• @[email protected]
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    24 months ago

    That wasn’t an analogy. You can see skin color, you can’t see nationality. An aboriginal person would absolutely be seen as black in America. Do you live in America? We have black, brown, yellow and white and you’re gonna get put into one of those categories regardless of nationality.

    • @John_McMurray
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      4 months ago

      After all the time the general media soent convincing us, USA black is its own culture, you switch back to this shit when it’s convenient? And ffs, aborigines ain’t black, under any definition. Your argument just became so circular you inadvertently agreed with my initial statement. Sometimes you can absolutely see nationality. It’s really easy to tell a Korean from a Japanese from a Chinese

      • @[email protected]
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        24 months ago

        Wrongo! Being biracial and identifying as one of your races doesn’t mean you’re a part of that races culture. A lot of different races can be part of black and other cultures or multiple. Eminem is part of black culture.

        Yes, I’d say most Americans seeing an aborigine in the US would call them black. I don’t think you live in the US.

        LOL…ok, how do you see nationality? Go to a busy tourist area and pick 20 white guys and tell me where they’re from. God damn dude 🤣