Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No issues means no issues. I'm 44 now and I think if the sky were going to fall in on me just because I do not claim to be black. I don't consider it "passing" this is simply who I am.
So fo you consider yourself to be biracial? Or just white? Has anyone ever asked you of you were biracial?
I am biracial, but I identify white.
I get the biracial question the most from AA, who then get really offended and try to tell me about this "one drop makes you black" rule. I tell them slavery is over, welcome to 2012.
Just know that to many you look/seem desperate. How pathetic.
Who are you referring to as the "many"? Desperate in what way? Can you comprehend that someone may have had a different experience than what you may know, and that one person's view shouldn't bother you as much as it obviously does.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No issues means no issues. I'm 44 now and I think if the sky were going to fall in on me just because I do not claim to be black. I don't consider it "passing" this is simply who I am.
So fo you consider yourself to be biracial? Or just white? Has anyone ever asked you of you were biracial?
I am biracial, but I identify white.
I get the biracial question the most from AA, who then get really offended and try to tell me about this "one drop makes you black" rule. I tell them slavery is over, welcome to 2012.
Just know that to many you look/seem desperate. How pathetic.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Biracial people really can't catch a break. I look white or hispanic even though I'm black and white. When I say I'm black or go to black events, people give me the side eye and act like I'm intruding. But if I had just gone about my business and didn't talk about being black, people would think I was trying to "pass."
I am the first black/white poster, and I agree with the sentiment of this post. Although I look more AA than anything else and was raised to identify with the AA community, there is no one "right" way for biracial people to identify themselves. I find it very frustrating when society steps in and tells us how we should identify ourselves. The whole "Why does Obama say he's black when he's biracial," line of thinking is really annoying to me. It is hard to be undefined in a society rather obsessed with racial classification - if you're biracial, when you find a way that works for you, you go with it.
Anonymous wrote:Biracial people really can't catch a break. I look white or hispanic even though I'm black and white. When I say I'm black or go to black events, people give me the side eye and act like I'm intruding. But if I had just gone about my business and didn't talk about being black, people would think I was trying to "pass."
Anonymous wrote:Biracial people really can't catch a break. I look white or hispanic even though I'm black and white. When I say I'm black or go to black events, people give me the side eye and act like I'm intruding. But if I had just gone about my business and didn't talk about being black, people would think I was trying to "pass."
Anonymous wrote:Biracial people really can't catch a break. I look white or hispanic even though I'm black and white. When I say I'm black or go to black events, people give me the side eye and act like I'm intruding. But if I had just gone about my business and didn't talk about being black, people would think I was trying to "pass."