A Real Black VS A Mulatto: Y'all Really Can't Tell the Difference?!?!

Beck.er.

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Malcolm x doesnt have a white parent he's only 25% white. He made the cut off off point its a bad example no one is refusing to call a 75%er not black. This is about mixed race people i.e half white
:dwillhuh:
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:scust:Look at all these "biracial" and "multi Racial" people trying to identify as black and aid in the black struggle.

bad example these people dont have a white parent their just admixed.
the thread is about people who are 50% black.

:dwillhuh:

Do you not know who any of those individuals are?
Do you not know who any of those other four individuals are?
Notice I didn't mention Malcolm, but nice try.

And breh, if you're American, you should know who each one of them are. If ya don't ya oughta slap your parents, teachers and yourself.
 

Beck.er.

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you have a hard to grasping facts

the OP asked if you could tell if someone is black or biracial *50/50*
most of the idiots in here ignored that and started talking about admixed people smh

so if you can't tell if someone is 50% white then you're ignorant

if you can't understand that if you have a non black parent you're mixed you are also ignorant.
Where is the line between black and admixed?
Where is the line between admixed and biracial?
What if a person with ancestral admixture has a higher Euro% than a person with an actual white parent?

Skip Gates is 52%/48% Afro/Euro.
He has two Afram parents and no recent white ascendents.
He is admixed yet still nearly 50% white (yet passes easily amongst Aframs with much higher/average African %s)
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Cory Booker is 47/45 Afro-Euro.
He has two Afram parents and no recent white ascendents.
He is admixed yet has less than 50% SSA ancestry.
Tom Joyner is 65/35.
He has Afram parents and recent ascendants also.
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Tyra Banks and Chris Rock are both approx 80% SSA.
Both Aframs with non-African ancestral admixture.
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Same with Don Cheadle.
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An African American can be @50% (or less even) SSA without having a white parent (grands or recent ancestor). Are they admixed or biracial?
Admixed blacks and biracials can overlap in appearance, but admixed blacks can also overlap with non-admixed blacks on the other end.
Most Aframs are admixed to some extent, where is the line between regular(?) and admixed black?
Should they be classed separately from blacks like in the colonial days? Griffe, samba, dark mulatto, sacatra, marabou, mango, capre... to eliminate any ambiguity or continuity amongst these three groupings?

Is it really that odd in black populations with high rates of admixture unevenly distributed that an individual with a white parent that is around 50% SSA (not like some AA/white biracials that are 40%> SSA) could have an appearance that overlaps the spectrum of features of that black demographic enough for others to make mistakes as to their parentage and percentages?
 

Kuwka_Atcha_Ratcha

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:mjlol::camby:





For you


12 Beautiful Portraits Of Black Identity Challenging the "One-Drop" Rule

"What are you?" they'd ask, head tilted and eyes squinted.

"Black," I'd reply.

"No ... but like, what else are you? I know it's not all black."

So went a typical interrogation by my peers as a kid. With skin lighter than even some who identify as White and hair that streaks blond in the sun, I've never been offended by the question, although I have since changed my response. To the more politically correct question that I'm asked in adulthood — "Where are you from?" — I would recite my ethnic makeup, followed by a definitive, "But I identify as Black." (If I feel like being a wise ass, I'll simply reply with "New Jersey.")
How do you define a racial identity? Can "blackness" be defined simply by a person's skin tone, hair texture or facial features? Can we define it by the way someone walks or talks? Can it be a product of someone's cultural affinities, regardless of what she looks like?

These are the questions that Dr. Yaba Blay and photographer Noelle Théard encourage us to wrestle with in (1)ne Drop: Shifting the Lens on Race. Featuring the perspectives of 58 people who identify as part of the larger "racial, cultural, and social group generally referred to and known as Black," the book combines candid memoirs and striking portraits to explore the complexities of Black identity and celebrate an individual's right to self-identify.

