Anonymous wrote:Yes, just have the 23 and me ready
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kids are half and half, and maybe people would refer to them as POC but I don’t think in those terms. They’re just American. Their ethnicity is mixed. Half Indian and half all the mixed/Europeanish things I have on my side.
My kids are also half and half, and I do think in those terms. They are mixed, but no one would call the Caucasian (i.e. white). The world will see them as having "color" and I have raised them to recognize that.
Anonymous wrote:No, I heard that Asian Indians are considered Caucasians.
They certainly are different than the Chinese-y Asians.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:One-drop rule says “Yes”
Despite what people claim, the "one-drop rule" was never really a thing.
Rebecca, Charley & Rosa, Slave Children from New Orleans by SMU Libraries Digital Collections, on FlickrAnonymous wrote:Truthfully, it depends on what they look like. I have a friend who is a rather light skinned Indian whose husband is Caucasian, and I really don't think anyone would consider her daughter to be a "person of color". She looks like a slightly exotic white person.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes. Of course. If you go to Alabama would this person be considered white? Obviously not.
I wish people who have no true knowledge of what the deep south is like would quite pretending like they know. People in Alabama would think like everyone else does, if the person in question is light, they would be taken as white, if the person is darker, they would be thought of as a person of color. I should mention that my 94 year old Venezuelan born grandmother lived in Mississippi from 1946-1970, and literally received NO prejudice at all, and yes everyone knew she was Venezuelan.
Anonymous wrote:Yes. Of course. If you go to Alabama would this person be considered white? Obviously not.
Anonymous wrote:One-drop rule says “Yes”
Anonymous wrote:Another person speaking from experience, I think it's contextual for a lot of us mixed people.
In a group of blonde, blue eyed Christians? I'm definitely a POC. In a group of dark Southern Indians, I'm not really a POC.
Anonymous wrote:1. For diversity enrollment, maybe
2. It depends on skin color OP