Jessica Krug

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:She doesn’t look black at all. She doesn’t even look mixed.


Don’t be ridiculous. Vanessa Williams has stunning blue eyes with very pale skin. You can be black and “look white” as it were.

Anyone can tell Vanessa Williams is part black. Jessica Krug doesn’t look black at all.


Yes, maybe because I'm another light-skinned, blue-eyed black woman, Williams looks obviously black to me. Both her parents are black, but from her Wiki, she's got almost half European DNA:

"Later in life, she participated in a DNA test with the following results: 23% from Ghana, 17% from the British Isles, 15% from Cameroon, 12% Finnish, 11% Southern European, 7% from Togo, 6% from Benin, 5% from Senegal, and 4% Portuguese.[4]"

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vanessa_Williams

Krug doesn't look black to me at all, but I wouldn't challenge her too much if she told me she had some black ancestry because who lies about this (ha)? Although she does seem to overdo it a bit in the clips I've seen of her--that might make me a little skeptical.

Vanessa Williams part of the conversation about 10 pages ago. The problem isn’t what she looks like, the problem is the lies

This is Congressman butterfield:

He’s a black man. Both his parents were black. It shouldn’t be up to others to judge if people are black enough (or in krug’s case—not black at all). It would be great if people didn’t feel the compulsion to lie about who they are. In krug’s case, the many inconsistencies in where she came from should have been addressed a while ago.

His parents are both mixed race.


Great point! I’d really like to understand the implications of your great point better! So: Explain to me how being “mixed race” worked out for Congressman Butterfield, his parents, and his family in the very segregated South when he was born in 1947? Legally? Socially? With Segregated schools? Churches? How exactly did that “both mixed race” thing play out? I’m guessing you got your great point from Wikipedia— NOT from Congressman Butterfield.


Dude, i’m not speaking to butterfield’s experience. My point was that people said it was obvious by how krug looked that she wasn’t black. Krug doesn’t look black to me either, but not everyone who is black looks black.

I have no idea what point you’re trying to make.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:She doesn’t look black at all. She doesn’t even look mixed.


Don’t be ridiculous. Vanessa Williams has stunning blue eyes with very pale skin. You can be black and “look white” as it were.

Anyone can tell Vanessa Williams is part black. Jessica Krug doesn’t look black at all.


Yes, maybe because I'm another light-skinned, blue-eyed black woman, Williams looks obviously black to me. Both her parents are black, but from her Wiki, she's got almost half European DNA:

"Later in life, she participated in a DNA test with the following results: 23% from Ghana, 17% from the British Isles, 15% from Cameroon, 12% Finnish, 11% Southern European, 7% from Togo, 6% from Benin, 5% from Senegal, and 4% Portuguese.[4]"

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vanessa_Williams

Krug doesn't look black to me at all, but I wouldn't challenge her too much if she told me she had some black ancestry because who lies about this (ha)? Although she does seem to overdo it a bit in the clips I've seen of her--that might make me a little skeptical.

Vanessa Williams part of the conversation about 10 pages ago. The problem isn’t what she looks like, the problem is the lies

This is Congressman butterfield:

He’s a black man. Both his parents were black. It shouldn’t be up to others to judge if people are black enough (or in krug’s case—not black at all). It would be great if people didn’t feel the compulsion to lie about who they are. In krug’s case, the many inconsistencies in where she came from should have been addressed a while ago.

His parents are both mixed race.

Great point! I’d really like to understand the implications of your great point better! So: Explain to me how being “mixed race” worked out for Congressman Butterfield, his parents, and his family in the very segregated South when he was born in 1947? Legally? Socially? With Segregated schools? Churches? How exactly did that “both mixed race” thing play out? I’m guessing you got your great point from Wikipedia— NOT from Congressman Butterfield.

The implications are you are a liar and the facts don’t support your claims. Google him. He has explained his family history multiple times.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:She doesn’t look black at all. She doesn’t even look mixed.


Don’t be ridiculous. Vanessa Williams has stunning blue eyes with very pale skin. You can be black and “look white” as it were.

Anyone can tell Vanessa Williams is part black. Jessica Krug doesn’t look black at all.


Yes, maybe because I'm another light-skinned, blue-eyed black woman, Williams looks obviously black to me. Both her parents are black, but from her Wiki, she's got almost half European DNA:

"Later in life, she participated in a DNA test with the following results: 23% from Ghana, 17% from the British Isles, 15% from Cameroon, 12% Finnish, 11% Southern European, 7% from Togo, 6% from Benin, 5% from Senegal, and 4% Portuguese.[4]"

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vanessa_Williams

Krug doesn't look black to me at all, but I wouldn't challenge her too much if she told me she had some black ancestry because who lies about this (ha)? Although she does seem to overdo it a bit in the clips I've seen of her--that might make me a little skeptical.

Vanessa Williams part of the conversation about 10 pages ago. The problem isn’t what she looks like, the problem is the lies

This is Congressman butterfield:

He’s a black man. Both his parents were black. It shouldn’t be up to others to judge if people are black enough (or in krug’s case—not black at all). It would be great if people didn’t feel the compulsion to lie about who they are. In krug’s case, the many inconsistencies in where she came from should have been addressed a while ago.

His parents are both mixed race.


Great point! I’d really like to understand the implications of your great point better! So: Explain to me how being “mixed race” worked out for Congressman Butterfield, his parents, and his family in the very segregated South when he was born in 1947? Legally? Socially? With Segregated schools? Churches? How exactly did that “both mixed race” thing play out? I’m guessing you got your great point from Wikipedia— NOT from Congressman Butterfield.


Dude, i’m not speaking to butterfield’s experience. My point was that people said it was obvious by how krug looked that she wasn’t black. Krug doesn’t look black to me either, but not everyone who is black looks black.

I have no idea what point you’re trying to make.

Word salad PP has no point.
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