Ya, he's a good musician. But the boy is fucked up.
I would think people with any need for intellectual consistency would think Dolezal is as much Black as Jenner is a Woman, while leaving room for a wide range of disagreement on just how much that is.
I would think people with any need for intellectual consistency would think Dolezal is as much Black as Jenner is a Woman, while leaving room for a wide range of disagreement on just how much that is.
What is intellectually consistent about it? They are two separate issues with a number of differences. There are some commonalities and I don't see anything wrong whatsoever with drawing on that, but neither scenario is logically validated or invalidated by the other.
If Jenner is a woman because she says she is then Dolezal is Black because she says she is.
Identifying with is not the same as LYING. This woman said her father was a black man and that she'd been born in a tepee where she was allowed to play with bows and arrows in a foreign country her family never even resided in. She went so far as to propagate outright falsehoods to give weight to the claim that she is a black woman. It's a travesty.You both seem to miss the most important point about her childhood. She was brought up with black brothers and sisters. She identifies with them. Case closed. Is it a mental problem to identify with those with whom you've been raised?
You know...I read this and your other comments in this thread three times just to make sure that my vision did not simply conjure these words out of thin air. Such was my stupification reading them.Racial phenotypes matter, one way or the other. She has a claim that her father is black, but, when there are absolutely no apparent phenotypes to match the claim, then the claim is unlikely. Not impossible, but unlikely. Skin color is genetically inherited, hair color is genetically inherited, eye color is genetically inherited, facial geometry is genetically inherited, but claims of ancestry can change any time on the spot.
....
I don't know about Gabrielle Reece's history, so I have no position beyond finding the claim unlikely. She may have just been told a wrong claim by her mother. That possibility is perhaps a little more likely than having an Afro father who passed on absolutely none of his racially-relevant genes.



No, it should not be respected because she's lying. My children are actually mixed race. This woman is not. If my boys want to identify as one or the other, that's their right. But this woman comes from white parents only and duped everybody with a massive conjob. I worked as a reporter in the South and with the NAACP. My office used to get bomb threats. I had white people calling me "uppity negra gal" behind my back and I shrugged all that off.The meaningful political question is being ignored in this thread. Whether this particular women is "bonkers" is irrelevant to whether her claim to a black racial identity should be respected.
Not only is she bonkers, she is a proven liar and a charlatan. It's help she needs, not respect.
They aren't so much "lies" as "differently true". If she identifies as Black then calling herself Black or taking actions to be perceived as Black aren't lies they are truths to her.
It is very slippery slope to argue the transracial, the transgendered, trans-whatever's-next must always go about telling everyone they used to be a man or they used to be white and if not they are a liar and a fraud. Sure we know Caitlynn Jenner used to be man because She was on a reality show back when She was a he.
But if Bob Jones a mechanic from Skokie wants to identify as Roberta Jones and work for the feminist movement in Spokane, must he go about telling everyone he used to be a man or be labeled a liar and a fraud?
Derec, NOBODY gives a damn what black nationalists think. They have no meaningful presence in legislature, they don't even have a coherent political platform, let alone an identifiable party that has ever won an election anywhere. They are not the ones who pushed for the new definitions on the U.S. census reports that clearly differentiate "Black" from "white" and "hispanic" despite the fact that a HUGE number of black people in America could conceivably fall into ALL THREE CATEGORIES. The Congressional Black Caucus actually pushed for a "check all that apply" option on Federal forms. They were ignored completely.I do not think this has anything to do with whites supposedly controlling "the definition of blackness". Those who insist of one drop rule these days tend to be black nationalists who like it because it increases the black political power.This sort of confusion will continue as long as the definition of blackness continues to be decided by white people.
Which, again, wouldn't explain why the Federal government refuses to recognize the existence of bi-racial citizens. As far as the census is concerned, bi-racial children are black. Not black and caucasian, not black and hispanic. We have a system that explicitly tells black people that in THIS country, "black" is their only meaningful racial identity.I think "this sort of confusion" will continue as long as race continues to give people legal (for example affirmative action) and social (racist jokes against whites only one deemed socially acceptable for example) benefits.
