Hispanic Miami police captain under fire for claiming he's black because of 'one-drop rule'
This makes no sense. Why would anyone think identifying as black would give them an advantage?
Uh, he's trans.
If he says he's a black man then he is a black man. It's 2020 and people still don't accept that race and gender are social constructs.
All of us can trace our lineage to Africa. All of us are African-American. Checkmate, bigot.
Miami police Capt. Javier Ortiz was named at a meeting of city commissioners on Friday as part of a complaint made by other officers that there is a disparity in the treatment of black officers in the department. Ortiz was accused by Sgt. Stanley Jean-Poix of having identified himself as a black man on police exams to get a promotion.
This makes no sense. Why would anyone think identifying as black would give them an advantage?
"So the question is why is it that every time he finishes an exam, he goes back to white Hispanic male?" asked Jean-Poix, the president of the predominantly black Miami Community Police Benevolent Association.
Uh, he's trans.
Ortiz was allowed to defend himself against numerous accusations at the meeting and insisted that he was, in fact, a black man because of the so-called one-drop rule. He denied being Hispanic, although he did admit to having identified himself as a white man in previous documents.
If he says he's a black man then he is a black man. It's 2020 and people still don't accept that race and gender are social constructs.

Rubin Roberts, chairman of the NAACP's Miami-Dade branch, told The Miami Herald on Tuesday that Ortiz should be fired.
"The city should be made aware that the statement he made is incendiary," Roberts told The Herald. "He's not in any way considerate of black men or women's plight."
All of us can trace our lineage to Africa. All of us are African-American. Checkmate, bigot.
