Love is simply love and it has nothing to do with different cultures. There are many mixed cultural marriages in the world and they are successful. It doesn't mean the person doesn't feel their own culture wasn't good enough to have a romantic relationship with or marry. It's not about whether Mexican or Latin are better in any way, but who the person fell in love with. Beauty is in the eye of the beholder. Physical attributes may attract opposites sexes to each other first, but personality has a lot more to do with it.
However there are a few people who will choose a person as a "step up" in their lives, especially if they come from a poor background. For the most part I feel that people of different cultures either find someone in their own culture (naturally) or they just happen to fall in love with someone outside their culture. It's natural.
Marcy
Mexican guys prefer white women over Latin women because in Mexico the whites are the upper class people. They rule the government and the big businesses. The whites look down upon the dark skinned Mexicans. That's why dark skinned Mexicans desperately want to marry white women so that they can have relatively fair skinned children. This way they can improve the class of their families. By doing this, Mexican guys are unknowingly passing from generation to generation the racist ideas that were spread by the Spanish invaders.
If by "Latin" you mean "Mexican-American," then yes.
The Spanish word "gringita" translates to "little gringa" in English, where "gringa" is a term used in Latin America to refer to a foreign female, usually from the United States.
Not that I know of, because her mom's Irish and her dad's Mexican American.
The majority of Latin kings in Chicago are Mexican, and the majority of Latin kings in New York are Puerto Rican.
The Mexicans faced a middle class protest and unrest.
Kathy S. Leonard has written: 'Bibliographic guide to Chicana and Latina narrative' -- subject(s): Bibliography, American literature, Intellectual life, Mexican American women, Women and literature, Mexican American authors, Hispanic American authors, Mexican Americans in literature, Hispanic American women, Hispanic American women in literature, Mexican American women in literature, Hispanic Americans in literature, Women authors 'Narrative by Latin American women' -- subject(s): Translations into English, Bibliographies, Women authors, Latin American fiction
XUXA
Tejano (Spanish for "Texan") is a term used to identify a Texan of Mexican and/or Latin-American descent.
Princeton is Mexican and black that's a fact.
texas annexation ,mexican-american war, spanish-american war
She was born in Hacienda Heights, California.Her parents were of Mexican, Irish, Scottish & Native American descent.
Its just anaconda, in all forms of Spanish (Latin American, European, and Mexican dialects)