Leave it to Derec to turn every situation into a topsy-turvy big bad minority is so horrible to the white-male-majority
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My position is the classic liberal one - that people should be treated the same with no regard as to their race. The modern so-called liberals don't like that and perpetuate racism with all the race-based double standards they support.
If Jenner is a woman because she says she is then Dolezal is Black because she says she is.
Jenner is not a woman because she says she is a woman. Jenner is recognized as a woman because our understanding of transgender identities has changed over time based on our study of the subject matter thus far. Those studies do not, as far as I know, reveal a great deal about possible transracial identities, and if there are studies regarding transracial identities, they likely do not reveal a great deal about transgender identities. The medical impacts of her transition are based off of our knowledge of gender specifically, and the extent of the changes come down to biological factors which specifically relate to gender and Jenner as an individual. Those medical practices are not directly relevant to the steps Dolezal took, and the degree to which either party is successful has no bearing on the other party. Caitlyn's hormone levels will not fluctuate on the basis of Rachel's hair treatments or any other measures she has taken.
Rachel Dolezal has no genealogical claim whatsoever that she is black, going back through the last four centuries, an investigation by Daily Mail Online has revealed.
The woman who sparked a national debate on race has no black relatives dating back to 1671; in fact her family were entirely white including some who were Mormons.
Archives show that Rachel’s ancestors came to the US from Europe and have no bloodlines linking them to slaves or Africa.
Even a great grandmother who has almost identical features to Rachel was identified as white in two census documents.
They aren't so much "lies" as "differently true". If she identifies as Black then calling herself Black or taking actions to be perceived as Black aren't lies they are truths to her.
It is very slippery slope to argue the transracial, the transgendered, trans-whatever's-next must always go about telling everyone they used to be a man or they used to be white and if not they are a liar and a fraud. Sure we know Caitlynn Jenner used to be man because She was on a reality show back when She was a he.
But if Bob Jones a mechanic from Skokie wants to identify as Roberta Jones and work for the feminist movement in Spokane, must he go about telling everyone he used to be a man or be labeled a liar and a fraud?
That's the reason why "transgender male/female" is a thing: because where you come from says something about you as much as where you have arrived.
More importantly, when you decide to become a public official and an activist who speaks openly on behalf of many others, using your public position to affect change, you're speaking on your own authority and your own credibility. If you have been hiding/lying/bullshitting some of the most basic facts about yourself to create a false persona, expect your credibility to vanish when this comes to light.
Claiming special insight on a complex issue requires you to back up that insight with relevant experience or expertise. If your experience is bullshit, what does that say about your insight?
Not only is she bonkers, she is a proven liar and a charlatan. It's help she needs, not respect.
They aren't so much "lies" as "differently true". If she identifies as Black then calling herself Black or taking actions to be perceived as Black aren't lies they are truths to her.
Dolezal’s specious claims to black ancestry and faux black identity could not have been sustained and she would not have been able to pass if black womanhood were seen and understood as more than skin – or weave – deep. Wearing black womanhood was apparently even enough for Dolezal’s “fellow” black leaders in Spokane, Washington, who turned a blind eye to what the wider world now recognizes as her all-but laughable claims of racial identity, whether out of fear of rocking the boat or plain Northwestern niceness. Her charade could have only been maintained in a town (and within a society) with simplistic, stereotypical conceptions of blackness – that blackness is a shade on the range on olive to dark chocolate, a set of idioms delivered in a cadence from which American English derives its slang, and any number of bodily characteristics or mannerisms familiar across the globe, among others. And yet, while black Americans have long embraced a diverse array of lineages as kin, simply looking the part and faking the rest doesn’t cut it.
Speaking of Seinfeld ...From Seinfeld; "Jerry, just remember. It's not a lie if you believe it"
She is most definitely not black:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3126774/Investigation-Rachel-Dolezal-s-roots-reveals-no-black-relatives-dating-1671-ancestors-came-Europe-no-bloodlines-linking-slaves-Africa.html
Rachel Dolezal has no genealogical claim whatsoever that she is black, going back through the last four centuries, an investigation by Daily Mail Online has revealed.
The woman who sparked a national debate on race has no black relatives dating back to 1671; in fact her family were entirely white including some who were Mormons.
