Quick Search

Active Bloggers

HBCU CONNECT HBCU CONNECT
Central State University class of 1995
Reginald Culpepper Reginald Culpepper
Clark Atlanta University class of 1998
How May I Help You NC How May I Help You NC
Bellarmine University class of 2021
Will Moss Will Moss
Hampton University class of 1995
Shykeria Lifleur Shykeria Lifleur
Other College... class of
LaMarr Blackmon LaMarr Blackmon
Cal St Univ, Long Beach class of 1992
Valerie Ellis Valerie Ellis
College Not Listed class of 2025
rickey johnson rickey johnson
Other College... class of
Randi Payton Randi Payton
University of the District of Columbia class of 1982

OBAMA CLINT HOLMES DOUG BURNETT BIRACIAL "BLACK" MEN

OBAMA CLINT HOLMES DOUG BURNETT BIRACIAL "BLACK" MEN
Posted By: Douglas Burnett on December 02, 2008


TO VIEW THE LINK on THE LAS VEGAS REVIEW JOURNAL : http://www.lvrj.com/living/35276714.html


Nov. 30, 2008
Copyright © Las Vegas Review-Journal

Coloring between the lines

U.S. culture still grappling with racial identity

By COREY LEVITAN
LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL
At his home office in Spanish Trail, Douglas Burnett, chief executive officer of Corporate Services & Associates, discusses how he feels as a multiracial man.
Photo by Martin S. Fuentes/Review-Journal.



Audrey Holmes, left, hugs her son, Clint, in an undated photograph taken when Clint Holmes headlined Harrah's Las Vegas.
Courtesy photo

"U.S. Decisively Elects First Black President," read the Nov. 5 Washington Post headline. Decisive as Barack Obama's election was, however, his blackness is not. The former senator from Illinois is equally white. (His mother is Caucasian, his father African.)

Pressure exists in this country to shoehorn citizens into racial boxes, and "multiracial" has not been one of the boxes.


"For some people, it's based on the one-drop rule," said Susan Graham, founder and executive director of Project Race, a multiracial awareness organization headquartered in Los Banos, Calif.

"It's not a law and it never has been," Graham explained. "But it's a public perception. Some people believe that one drop of blood makes you black. They look at Barack Obama and see some black, so he has to be completely black." (In a 2007 "60 Minutes" interview, Obama described himself as "rooted in the African-American community" but "not defined by it.")

Graham's group lobbied successfully for the U.S. Census to allow self-identification by more than one race. In 2000, the first year the forms were changed, 2.4 percent of Clark County residents reported belonging to multiple races. Last year, 2.8 percent did.

Although demonstrating an upswing, albeit small, both these numbers probably are underrepresented, Graham said. Just because a form allows people to classify themselves a certain way doesn't mean society allows them to. Historically, as Graham pointed out, most African-Americans come from mixed bloodlines anyway because of the system of slavery practiced in the nation's early years.

"When you first saw me, you saw a black man, correct?" asked Douglas Burnett, 36-year-old owner of a Las Vegas business consulting firm.

"And that's how I identify myself," he said. "When people look at me, what you see, touch and feel would be an African-American."

Burnett is half black, three-eighths American Indian and an eighth white.

"I've identified with those other groups as far as research -- reading about the Cherokee Indians and the French," he said. "But I don't feel it."

Some multiracial individuals respond to the societal pressure by resisting it.

"When people ask, I say that I'm biracial," said Rebecca Rogers, an assistant program director for the University of Nevada, Las Vegas.



The 32-year-old -- whose mother is white and father is black -- said blacks usually give her "a strange response."

"There are a lot of people out there who don't approve of interracial relationships," she said.

The bigotry was even stronger in Rogers' small hometown of Sparta, Ill., from which she moved in 2001.

"It was hard for me because I dealt with prejudice in my own family," she said. "My father's side would always make little comments: 'half breed,' 'mulatto' and stuff like that. But my mother's side was worse."

Rogers said her maternal grandmother wouldn't allow her to visit.

"I didn't see her house until I was 10 years old," Rogers said, noting that her grandmother eventually changed her view at that time.

Las Vegas singer Clint Holmes said he felt the stares while coming of age in the rural outskirts of Buffalo, N.Y. -- stares from people apparently trying to piece together a puzzle in their heads.

"I felt, the phrase I guess is, no place to be somebody," said Holmes, the offspring of a black jazz singer father and a Caucasian English opera singer mom. "For a long time, I thought, 'Where do I fit in this?' "

Through the years, Holmes said, his perspective changed.

"The first part of my life, I related more to the white heritage because that's what I knew," he said. "Later on, I related more to the black part of my heritage because I was in the process of learning about it."

Holmes said he now considers himself "neither and both," but added that it took a long time for him to grow comfortable in his mixed skin.

"I am a black man, because that's what society says we are," he said. "But I fully relate to my mother's world, and I fully relate to my father's world."

Erik Ho, who is half white and half Chinese, said he never had any issues with race.

"When I was younger, I identified myself as being more Chinese just because of my last name, and it was easier for me to explain on paper that I was of Asian-American descent," said the 31-year-old KVBC-TV news cameraman. "But it was no big deal."

Ho said it's an even smaller deal now.

"It seems to be more common," he said. "I run into a lot of biracial people, even in my newsroom."

Ho laughed when he remembered being asked by a reporter how to pronounce a Chinese surname in a report about a traffic accident.