(1)ne Drop's title derives from the "one-drop rule" — a (successful) attempt to define blackness in America as one drop, or at least 1/32, of Black ancestry for the economic, social and political purposes of distinguishing a Black person from a White person. I say "successful," because the one-drop rule still holds cultural weight today, especially with regard to how we value light and dark skin. For this reason, Dr. Blay aims to "challenge narrow yet popular perceptions of what Blackness is and what Blackness looks like."

"I think the context that we live in shapes the way you identify yourself, and the way others identify you," says Dr. Blay. And therein lies the power of (1)ne Drop. From Zun Lee, a man who has always identified as Black despite being phenotypically Asian, to Sembene McFarland, a woman whose vitiligo bizarrely blurs other people's perception of her race, to James Bartlett, a man who is mistaken for Italian, Arab or Hispanic depending on what U.S. city he's in, (1)ne Drop narrates a story of blackness that is not bound by looks, but that is fluid and empowered by the act of self-identification.

Below are 12 portraits of participants, including their self-identification and a piece of their personal story from (1)ne Drop: Shifting the Lens on Race:


1. La Block – “Biracial/Mixed”

"I always wanted to be darker because I didn't want to have to tell people that I'm Black. I just wanted them to be able to tell … Now I say that I'm Biracial just because I think it's important to embrace cultures and I think the language of 'Biracial' reflects everything that I am."

2. Andrew Holmes - "Black"

"I've never been put in a situation to have to think about how I identify. I don't exclude my Biracialness. I fully embrace my Caucasian roots, just as I do my Jamaican roots. When I'm at home and I'm looking at my mom and my dad and my siblings, I don't necessarily see a Black family or a White family — I just see my family. But if there's a need for me to bubble in what I am, there's no hesitation — I bubble in 'Black.' That's just how I feel. I'm definitely not a White guy. People don't look at me and say, 'Hey, look at that White man!'"

3. Zun Lee – “Black”

"When I applied to grad school or for jobs, all of a sudden the boxes come up. I had to make a choice, so for the first time, I checked 'Black.' And I didn't think long about it because for me, it was based on personal circumstance. I just chose the box that I felt most at home with because I didn't relate to any of the other options. From then on, if I were asked, I would answer, 'I'm Black.' Of course, people told me I couldn't do that — that I couldn't choose that box. But I had spent all of my life being pushed away by people. In Germany, I wasn't even given the option to check anything because I wasn't welcomed there. I had no box. For the first time, I was being given the option to identify myself. Now I had a box, and I was happy in that little box."

4. Deborah Thomas – “Mixed/Jamaican”

"I was telling my students the other day that the most frequent question I get is, 'What are you?' People just randomly on the street, 'What are you?' I used to get really annoyed and militant about it. I've never been sure why people are so bold, because I would never. So I used to respond, 'Human!' But now I just try to figure out what it is somebody's trying to know."


5. James Bartlett – “Black”

"Most of the time, I can tell — somebody's either just looking at me or they just flat out ask me, 'What are you?' I can't tell you how many times I get that question. It's funny, because now most people either say, 'I thought you were XYZ when I first met you,' or 'I didn't know what you were until you started talking and then I knew you were Black!'"

6. Nuala Cabral – “Black/Mixed/Cape Verdean”

"I may identify as a Biracial person — I'm Black and White — but if people see me as a Black woman, that's how I'm treated. So I identify as a Black woman because I move through the world as a Black woman."

7. Melanie Staton – “African American”

"I don't think ever in my life someone has looked at me like, 'I think she's a White girl.' But I'm not sure people always look at me at as African American either. I guess it doesn't dawn on people that the African American race can come in so many different shades."

8. Brandon Stanford – “African American”

"My consciousness never really allowed me to think of myself as anything else but Black or a person of African descent. Anyone who has had the opportunity to get to know me never questions my race. They never question me being Black. Never. Regardless of my complexion. But for those who don't necessarily know me, based on my phenotype and their perception, I've had some interesting experiences."