Archives show that Rachel’s ancestors came to the US from Europe and have no bloodlines linking them to slaves or Africa.
Even a great grandmother who has almost identical features to Rachel was identified as white in two census documents.
I believe you. Don't let that statement escape you. I believe you. Read this statement again:You know...I read this and your other comments in this thread three times just to make sure that my vision did not simply conjure these words out of thin air. Such was my stupification reading them.Racial phenotypes matter, one way or the other. She has a claim that her father is black, but, when there are absolutely no apparent phenotypes to match the claim, then the claim is unlikely. Not impossible, but unlikely. Skin color is genetically inherited, hair color is genetically inherited, eye color is genetically inherited, facial geometry is genetically inherited, but claims of ancestry can change any time on the spot.
....
I don't know about Gabrielle Reece's history, so I have no position beyond finding the claim unlikely. She may have just been told a wrong claim by her mother. That possibility is perhaps a little more likely than having an Afro father who passed on absolutely none of his racially-relevant genes.
Here are some mixed race current and historical celebrities for you to Google: Halle Berry, Mariah Carey, Derek Jeter, Selena Gomez, Christina Aguilera, Tiger Woods, Dwanye "The Rock" Johnson, Keanu Reeves, Leona Lewis, Nora Jones, Phoebe Cates, Carol Channing, Wentworth Miller, Meagan Markle, Rashida Jones, Maya Rudolph, Jennifer Beals, Troian Bellisario, Soledad O'Brien, Michael Fosberg, Vin Diesel, Darnell Martin, Daniel Sunjunta, Vanessa Williams, Lena Horne, Frederick Douglass, W.E.B. DuBois, Booker T. Washington, Alexandre Dumas, Pinckney Benton Stewart Pinchback, John James Audubon....I can keep going.
You claim that half black people have more of a color blend to their skin. This is not always true.
My heritage from both sides of my family includes African, Irish, Cherokee, Seminole, and Sioux. Society sees me a black woman. My ex-husband is Irish and Norwegian. My youngest son was born with blond hair, blue eyes and extremely fair skin. The nurse at the time said, "If I wasn't standing here, I would not believe it." That's how white he was.
So I spent the first five years of his life being mistaken for his nanny every place I went until he was verbal enough to call me "Mom." My oldest was born with green eyes and dusky skin. He is so often mistaken for being white/Mediterranean or Hispanic that I had to teach him "No Hablo Espanol" and tell him not to get upset when people asked if he was adopted.
And I would get this same b.s. that I can't possibly be their mother. They must be adopted. They have different fathers, I'm lying etc. A lot of these opinions are based in the same assumptions you make here - that your eyesight alone is an accurate judge of a person's cultural and racial heritage. It isn't.
These children are mixed race twins born to the same parents - Alison Spooner and Dean Durrant. If you saw these children, you wouldn't even think these kids were related:
Here is another set of twins, Lucy and Maria Alymer. I keep posting twins because you seem to have this idea that racial characteristics can't be so drastically different among mixed kids. Well, here are some that share the same womb:
so, wait... is the point to this that it's shallow and inaccurate stereotyping to use observable and definable traits and characteristics which describe a thing to identify said thing?I became a black woman in Spokane. But, Rachel Dolezal, I was a black girl first
by
Alicia Walters
Dolezal’s specious claims to black ancestry and faux black identity could not have been sustained and she would not have been able to pass if black womanhood were seen and understood as more than skin – or weave – deep. Wearing black womanhood was apparently even enough for Dolezal’s “fellow” black leaders in Spokane, Washington, who turned a blind eye to what the wider world now recognizes as her all-but laughable claims of racial identity, whether out of fear of rocking the boat or plain Northwestern niceness. Her charade could have only been maintained in a town (and within a society) with simplistic, stereotypical conceptions of blackness – that blackness is a shade on the range on olive to dark chocolate, a set of idioms delivered in a cadence from which American English derives its slang, and any number of bodily characteristics or mannerisms familiar across the globe, among others. And yet, while black Americans have long embraced a diverse array of lineages as kin, simply looking the part and faking the rest doesn’t cut it.
If Bruce Jenner can claim to be a woman she can claim to be black.
Who exactly has this woman harmed?