifeisgoodParticipantI’m not comparing Phillipine mothers to Chinese mothers on how they raise kids. I am speaking about culture and traditions, in regards to parenting, changing the longer an immigrants from any country lives in the United States. A Chinese family that moves to the U.S. for work puposes and oppurtunity for their children will slowly start to see their children pick up on American culture. Their children will probalbly raise their kids differently than their parents raised them. So on and so on until the old customs, traditions, and culture are completely removed one generation at a time.
January 12, 2011 at 11:41 AM #653343lifeisgoodParticipantI’m not comparing Phillipine mothers to Chinese mothers on how they raise kids. I am speaking about culture and traditions, in regards to parenting, changing the longer an immigrants from any country lives in the United States. A Chinese family that moves to the U.S. for work puposes and oppurtunity for their children will slowly start to see their children pick up on American culture. Their children will probalbly raise their kids differently than their parents raised them. So on and so on until the old customs, traditions, and culture are completely removed one generation at a time.
January 12, 2011 at 11:54 AM #652250MyriadParticipantFlu, that’s hilarious. Definitely seen that before.
Which branches to this website.
http://www.asian-central.com/stuffasianpeoplelike/stuff-asian-people-like-full-list/January 12, 2011 at 11:54 AM #652315MyriadParticipantFlu, that’s hilarious. Definitely seen that before.
Which branches to this website.
http://www.asian-central.com/stuffasianpeoplelike/stuff-asian-people-like-full-list/January 12, 2011 at 11:54 AM #652904MyriadParticipantFlu, that’s hilarious. Definitely seen that before.
Which branches to this website.
http://www.asian-central.com/stuffasianpeoplelike/stuff-asian-people-like-full-list/January 12, 2011 at 11:54 AM #653041MyriadParticipantFlu, that’s hilarious. Definitely seen that before.
Which branches to this website.
http://www.asian-central.com/stuffasianpeoplelike/stuff-asian-people-like-full-list/ -
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