9 Black Celebrities who Rejected the One Drop Rule

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source: Atlanta Black Star





Last year, singer Keyshia Cole was hesitant about participating in the television special “Black Girls Rock” because she felt like she didn’t fit the criteria. When she sat down on the couch at BET’s “106 & Park,” the singer admitted that at first thought, she wasn’t sure her ethnic credentials were Black enough for the show.

The R&B singer said her mother is Black but said she doesn’t know who her father is and told the organization, “I’m bi-racial,” and not only Black when asked if she could be a part of the show.




On Naomi Campbell’s Oxygen reality show, “The Face,” model Devyn was asked if she identified as a “Black” model by interviewer Wendy Williams. After the apparently Black model answered the question, Campbell listened and responded in the background.

Wendy: Is it hard to be a Black girl model?

Devyn: I don’t really consider myself to be a Black girl model. I mean, I know what my ethnicity is, but I’m fair-skinned and I feel like I have an international look.

Naomi Campbell (in the wings): What the f*ck does she mean? That’s a disgrace! She’s a Black girl.




Singer Rihanna referred to herself as bi-racial and not Black in multiple interviews last year. While on the TV show “Ellen,” she said Mariah Carey is her idol and she can relate to her . . . because Mariah, who has a white mother and a Black father, is also bi-racial.




Early in golfer Tiger Woods’ career when the media asked him if he was Black, he went out of his way to construct his own racial group saying that he was “Cablinasian.” Woods said he developed the term because he is a mix of several races.




Earlier this year when Zoe Saldana was asked about how she racially-identifies herself during a BET interview, the actress avoided the question saying:

“I find it uncomfortable to have to speak about my identity all of the time. I literally run away from people that use words like ethnic. It’s preposterous! To me there is no such thing as people of color.”




In an interview with The Village Voice, Drake spoke about his racial identity saying because he is mixed, it may come with extra benefits.

“I think Canada’s very accepting. But at the same time I get a lot of love everywhere in the world for just being diverse, instead of just being straight out [one thing]. I’m all mixed up and people embrace that.”




Oscar award winning actress Halle Berry also talked about being biracial and said,

“Being bi-racial is sort of like being in a secret society. Most people I know of that mix have a real ability to be in a room with anyone, Black or white.”




During an interview with MTV, rapper Kid Cudi mentioned that he was bi-racial by saying he’s Black and Mexican. While explaining his alter ego, “Juan Pablo,” to the interviewer, he said, “I have little bit of Mexican in me,” while referring to being mixed racially.




In an interview with Sophisticate’s Black Hair, Melanie Fiona went out of her way to let her fans know that she was mixed racially when referencing her long hair.
SBH: What’s the secret to your gorgeous long hair?

Melanie Fiona: I was born with a full head of hair. I’m mixed – my mom is Black and Portuguese and my dad is Indian so I have a good mix for growth.

Source: http://blacklikemoi.com
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Source: http://necolebitchie.com
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Halle Berry never rejected the one drop rule. On the Tavis Smiley show she admitted ti just being "black"

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I reject the "One Drop Rule" It is based on a white supremacist meme that there exists some sort of caucasian purity.

In fact, I reject the concept of "race" as it is used as a political characterization.

If you put one drop of chocolate in a glass of milk, does that make it chocolate milk?
 
I reject the "One Drop Rule" It is based on a white supremacist meme that there exists some sort of caucasian purity.

In fact, I reject the concept of "race" as it is used as a political characterization.

If you put one drop of chocolate in a glass of milk, does that make it chocolate milk?

I reject the concept of race, too. Unfortunately, most other people aren't intelligent enough to do the same.

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I reject the concept of race, too. Unfortunately, most other people aren't intelligent enough to do the same.

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I feel the same way. However, it's difficult to associate with the other half of yourself when you don't have that parent or their side of the family standing next to you to vouch.

I'm bi-racial but I never could relate to being just Latino. I always felt that it was bullshit because in my mind that's not even a racial construct, it's a culture.

I've caught hell because of my views. Puerto Ricans, Mexicans, and every other south or central American person looks at me as being Dominican. I say then you're basically calling me Black because that is the ancestry of most Dominicans historically. They are on the same damn island as Haitians...:hmm: (looking at you Zoe Saldana...:hmm:).

Even though I have had my share of difficulties growing up and being accepted as a brotha in the Black community, at the end of the day no other culture (in my opinion) is as willing to accept others as African Americans do. I am and will forever be grateful for that.

None of these fucking people mentioned should get a sponsorship, endorsement, or role as a "Black" person or from "Black" people, if they truly feel they are not Black...
 
Don't want to be Black...but white don't want you...

Go to your subspace and let the rest of us deal with the real world.
 
Don't want to be Black...but white don't want you...

Go to your subspace and let the rest of us deal with the real world.

My thoughts exactly. This bullshit reminds me of that documentary about bi-racial or mixed people wanting to have their own category and race...:smh:
 
My thoughts exactly. This bullshit reminds me of that documentary about bi-racial or mixed people wanting to have their own category and race...:smh:

I think that's silly also. I had an ex-gf that was on that mixed chicks ish hella hard. I'm like let's work on being spiritual and fuck all these divisions. Nope. She was obsessed with creating and living this new category. Got to the point where I felt I was just going to supply the DNA to keep her fantasy of a new mixed race alive. Like if she had gotten with a white guy her mixed race would have been diluted. lol. Crazy but that's how she thought. smh. She even used hair products specifically designed (yea right) for mixed chicks. I had to bail.
 
I feel the same way. However, it's difficult to associate with the other half of yourself when you don't have that parent or their side of the family standing next to you to vouch.

I'm bi-racial but I never could relate to being just Latino. I always felt that it was bullshit because in my mind that's not even a racial construct, it's a culture.

I've caught hell because of my views. Puerto Ricans, Mexicans, and every other south or central American person looks at me as being Dominican. I say then you're basically calling me Black because that is the ancestry of most Dominicans historically. They are on the same damn island as Haitians...:hmm: (looking at you Zoe Saldana...:hmm:).

Even though I have had my share of difficulties growing up and being accepted as a brotha in the Black community, at the end of the day no other culture (in my opinion) is as willing to accept others as African Americans do. I am and will forever be grateful for that.

None of these fucking people mentioned should get a sponsorship, endorsement, or role as a "Black" person or from "Black" people, if they truly feel they are not Black...

Interesting...
 
Where i'm from you're what your father is. If your father is black. You're black. To me it's also about a cultural identity as well. But also i DO believe in respecting someone elses view of how they wish to identify. So long as they realize their personal choice is not going to be accepted by society at large.

People call me all kinds of things, and think i'm this that and the other and i say, i identify as black. I've never had an issue with people coming at me sideways because of it. I have had some people look at me and then be like, "yeah... i can see that."

:hmm:
 
Proud black puertorican. Big lips,nappy hair. Strong atheletic body.

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I reject the "One Drop Rule" It is based on a white supremacist meme that there exists some sort of caucasian purity.

In fact, I reject the concept of "race" as it is used as a political characterization.

If you put one drop of chocolate in a glass of milk, does that make it chocolate milk?

Exactly!

The one drop rule was created by whites as a way to keep their "race" pure.

Never understood why black people accept and follow this nonsense rule.
 
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