IllmaticDelta
Veteran
These aren't even the black identified passe blancs. Folks like Allison Davis, a Chicago descendant of DC's Wormley-Syphax-Cook and Detroit Stubb Families.
When you have folks like this that proudly proclaim they're black (and Allison Davis is very pro-black) it's a hard sell for biracials to try to carve out a separate space based on the binary nature of their race when there are many multi-gen black folks who have higher percentages of whiteness than they do.
People don't view blackness in this way, and I'm not sure if it's correct to do so, but to me, it's a lot like the Hispanic designation. You can be a white, brown, or black Hispanic but what unites is the culture. I viewed blackness sort of the same way. We got all these hues, from light bright damn near white all the way down to dark brown, but what unites is the shared cultural experience based on being descendants of slaves.
Facts! GK Butterfield (2 black parents) basically said as much about Obama
Obama's true colors: Black, white ... or neither?
A perplexing new chapter is unfolding in Barack Obama's racial saga: Many people insist that "the first black president" is actually not black.
Debate over whether to call this son of a white Kansan and a black Kenyan biracial, African-American, mixed-race, half-and-half, multiracial -- or, in Obama's own words, a "mutt" -- has reached a crescendo since Obama's election shattered assumptions about race.
Obama has said, "I identify as African-American -- that's how I'm treated and that's how I'm viewed. I'm proud of it." In other words, the world gave Obama no choice but to be black, and he was happy to oblige.
Obama's true colors: Black, white ... or neither? - USATODAY.com
In the word of a monoracial (as in non-biracial) Afram who happens to look "white"
GK Butterfield
But U.S. Rep. G. K. Butterfield, a black man who by all appearances is white, feels differently.
Butterfield, 61, grew up in a prominent black family in Wilson, N.C. Both of his parents had white forebears, "and those genes came together to produce me." He grew up on the black side of town, led civil rights marches as a young man, and to this day goes out of his way to inform people that he is certainly not white.
Butterfield has made his choice; he says let Obama do the same.
"Obama has chosen the heritage he feels comfortable with," he said. "His physical appearance is black. I don't know how he could have chosen to be any other race. Let's just say he decided to be white -- people would have laughed at him."
"You are a product of your experience. I'm a U.S. congressman, and I feel some degree of discomfort when I'm in an all-white group. We don't have the same view of the world, our experiences have been different."
The entire issue balances precariously on the "one-drop" rule, which sprang from the slaveowner habit of dropping by the slave quarters and producing brown babies. One drop of black blood meant that person, and his or her descendants, could never be a full citizen.
Today, the spectrum of skin tones among African-Americans -- even those with two black parents -- is evidence of widespread white ancestry. Also, since blacks were often light enough to pass for white, unknown numbers of white Americans today have blacks hidden in their family trees.
Obama's true colors: Black, white ... or neither? - USATODAY.com