Whether you knew that they were Dominican or not doesn't mean anything. I could post up pics of plenty of Dominicans that you were never know were Dominican unless you knew who they were.
I highly doubt that's the case. Everybody raps these days. If a Dominican wants to rap, he's gonna rap regardless.
I'm not saying don't rep your roots. If you want to, then by all means go ahead. But you're trying to say that them not repping their Dominican roots makes them less Dominican. Which is bullshyt
AZ has always spoken on his Dominican roots. @ISO just posted some examples.
None of this would be an issue if these guys were light skinned. But because they're looked at as Black people question they're authenticity, because in the mind of many people you can't be Dominican if you're Black (which is incorrect)
Don't take my words out of context to push your agenda. This is what I said "JR Writer is the best one that actually repped his heritage". I didn't say any of them were "less" Dominican but I did say they didn't rep it. In AZ's case I was incorrect because he referenced it once or twice early on, but this whole "it doesn't matter everybody raps" thing certainly didn't apply when AZ first came out.
Do you remember how minorites from Staten Island felt when Wu-Tang came out? All the ones I knew associated themselves with that movement in some way, or had a story about how they were connected to one of the members.
Do you remember how Puerto Ricans/Latinos in NYC felt when Big Pun blew up?
How young Haitian kids in NYC felt when the Fugees blew up?
You cannot change your roots but it absolutely DOES have an influence if you rep it or not.