asians
American Catholicism is becoming more diverse, with a growing number of Hispanic and Latino Catholics, as well as an increasing presence of Asian and African Catholics. This shift is influencing the cultural practices and traditions within the church and has implications for the future leadership and direction of American Catholicism.
Per the American Red Cross, in the U.S. 2% of Caucasians, 1% of African-Americans, 1% of Hispanics and 0.4% of the Asian population has Type B- blood.
In a way, yes they did. Since segregation is splitting Caucasians and African American people up. They were separated from them too.
Black or African American, Hispanics, Asians, White Non-Hispanics
no, not yet
Because it hightened the American sense of xenophobia towards Hispanics
asians are born with slanted eyes, caucasians are not
An Anglo-American usually has some English, Irish, or Scottish antecedents and are predominantly Caucasians .
hispanics
By 2050, American Hispanics are expected to constitute about 30% of the US population.
African American Latino American Caucasians Germans
Certainly not. Members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (the "Mormon" church) come from all ethnicities. The Church does not keep statistics on the ethnicities of their members, but it can be assumed that the majority of their members are caucasian and hispanic, based on the geography and language of Mormon congregations. Although caucasians and hispanics are the majority, there are still millions of Mormons who are black, asian, middle eastern, native american, and pacific islander. See the "Related Links" for images of real Mormons from various ethnicities.