9. Sumaya Ellard – “Black American Muslim”

"I started covering my hair when I was about 14. It was an adjustment for me because in our society, especially within the Black community, we define ourselves very deeply by our hair. Your hair somehow identifies who you are, how Black you are, how beautiful you are, how polished you are, or your political inclinations. It was an adjustment because it felt like I was taking away part of my identity from people. The hijab itself can be a barrier in people's perception of you and how well they think they can identify who you are. And yet, I think that's the beauty of covering. You are forced to deal with yourself and your own self-identification."

10. Sembene McFarland – “Black/African American”

"A lot of people just look and see skin color. Your skin is White, therefore you're White. Or are you? One girl said to me, 'I've been wanting to ask you this question but I didn't feel comfortable asking you because I thought that you might be offended, but are you Black or are you White?' And I told her, 'Well, I'm always Black.'"

11. Kaneesha Parsard — "Black/Multiracial"

"I tend to believe that being Black — like choosing to identify as Multiracial — is not about phenotype as much as it's about feelings of belonging and identification. I'm Black because I feel the memory of the Middle Passage and slavery most strongly. I'm Black because when I look in the mirror I see my mother, her mother and my aunts. Maybe my reasoning wouldn't be strong enough for somebody who might have an immediately negative or dismissive response to my phenotype, but our cultural memories have the same roots."

12. Brett Russel — "Yu’i Korsou (a child of Curaçao)"

"Even though I was born and raised in Curaçao and I spoke the language, at first sight people always thought that I was Dutch. Then, when I came to Holland in 2001, the people saw me as 'the immigrant.' All of a sudden, I was 'the Black guy.' It was frustrating. There was no explanation for it, and I realized how little I had actually thought about myself in the context of race."


hahahahah theyre letting anyone claim black nowadays
 

Kuwka_Atcha_Ratcha

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which one is bi-racial and which one isn't? In which manner did you arrive to your outcome?
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both are mixed smh

you still don't even know the difference between 50/50 mixed , admixture mixed, and black.

travel the world breh and free yourself of ignorance.

you the same guy that tried to call me African, u know nothing.
 
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both are mixed smh

you still don't even know the difference between 50/50 mixed , admixture mixed, and black.

travel the world breh and free yourself of ignorance.

you the same guy that tried to call me African, u know nothing.
yeah cause a mulatto and person with 2 black parents are genetically the same:stopitslime:
 

Kuwka_Atcha_Ratcha

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yeah cause a mulatto and person with 2 black parents are genetically the same:stopitslime:
are you stupid? jada is mixed smh.

furthermore the OP asked if you can tell the difference between 50/50 mix and black

he didn't ask about admixture people

50/50 vs black, can you tell the difference? yes or no?

yet people are to stupid to understand the question so fail to produce an answer.
 

IllmaticDelta

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hahahahah theyre letting anyone claim black nowadays


That's their own personal self identification and it foe against everything Knuckles is trying to claim

The bottom line is that mulattos are not black, they do not have the black experience. I don't know what it is to have a white biological parent. MULATTOS ARE NOT BLACK!!! /thread

Even just having a white parent cancels out the ability for them to identify as black. More mulattos are beginning to wake up and realize that their population is growing. They won't need to bite off of our culture in the future, as they become more independent. And thank goodness for that.
 
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are you stupid? jada is mixed smh.

furthermore the OP asked if you can tell the difference between 50/50 mix and black

he didn't ask about admixture people

50/50 vs black, can you tell the difference? yes or no?

yet people are to stupid to understand the question so fail to produce an answer.

does your dumbass understand basic math:what:Jada's has 2 black parents doesn't = 50/50 mixed :stopitslime:
 

Maschine_Man

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They receive lighter jail sentences and are more likely to be hired than real black people.
it probably has just as much to do about the white family or white women sitting behid this "mulatto" dude that the sentences are "lighter", or getting these better jobs. Not so much about that individual
 
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