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39
Southasiangir1 39 points ago +40 / -1

Yea, noticed alot of mulattos' have identity disorders and are the ones most up in arms about blm. Like they are trying to prove something.

14
okaygroomer 14 points ago +14 / -0

There's an interview with a female who is both black and white and she said it hurts her because she wants to look like one or the other, not stand out the way she does. She had very light skin, African features and red hair. Unique, for sure, but she wasn't loving it. It weighed heavy on her heart that she didn't fit in anywhere.

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Southasiangir1 25 points ago +25 / -0

As long as black people make ridicule one another for "acting white", or "acting light skin". These individuals will keep having problems. White people dont give a fuck what you look like, but black people (especially black women) do.

Experience: Long haired, brown skin east Indian chick married to a black guy, that has to deal with "15+, low iq, democrat family members (black women) once every 2 years". The men are Trump supporters for the most part.

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okaygroomer 1 point ago +2 / -1

I live in the hood. I get it.

22
SilverBackTrump 22 points ago +24 / -2

She would fit in anywhere if she stopped associating with commies

8
Kweebecker 8 points ago +9 / -1

That's sad. Mostly because the problem can fix itself easily, but few will make the leap: In places not dominated by identity politics, the only color that matters is the green in your pocket.

When I was a kid, many moons ago, my friend group looked like an after-school cartoon. A black woman, an asian woman, a white woman, a white man, and a native man. No one cared about race or origin. We were just that, a group of kids playing. It takes indoctrination in identity politics, to make that seem like a problem. There was no hierarchy, no oppression. The class was 35 people, there was no need for this combination to congregate. We were friends, we fit in together because of that simple fact.

It takes identity politics to make a group of people, bonding over something NOT tied to race, an issue.