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Sure, it’s the broad average, but looking into it further IMO still doesn’t make the Laing story plausible, if the Laings really were just ordinary Afrikaners.

It was Chibie, above all, who fascinated me. Who was Chibie? Where had she come from?… One story went that she was the illegitimate daughter of King Alphonso XIII of Spain and a Moorish slave he had gotten pregnant… I was able to confirm that until her mid-teens, Chibie lived in England, and that when she left the convent [where she spent time], she could read in eight languages.

Those grandparents… seriously, does any race change its name/s more than Phoenicians? Asians seem to just give their kids cutesy first names like, um… Brandon, but I suppose their family names tend to be simple and easy to pronounce, unlike those ugly Phoenician jawbreakers.

This author would benefit from a hard-boiled copy editor, to teach her to strip unneeded, ambiguous big words and convoluted sentence structure from her prose. What remained might be interesting.

It seems like to me this would be mostly likely to happen when both parents are mixed race, not just one, and both have some distant (but not too distant) ancestry that does not match how they identify.

One day she mentioned to a co-worker that her mother was Korean. One look at her made it abundantly clear that she was unmistakably part-Asian, not just from color but from obviously Asian features.

When you look at Latinos and Arabs, the USA never really had a “one drop rule.” It was more of a “Don’t ask, don’t tell” rule. Even in the South, it was not unusual for a white family to be known to have some “black blood” but they were treated like other whites as long as they behaved as whites were expected to behave.

Then the NYT reporter digresses to explain that she’s multiracial too — half German, half Chinese, and how that was very fraught in high school and she has to tell us all about it.

A person absolutely gets -50% of his DNA from each parent. SFAIK that is non-negotiable. Once you get past the parent/child relationship the degree of genetic relationship is up to a lot of luck. Siblings share 50% of their DNA on average but it can be much more or much less than that.

Well, they’ve got enough corporate support to gasp along for some time. Nothing new or exciting is being created, though. And check my reference there’s always “papering the house.”

The actor playing the gardener on the estate was played by a black. The improbability of that was hard to ignore.

Most of the time, putting on a play is a financially dicey proposition, so I’m in favor of making it easier on the people trying to entertain you by not holding acting companies to super high standards of realism in casting.

I definitely doubt that Sir Peter, an extreme example of a man of the world, failed to notice that his third wife was kinda black.

Of course if Sandra herself is actually convinced of this theory, she could always take a DNA test. She could’ve had it done as part of the documentary, or maybe to celebrate the release of the feature film. Clear her mother’s name, shut up the skeptics. Yet she hasn’t, and won’t.

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