"I didn't know," he replied. "I never learned Chinese."

Rainier Spencer, professor of Afro-American Studies at UNLV, believes that any categorization by race -- even by multiple races -- is unscientific and socially detrimental.

"What you see when you look at people are physical factors that have to do with where their ancestors lived, but cannot be used in any way to classify people into discrete racial categories," said Spencer, who authored a 2006 book called "Challenging Multiracial Identities." "There's no way you can set up racial categories that are scientifically consistent."

Spencer said that Americans should be trying to banish racial identity instead of creating new ones.

"You can't do away with race by creating an identity that needs race in order to exist," he said. "The idea is for race not to be a salient fact in anybody's identity."

Contact reporter Corey Levitan at clevitan@reviewjournal.com or 702-383-0456.

If you enjoyed this article, Join HBCU CONNECT today for similar content and opportunities via email!
Comments
Please Login To Post Comments...
Email:
Password:

 
More From This Author
Just Being Me
BUSINESS SEMINARS, MULTI MEDIA COMPANIES, NETWORK MARKTERS, HOME BASED BUSINESS OWNERS
OBAMA IS CUTTING TAXES FOR BUSINESS OWNERS-START OR RESTRUCTURE YOUR BUSINESS NOW!!!
MULTI MEDIA INTERVIEWS BUSINESS EDUCATIONAL INFORMANTION VERY IMPORTANT WE ARE READY FOR OBAMA
DOUG BURNETT-ALEXIS LEVI-CORPORATE SERVICES & ASSOCIATES / LAS VEGAS STARS BASKETBALL
WHY INCORPORATING YOUR BUSINESS IS IMPORTANT AND WHY NEVADA www.4corporateservices.com
Latest Blogs
Volunteer Join us in creating an uplifting and unforgettable event that champions a more inclusive world!

Volunteer Join us in creating an uplifting and unforgettable event that champions a more inclusive world!

Minnesota now that's a place I've yet to venture to. Better add some Community Service activities to our Family Calendar Special Olympics is near and dear to our staff at HBCUConnect Represent fo ...more
How May I Help You NC • 62 Views • April 23rd, 2026
21 Questions to ask a new Mate *What does DEPRESSION look like on you*

21 Questions to ask a new Mate *What does DEPRESSION look like on you*

Made in love Made in Lust What causes an impediment in a fetus in a newborn in a adolescent in adults Or could it the impediment be another color in the Human Rainbow just another part of he he ...more
How May I Help You NC • 72 Views • April 23rd, 2026
EARTH DAY SERVE UNIVERSE NIGHT

EARTH DAY SERVE UNIVERSE NIGHT

Sprinkled Dipped 🍒 on top in Earth DAY NOON NIGHT festivities ...more
How May I Help You NC • 86 Views • April 23rd, 2026
Best kept secret in India

Best kept secret in India

ODISHA formerly known as Orissa Get that Juggernaut Origin History See how sports are weighing yay nay MAY Soccer Finals https://www.newsx.com/live-updates/kerala-blasters-vs-odisha-fc-isl-highlig ...more
How May I Help You NC • 76 Views • April 23rd, 2026
What type of blinged out cup would we gift to our Graduate

What type of blinged out cup would we gift to our Graduate

Is it a Disney Theme with some Bling Should the cup represent his beloved Mexican Soccer team Maybe a blinged out cup with a custom reason why they were created Made In Lova ...more
How May I Help You NC • 78 Views • April 23rd, 2026
Popular Blogs
Divorce in America in 2009 – What’s love got to do, got to do with it?

Divorce in America in 2009 – What’s love got to do, got to do with it?

Join Brother Marcus and the cast and the crew of the Brother Marcus Show live this Sunday evening on February 1, 2009 @ 8:00 p.m. for another hot topic in our community! “Divorce in America in 2009 ...more
Brother Marcus! • 70,958,291 Views • January 27th, 2009
VISINE ALERT!!!

VISINE ALERT!!!

Seemingly innocent medication such as Visine eyedrops are used by people to concoct a mixture with similar effects as a date-rape drug. When mixed with alcohol and taken orally, the eyedrops can l ...more
Siebra Muhammad • 119,329 Views • May 23rd, 2009

"Chain Hang Low" check out the real meaning of the Lyrics!

Recently there is a new artist out of Saint Louis that goes by the name JIBBS. Jibbs debut single "Chain hang low" has a history that most people are not aware of. The particular nursery rhyme that th ...more
Tyhesha Judge-Fogle • 77,420 Views • November 9th, 2006
HBCU Marketplace Gifts: Divine 9 Premium Fraternity / Sorority Playing Cards

HBCU Marketplace Gifts: Divine 9 Premium Fraternity / Sorority Playing Cards

Vendor: Charles Jones Item Price: $20.00 Price Includes Shipping: Yes - Shipping Included Item Description: Pantheon Series - Divine 9 - Premium Playing Cards (choose Gold Series or Silve ...more
How May I Help You NC • 62,559 Views • December 2nd, 2018
Black College Student Sentenced to 12 Years in Prison for Kissing a White Girl

Black College Student Sentenced to 12 Years in Prison for Kissing a White Girl

Albert N. Wilson, a former University of Kansas student, has been sentenced to 12 years in prison and a lifetime of probation after being convicted by an all-white jury of raping a white teen girl. Bu ...more
Will Moss • 55,502 Views • June 4th, 2020
Please Give Us a Like on Facebook!
Featured Members