I have found that most white people don’t identify with ANYTHING. No white person can truly be described as Anglo Saxon, though I admit, I feel at home with Anglo Saxon culture which I doubt never had much a foothold in the United States past the Great Depression,
Most of the places I’ve lived and worked have been predominately African American, and I am in a similar socio-economic bracket with them and share their struggles, particularly because I am on disability right now and most people on disability are African American. Most government workers, medical personnel, law enforcement, educators, and legal people whom I’ve been involved with in my daily life are African American,
There are also a great many Hispanics in my community and I have been on staff at a Korean church. I have been in religious settings with Koreans, Jews, and Russians.
All in all, I find that diversity is a good thing as long as we share the same core values and struggles. Thats why I prefer urban settings. I find the newer all-white suburbs near me to be incredibly bland and unimaginative. but I really feel at home among Collegiate Gothic and Tudor architecture, the hallmarks of all things Anglo Saxon—and the rural countryside that tends to be a mixture of Anglo and African American.
I was friends with many Scandinavian, German, and British exchange students when in School—I classify these as Teutonic—and though we are the same as a race, culturally the Germans and Scandinavians were extremely foreign to me.