This whole situation shows what happens when a people don't have a clear code.
First, we have a woman who managed to pretend she was black for ten years, and despite her showing who her "father" is and how she looks, AND due to the loosy-goosy definition of who's black, no one bothered to vet Her.
Then, the NAACP flat out says it doesn't matter anyway and that they fight for everyone, and we have a lot of people who don't seen to have a problem with that.
Now we have people saying because she did a lot of work for the community, we should let everything slide.
I have no problem with the good work she may have done, and I hope she continues. And in a weird way, there can be a place for people like her who aren't black but want to help effectively for the cause. However, considering what just happened, she should not be the leader of the chapter. At the least, the members of the chapter should have a revote.
That would require structured, something the NAACP, and black society in general, doesn't seem to have.
I said it before and I'll say it again: she wouldn't be able to get away with it for that long with other communities. At best, everyone would know she's white and they'll what they do from there.
That code of conduct is really needed.