User:Lionchow/blackpeoplepics

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
if you shaved their hair and painted their skin, these Ethiopians would look exactly like whites
File:9579274new.jpg
if you shaved his head, lightened his skin he would also be viewed as white, maybe jewish, maybe italian, maybe Slavic, but not black either.
File:Aeta07.jpg
If this man was not known to be Filipino, he would near unanimously be thought of as black by any westerner, african, or Asian unfmailiar with the Aeta or other black Asians.
File:9579274new.jpg
African Americans look very different but no more nor less black than the Aeta, Ethiopian, or other black people of the world (except of course the black Irish).
File:9579274new.jpg
Now this is a Black man too.
Jamie Foxx whose blackness is unquestioned shares similar so-called caucasoid features to the Ethiopians. His profile shows strong so-called Cauacsoid admixture, however being an American, the public is psychologically isolated from consistent observation of this caucasoid phenomonon.
File:Blackafricans.jpg
Black people in Africa
Ethiopian children in Western Oromia, Ethiopia
File:Blackafricans.jpg
Humans from Earth. (black people in Africa? Where IN Africa?
Some black kids (awww, aint they cute?)
File:Blackmodel.jpg
Black woman model
File:Blackmodel.jpg
Black woman model, we don't know her name, you know, when they are that dark we just don't care. But of course, those citation-istas didn't put that here!
Ethiopians are widely considered Black both historically and by the census, because of their Negroid skin and hair type, but a 2001 Oxford genetic cluster study stated: 62% of the Ethiopians fall in the first cluster, which encompasses the majority of the Jews, Norwegians and Armenians, indicating that placement of these individuals in a 'Black' cluster would be an inaccurate reflection of the genetic structure. Only 24% of the Ethiopians are placed in the cluster with the Bantu and most of the Afro-Caribbeans.[1] In addition their craniofacial features resemble those of Caucasoids.[2]
The first black president of South Africa stands beside the man Toni Morrison called America's first black president[3]
  1. ^ [[1]]
  2. ^ [[2]]
  3. ^ Cite error: The named reference morrison was invoked but never defined (see the help page).