What unites them?
Povertyball
gays with hatred of usaidiots with love for usalosers who seethe at usawinners who take advantage of usamigrants heading to usaboomers leaving usa
United? Like united states in America?
We make other browns seethe
>>217199467>otherNope, not me remove me from this image
>>217199429our hatred towards each other?
Our average cock length above 14 cm
>>217199429nothingbrazil isn't latinx america
>>217199429Our joint effort to brownify USA
reggaeton
anti-white hatred
>>217199510>>217199462>>217199480You speak Portuguese AKA Galician (and therefore you speak a Spanish language)
>>217199531We love white women though
>>217199537Portuguese is literally older than Spanish, retard, Spanish is a man made language created through a unit of several languages after portuguese
>>217199601Learn to read, I said Portuguese is Galician and since Galicia is in Spain you speak a Spanish language
>>217199429jesus's sacrificethe churchromespainthe same things that unite poland with mexico, america, italy and the rest of the catholic world. Imagine how much worse if poland was russian orthodox and a part of russia
>>217199648>Imagine how much worse if poland was russian orthodox and a part of russiaYou will never be USoid, VPN off, now
>>217199628Galicia was stolen from portugal, spain is lucky that they are part of nato, otherwise we would have invaded them.
>>217199429Odiar a los PRIETOS
>>217199429The only countries I like here are Uruguay and Argentina, you can nuke the rest for all I care
>>217199429Unrealized potential.
>>217199686You are our brother and one of us and that's it
>>217199800Yeah, I think eventually our languages will merge into a portuñol, so I think you are right
>>217199429absolutely nothing >>217199510retard >>217199601>Portuguese is literally older than Spanishno it isn't. The other way around You walking turd retard
>>217199429>the same people>"what unites them?"
>>217200105>vira-lata education
>>217199628portuguese isn't galicianthey're both derived from old galaico-portuguêsnowadays spain mangled up the galician language and it sounds nothing like old galician
>>217200168>same peoplelolnext time look pics
>>217199429They behead and shoot women like in the Mideast but they're christians, basically
We are all descendents of portuguese and spanish settlers - CheckedThat mixed with amerindian women - CheckedAnd brought african niggas to work a little - CheckedReceived european immigration mainly from Iberia and Italy - CheckedWe are obviosuly not "the same", even inside Brazil we have massive differences from one state to the other. But we are similar enough
>>217199467We make argentines seethe
Leftists are desesperate to unite them. Leftists are pathetic, I know.
>>217200315>We are all descendents of portuguese and spanish settlers that mixed with amerindian womenThere are countries in Latam where the majority of people have paternal native american haplogroups. There are millions of indigenous people, not everyone is a Brazilian gigamutt
>>217200355Yes but I see bolivians and peruvians as part of South America fauna.
Please remove Mexico from that image, we have nothing to do with them
>>217199628No man, portuguese are their own thing. The galician and portuguese languages are close but not the same.
>>217200105You are the retard. All Brazilians who insist we are part of the same circlejerk of these spics that hate each other to the oblivion are retard. I hate leftists, man.
>>217199722You don't get it, those who are rich there (large estate owners) only care for themselves, and they have been like this before their countries got the independence. It's quite similar with their southron counterparts in Spain, just google "señorito andaluz".
javelinas
>>217200754
>>217199429America
>>217200789cute
>>217199429judging by thier posts here, a lust for negro phallus.
>>217200421You aren't that different after all
>>217201030Por que só macaco bostileiro cultua perdedores? Baixo QI? Nenhum dos índios cultuam perdedores e fazem o máximo pra ter identidade e se distanciar da gentalha
>>217199429Gringo hatred
>>217201069Já vi muitos argentinos e mexicanos falando a mesma idiotice que você, palavra por palavra, chega até a ser cômico. Na sua tentativa de se afastar deles só parece com eles mais ainda.
