Do black people discriminate against other black people based on skin color?
[2023-10-10 23:59:28]
In South Africa our ethnic relationships have a unique tone due to the longstanding presence of Europeans, Asians and their hybrids, and other slaves and other slaves in other parts of Africa and Khoisan.
Thanks to the trekking of 1910 and the integration of the former Pol Republic, coupled with relatively delayed internal expansion, then it became blurred
I do not know how Bantu stock African South Africans are watching this, so I would rather speak from a community perspective.
Our very heterogeneous origins and unstable positions in the political realm of South Africa have brought us an identity crisis so we will try to distinguish ourselves from white and black people, An area has assigned a community in our community. Thinner skin color member
Therefore, those with more Coixan and Bantu features are more discriminated, and those with more European and Asian characteristics will be more advantageous. Integrate
Until today, the richer so-called colored people tend to have "finer" characteristics, the poorer parts have more Bantu and Khoisan characteristics. In some cases, battle broke out, "hotnot", "Boesman", "Slams", "korrelkop" are commonly used.
To make matters worse, we show how wealthy segments can build some of the dominant complexes at the moment, poor segments treat them as meal coupons. This is reflected in the strong spirit, especially in the community.
Skin color often plays an important role in partner's choice, insulting against thin skin people and dark skin people is quite normal.
We often guide our prejudices to the Bantas, Indians and other Asians. Among them, especially the Bantas have their contradictions. In Cape Town, due to the complexity of our advantage. We also tend to show a cold attitude towards African immigrants other than multi-ethnic, Asian, or North African.
We tend to have children hoping to marry Bantu with Indian, Chinese, Caucasian or other Westerners and many of us try to make our cultural heritage of Bantu and Koysan best . Place and ignored in the worst case
Do you remember the church that I went to? My father took down the roots in the rural areas, taught in poor communities, and made us strange like them.
The most sad thing is that their work and lifestyle are very different from ours The worst thing is that the color of their skin is dark and the texture of the hair is coarser than ours is.
My parents happen to be superficial, my father has a strong Western European look, and my mother looks like South Asia.
I do not like this, I refuse to accept this spirit in any way, as it is frankly embarrassing and inhuman.
For centuries, colored people have face discrimination due to the color of whites and other racial skin. Discrimination against blacks is very bad outside their race, and worse it comes from their race. Color rhythm separated the black community greatly, especially in the process of enslaving blacks. Bright skin has always been considered better than dark skin. During slavery, people considered "bright skin" were slaves, they stayed inside and "black skin" was exercising outdoors. Separation between blacks makes the society truly believe that it is ideal to have a brighter skin and is more widely accepted than having deeper skin.
Is there anyone who does not want black people to really have black skin? In fact, many blacks do not want to be blacks. This phenomenon known as a phenomenon of color, or the system of people whose skin is discriminated and dark skin is dark, is greatly affected by the black community. Have you ever met a black guy trying to deny their darkness and immediately giving you what percentage of the race list? Perhaps their Instagram creatures will look like "15% Creole, 18% Indian, 37% Belize, 49% Italian ...". Or how does a dark black man argue for disgust against a dark black woman and his love for a thin skin woman? He may say, "Is there no preference for me?" Or maybe the black men say why they are not b