What is child’s race if one parent is white and one is Asian?

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Also interesting that Joanna and her sisters have all had surgery to reduce their Asian features. I see eyelid surgery and nose jobs.


That kind of surgery is very common in Asia and they are not trying to look white either.

Keep telling yourself that.


Right, you’re telling Chinese, Koreans, Japanese, etc that they are all trying to look white. The entire world does not revolve around the USA, moron.


And those cultures consider themselves superior to the Americans anyway. They are not trying nor care about American culture wars.


They do? Why were so many Chinese women in the illegal sex trafficking ring? Why do they have baby businesses in china to bring pregnant women illegally over to the US for a cost? Koreans and chinese go anywhere the scent of money takes them. They usually develop bad reps in the countries they settle into except the US bc asians are white peoples model minority.
Anonymous
So many idiots in this thread. From the lying Latino pretending Hispanics don’t have serious color issues to the cretin who thinks Rachel Dolezal is a light skinned black woman to the Asian who thinks everyone was born yesterday and doesn’t know how white worshipping Asians are.

No one believes you people.
Anonymous
Asian women at the beach with their sun protection

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:So many idiots in this thread. From the lying Latino pretending Hispanics don’t have serious color issues to the cretin who thinks Rachel Dolezal is a light skinned black woman to the Asian who thinks everyone was born yesterday and doesn’t know how white worshipping Asians are.

No one believes you people.


The idiot on this thread is you if you think all Asians think in the same way. There are literally billions of them.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:So many idiots in this thread. From the lying Latino pretending Hispanics don’t have serious color issues to the cretin who thinks Rachel Dolezal is a light skinned black woman to the Asian who thinks everyone was born yesterday and doesn’t know how white worshipping Asians are.

No one believes you people.


The idiot on this thread is you if you think all Asians think in the same way. There are literally billions of them.


+1.

The typical clueless and racist anglo trying to teach others how not to be as clueless and racist.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Asian women at the beach with their sun protection


This is what hydroquinone and other whitening agents do. They make the user’s skin thinner and thinner until the person is unable to handle even basic sun exposure without severe damage. All this just to look like mockeries of whites. I say this as an Korean from Seoul, okay? Let’s not pretend this isn’t what it is.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Interesting that Joanna sees her mother as “different.” I wonder if she’s even aware of how she’s swallowed whiteness as default.


Koreans in Korea will consider her white. She was born and raised in the US. She’s culturally White.

Is this Korea? No.


In the US, people self identify. She considers herself Asian American.

Unfortunately, in the US, you are categorized based on your skin color or features, so if you look more Asian, you will not be considered "white", except as someone stated, it's convenient for white people to consider the half Asian as white.


Who are these "white people" who do that, and why is it convenient for them?
Anonymous
My niece is a ‘white person of color’ according to her private school application. Mom is white. Dad is Spanish.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Asian women at the beach with their sun protection


This is what hydroquinone and other whitening agents do. They make the user’s skin thinner and thinner until the person is unable to handle even basic sun exposure without severe damage. All this just to look like mockeries of whites. I say this as an Korean from Seoul, okay? Let’s not pretend this isn’t what it is.


I am S. Korean and I don't know anyone who uses skin whitening products but I am in my 40s. Also, I am very pale naturally with double eye lids, born that way.

Classic Asian beauty for hundreds of years have always been pale skin with double eye lids. This is why my mother and grandmother have always used umbrellas to protect themselves from the sun and why they always told me to stay out of the sun and not tan. It has nothing to do with "wanting to look white".
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:My niece is a ‘white person of color’ according to her private school application. Mom is white. Dad is Spanish.


Ha! Private schools, always trying to increase their “people of color” numbers without actually increasing their people of color. I know a local school that touted its “people of color + international” numbers when a significant majority of those were rich Europeans, Persians, and Arabs. Oh, “diversity”....
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:My niece is a ‘white person of color’ according to her private school application. Mom is white. Dad is Spanish.


Scientifically speaking, white is a color.

And black isn't.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Asian women at the beach with their sun protection


This is what hydroquinone and other whitening agents do. They make the user’s skin thinner and thinner until the person is unable to handle even basic sun exposure without severe damage. All this just to look like mockeries of whites. I say this as an Korean from Seoul, okay? Let’s not pretend this isn’t what it is.


I am S. Korean and I don't know anyone who uses skin whitening products but I am in my 40s. Also, I am very pale naturally with double eye lids, born that way.

Classic Asian beauty for hundreds of years have always been pale skin with double eye lids. This is why my mother and grandmother have always used umbrellas to protect themselves from the sun and why they always told me to stay out of the sun and not tan. It has nothing to do with "wanting to look white".


+1.

Even wealthy white people used to do that.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Interesting that Joanna sees her mother as “different.” I wonder if she’s even aware of how she’s swallowed whiteness as default.


Koreans in Korea will consider her white. She was born and raised in the US. She’s culturally White.

Is this Korea? No.


In the US, people self identify. She considers herself Asian American.

Unfortunately, in the US, you are categorized based on your skin color or features, so if you look more Asian, you will not be considered "white", except as someone stated, it's convenient for white people to consider the half Asian as white.


Who are these "white people" who do that, and why is it convenient for them?


Not the PP, but I'm assuming they're suggesting that white people don't want to list their kids as Asian, since full Asian kids in this area often have really high test scores--and so their half-Asian kid with lower test scores would be at a disadvantage, relatively speaking.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Asian women at the beach with their sun protection


This is what hydroquinone and other whitening agents do. They make the user’s skin thinner and thinner until the person is unable to handle even basic sun exposure without severe damage. All this just to look like mockeries of whites. I say this as an Korean from Seoul, okay? Let’s not pretend this isn’t what it is.


I am S. Korean and I don't know anyone who uses skin whitening products but I am in my 40s. Also, I am very pale naturally with double eye lids, born that way.

Classic Asian beauty for hundreds of years have always been pale skin with double eye lids. This is why my mother and grandmother have always used umbrellas to protect themselves from the sun and why they always told me to stay out of the sun and not tan. It has nothing to do with "wanting to look white".


+1.

Even wealthy white people used to do that.


Asians never had Coco Chanel to popularize tanning. Thus our beauty culture has always emphasized pale skin as a sign of not having to "work the fields".
Anonymous
If you look at Chinese, Japanese, Korean paintings from 200- 300 yrs ago, they feature very pale women with double eye lids. Doubtful these women were trying to "look white."
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