>>217201120Não querer ter identidade é coisa de macaco perdedor. O planeta inteiro está errado e só você, o macaco sojado de baixo QI está certo?
Speaking latin-x, hating Americans
>>217201189Desespero por uma "identidade" é a coisa de perdedor. Você acha que os "vencedores" alto QI de que tanto você baba ovo ligam pra essa bosta? Provavelmente não sabem nem o nome do próprio prefeito,imagina ter um senso de identidade. E sua projeção já tá ficando chata pardonazi, nem todo mundo é marrom igual você e precisa desperadamente de uma identidade própria pra ter orgulho a algo.
>>217200403If Mexico spoke English you could sit at the ‘firstie’ tableAlas, your linguistics dictate that you must instead sit with Guatemala
>>217201352Você não tem orgulho de nada, por isso que fica criando circlejerks fictícios e artificiais como esse, precisa de algo artificial pra se apoiar a alguma agenda. Ninguém do velho mundo se apoia a isso, nem na África.
>>217201352Você é só o goyim perfeito que o moedinha adora.
>>217200754Zamacueca, cueca, marinera, etc. derive from the "handkerchief" dances practiced across the Andes and maybe beyond, seems since Inca times at least, that underwent strong euro and afro influence on the Pacific coast, where this group of dances developed their current form and expanded, even reaching places like Mexico.In our highlands, there are many indio dances that also use handkerchiefs, pieces of cloth or similar items, it is really widespread in traditional dances, and these followed a different evolutionary path to that seen on the coast, with no afro contribution.
>>217200754In that image, zapateo almost certainly refers to afro-peruvian zapateo specifically.Afro-Peruvian zapateo developed on the Peruvian coast, during the christianization of indian/african plantation workers who were made to perform quadrille dances during Christmas, merging styles.
>>217201501Or spain, a first world country.
>>217203227But zapateo in simply means foot-stomping, it is a major component in most Peruvian dancing, here's a weddinghttps://www.tiktok.com/@claudia.cruzatte/video/7361885273774378246At its core, stomping seems to go back to the earliest human habitation of the Americas, since it is integral to many amerindian dances continent-wide.
>>217204592Nightlifehttps://www.tiktok.com/@agrupacionlosfenix/video/7464670001199353094https://www.tiktok.com/@faviovargas5_/video/7548148960226020616https://www.tiktok.com/@katyguevara1/video/7337476948400065797https://www.tiktok.com/@keily_salazar22/video/7292253414476598533
>>217201094Your women don't hate gringos.>>217199429TheIR love of BWC.
>>217206000All of these are from the Cajamarca region btw, in northern Peru. The previous one was part of a local type of wedding from the Huanca tradition of central Peru (Huancayo region) called palpa, where they give many gifts to the newlyweds. And here's a more traditional one from northern Peru, originally a pre-Inca dance, from Ancash region:https://www.tiktok.com/@angeldanzaperu/video/7514023935080500498
>>217206548This one is from the Ayacucho region in southern Peru, originally a chanca dance performed by sorcerers and healers. They were banished outside the towns until priests allowed them to return on the condition that they would dance for the Christian God instead of the apus. It has some breakdance-like moves.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OmrGawsU5Tk
>>217199710the atlantic countries really are different, i cringe when people group chile together with us just because it looks nice in a map, instead of grouping paraguay or even brazil when we actually do share cultures and backgrounds, like in >>217200798>>217204592shoe tapping came from the spaniards actually, you can see similarities with flamenco, here northeners do it for dancing "malambo" and i think it has an equivalent in every iberoamerican country
>>217206648This one is from Cusco region, also in southern Peruhttps://www.tiktok.com/@saulttitoalmanacin/video/7553828872802864391Typically they dress like thishttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ynO54iRcwYcAt the border with Bolivia, Puno regionhttps://www.tiktok.com/@nori.laura/video/7573097882845285650
>>217207199Yes, that too, but as I said, at its core it also has Amerindian roots. I'd say that the more Afro and European influence a dance has, the more varied and complex its footwork becomes.A long time ago, it was believed that many Ibero-American dances had strong Andalusian heritage, but nowadays it seems that what actually happened is the opposite: Andalusian music was influenced by American styles of mixed Spanish/Indian/African heritage that later returned to the Old World. For example, the DRAE (1732 edition) defines fandango as: “a dance introduced by those who had been in the Kingdoms of the Indies, performed to a very cheerful and festive tune.”
