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Sure, it’s the broad average, but looking into it further IMO still doesn’t make the Laing story plausible, if the Laings really were just ordinary Afrikaners.

I think we should stop bemoaning the fact that so much woke culture is shit, and start celebrating it.

So there is something empowering about merely calling Naomi Osaka Japanese, whether it be in headlines or advertisements. And it’s a correct assertion: she is Japanese. Her biraciality does not make her less so.

@prosa123 #38: Even if a person has less than 1% black ancestry and looks completely white they’re still legally black in the United States. Not true at all. The truth is simply that they get to demand special treatment.

And all these women … hall and the others may not be the hottest stars, but by realistic standards are very hot.

The “passing for white” accusation has nothing to do with slavery. It is based on the presumption that true whites are racially pure and that the “taint” of “black blood” makes one unworthy of a white identity – regardless of the predominance of European ancestry. Notice that the attitude toward American Indian ancestry in whites is exactly the opposite. The film by the very white multiracial Brit Rebecca Hall is based on a 1929 novel by a light-brown half-Danish woman named Nella Larsen.

To this day I cannot imagine why I had never noticed her mixed ancestry. It was almost as if her black ancestry made all else invisible.

I’m not heavily invested in the particulars of Liang’s story one way or the other because even if she had some other father, it wouldn’t change the point about Creoles and Continue Dominicans and so forth. Oh, sure, definitely doesn’t change that point. It’s just the way the Laing story is often presented in the media (with some outlets peddling outright lies about the case) that annoys me.

That part is based on the tabloid-fodder 1925 court case in which a scion of the Dutch Old Money Rhinelander family of New York attempted to get his marriage to a maid annulled on the grounds that she didn’t tell him she was part black. Her attorney pointed out she didn’t tell him she wasn’t

Bea, being rich and resourceful, is able to track Peola down to a restaurant where she is passing for white and working under a fake name. When Delilah comes into the restaurant to bring her back, Peola pretends not to know her. Peola would rather be a white shop girl than the black daughter of a millionaire.”

Didn’t even cross my mind that it would be about being black and looking white. Is it also used the opposite way, for instance Rachel Dolezal or Talcum X?

… “Sometimes she would intimate that maybe there was African American ancestry, or sometimes she would intimate that there was Indigenous ancestry. But she didn’t really know; it wasn’t available to her.”

In the 1934 version, by the time Peloa is an adult, they are all fabulously wealthy and living in a mansion in New York. Bea has thrown a party full of wealthy New York socialites, which Delilah and Peola can only listen to from the basement.

Keuntae McElroy, 21 Obviously another one of those blond boys who do all the rapin’ and shootin’.

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