Why Right-Wing Bloggers Are Desperate To Prove Biracial People Aren’t BlackPosted in Articles, Law, Media Archive, Passing, Social Justice, United States on 2015-08-23 01:21Z by Steven |
Why Right-Wing Bloggers Are Desperate To Prove Biracial People Aren’t Black
Think Progress
2015-08-21
Aviva Shen, Senior Editor
Shaun King, right, addresses the controversy over his racial identity.
Right-wing media has been abuzz over the past few weeks with rumors that Black Lives Matter activist and writer Shaun King is not actually black. Breitbart and other more mainstream outlets like the Daily Beast compared King to Rachel Dolezal, the Spokane NAACP leader whose parents revealed she was white earlier this year. The harassment escalated so much that King finally published an emotional personal account Thursday evening, explaining that his biological father is an unknown black man who had an affair with his mother.
Some of the same bloggers have apparently also “investigated” the parentage of Wesley Lowery, a biracial Washington Post reporter who covers the Black Lives Matter movement.
The harassment of King recalls a long American tradition of telling multiracial people what their identities can and cannot contain. The notorious “one drop rule” — which legally declared anyone with black ancestry, no matter how light-skinned or blue-eyed they were, as mulatto or colored — was central to maintaining a white supremacist hierarchy in the South well into the 20th century. Many people who could get away with it “passed” as white so as to enjoy the privileges of segregated services closed off to black people…
Read the entire article here.