(May 11, 2020 at 4:53 pm)onlinebiker Wrote:(May 11, 2020 at 4:14 pm)arewethereyet Wrote: Thanks for your permission ma'am. I still want an answer as to how dark a person has to be in order to be considered a person of color? What I got from Smuggy was a bunch of mugshots...not an answer.
And isn't it interesting he doesn't show people simply living life - but criminal mugshots?
I guess that's how he sees people....
I suppose it's where you find a bunch of guys with Hispanic sounding last names who also have darker complexions than the real white people. <eyeroll>
My future daughter-in-law has a very common Hispanic last name. She also has dark hair and eyes and a darker complexion. She is not Hispanic - she has had the genetic testing done to find out. But, her adoptive father, a lily white guy, is where she got that Hispanic last name from because he was adopted by a Hispanic man.
So, are we going with names, or skin tones, or just what is the criteria?
Seems that the racial hackles are raised by our outraged members when the topic of race comes up only when the person being discussed is not a person of color but a person of a specific range of colors.
And that's racist.