Color circle There are various races in the United States, and "black and white" is one of them. As a child of white and black mixed-blood, I have a "perfect" view of life in both cultures; I feel complete like a symmetrical circle. I have no sense of racial discrimination, and I feel that I belong to both races. I know that I can not go anywhere, and I say I am white, but I can be as easy as a black man. The color is fiction, paying attention to how things look distracting in the light.
In the United States, these changes in skin color created a self-evident hierarchy: blacks with brighter skin eventually acquired some of the master class rights. By the beginning of the nineteenth century, "black-and-white hypotheses" appeared, and "white blood" of slim slims made them smarter, more civilized and more appealing. In the Negro community, it may not be coincidental that blacks of light skin become leaders. For white power brokers, they are not that much a threat. The first black graduate of Harvard University was W. E. B. Dubois of white skin. The most famous black politician - Former New Orleans mayor Ernest Morrill, former Virginia Governor Douglas Wilder to former President Obama - has more relaxed skin
Murray's philosophy, on the contrary, there are neither blacks nor white Americans, we would say that we are all Americans. Mr. Barrack Obama announced this point long before the US thought that the United States was not divided by red and blue, and she was united as the United States. In our ancestry, Americans with the most white skin may have African and European DNA or the darkest people may be Nigerians and Scandinavians. The underlying black intellectuals feel that their black empowerment messages are weakening by the Murray's pan-American rhetoric. Murray's hypothesis proves Washington's assertion that black-and-white America can coexist while maintaining separate phallics, as fingers are only an extension of one aspect.
African-Americans - There are 100 million African descendants in Latin America. Among them, there are 67 million people in South America, accounting for 28% of Brazilian population including multi ethnic mixed-paraguayes. Many people also have European and indigenous families. (Brazilian 'black people' are mainly mixed). Cuba, Haiti, Colombia, the Dominican Republic also have a large population of African Americans and other major ethnic families.