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"It's frustrating from a point that there's a lot of multiracial people out there who see Obama out there doing that, knowing that he's multiracial, and they think maybe that's the right choice. But there's a lot of people saying maybe it's the wrong choice." For those who decline to check the white box: "Think about your family, think about what makes you you," Graham said. "How you are, who you are, where you come from." Most experts say there is very little genetic difference between people of different races
-- as little as 1 percent. "Race is a social concept, not a scientific one," goes a much-repeated quote from J. Craig Venter, who led one of the first projects to decipher the entire human genome. That's one reason why the American racial system is "facing taxonomical meltdown," said Nell Painter, a Princeton University history professor and author of "The History of White People." "The complications of the classification system, the resistance that people are mounting, the weight of immigration and marriage mixing, young people are checking more than one box," Painter said. "The system might just all fall away." Which would leave blackness to be defined person by person, according to how they think, the way they look at the world
-- blackness as a state of mind. Tony Spearman, author of "Why Am I Black," was born to two white parents. He grew up in a mostly black town, worked at a historically black college, taught physics to predominantly black students. On every census since 1996, Spearman has marked one box: black. "My wife got angry at me, my father got angry at me," said Spearman, 42. "They told me,
'You gotta be truthful!' I said, 'I am!' ... Race is a foolish thing. It has nothing to do with our humanness." "The system is breaking down, and I hope it continues to break down," Spearman . "Because when it fully breaks down, we'll start to measure people by the content of their hearts."
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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