>>217207582>Flamencologist Ángel Álvarez Caballero believes they are “songs wrongly called ‘round-trip’ from the belief that, at one time, emigrants had taken them from Spain to America, and later they returned in the mouths of those who came back or of their descendants, already infused with new airs acquired in those lands.”>The term “round-trip” was never accepted by all specialists nor by all performers, especially after the studies and debates held for the 1992 Quincentenary. According to Álvarez Caballero, “this concept was already being reviewed, since no trace could be found of the styles supposedly exported from Andalusia across the sea.”https://www.elortiba.org/files/pdf/tango.pdfA much more recent example would be the use of the Afro-Peruvian cajón in flamenco music.
>>217207675Another instance similar to zamacueca, with its Afro/Indian/Euro heritage, is tango. It seems to have first originated in gatherings of Africans and Indians around the late 18th century, popularly called tambos, initially named after the infrastructure for meetings of the same name.For a time, the words tango and tambo were used interchangeably in Argentina, before tango became the term associated with the music and dance. The original "more proper" name would be tanpu, which is what they are called in Cuzco Quechua, but the Spaniards adopted the northern pronunciation instead.And yet, roughly half a century after the mostly black influence of the dance was already recorded in Argentina, the term took on a different meaning in Spain. As it became so popular among the Gitanos that the RAE defined tango in 1843 as “a gathering and dance of Gypsies.” Only in 1914 did it add “a festival and dance of Black people or common folk in America” and “the music for this dance,” because understanding of tango’s origin improved in Spain.
>>217203227I don't really care. I only uploaded it to highlight that Chile is the only country without black music.
>>217208811the mapuche-inca ethnostate of chile is too far from the old world to receive migration of old worlders, blacks (ex-slaves) were only present where whites (ex-slavers) lived
>>217200321It's funny how I can literally kill up to 3 or 4 chileans with a single fist lol keep quiet short 1,50m brown boy
>>217199429White pussy
>>217209048We make argentines seethe, here the proof
>>217208609And tango has also been proposed as an evolution of the older zamacueca, although that idea hasn’t been explored much, but it had some influence.Another dance with a similar background is cumbia, originally created by coastal Colombian indians, that later absorbed a very strong Afro influence, then performed with European-derived instruments and more recently including modern arrangements.
>>217208811The zamacueca or cueca for short became one of the earliest consolidated genres in the Viceroyalty of Peru, which influenced or gave rise to many other across most of South America, including Chile's cueca. It had Indian and European heritage, but also African undertones. Then your version became very popular in Mexico .And as I said, what is interesting is that colonial accounts already mention similar “handkerchief” dances practiced among locals across the Inca Empire.For a time, many colonial sources went dark, because of Tupac Amaru rebellion's countermeasures that banned Inca history (and thus early colonial history), many sources have only been rediscovered fairly recently. Because of that, it was assumed that this piece of cloth element was an old world influence, but it seems its core is not.It is so prevalent among diverse indian dances in Peru, and the Andes in general (due to zamacueca), even Argentina has some of that since early viceroyal control of that region, but not elsewhere, save for the more indian regions of Central America like the Maya area or Chiapas. And it is notably absent in places with stronger iberian control like Cuba or in the Old World itself.
>>217199429Brownness
>>217209784You should be with them then
>>217210856t. urk
>>217199429El Chavo del 8
>>217199429being a 2nd-rate bioweapon now that jeets exist