|
|
 | |  |
| I have a question. An African is born an albino. Another individual is born of a heavy Eastern European ancestry and as a result has a pale complexion at birth quite similar to the albino. | |
 | |  |
|
 |
|
|
|
|
 | |  |
| Remove the knowledge of their ancestry. To the eyes one would still be able to discern that the albino is of African descent and the European is of European descent. | |
 | |  |
|
 |
 | |  |
| From this, and with some added thought, one can conclude that it is not skin pigmentation that actually defines a race but rather the similarities that said race shares heavily among each other. | |
 | |  |
|
|
|
|
|
 | |  |
| So if in regards to people, black isn't necessarily black and white isn't necessarily white, does that mean that genetically white people can be more black than white and vice versa? | |
 | |  |
|
 |
 | |  |
| I don't care how much sense you make. It doesn't matter how much you like rap music, you can't call yourself Tupac Shakur's 'Fellow nigga's nigga from a cracka motha'. | |
 | |  |
|
|
|