Las Vegas Review-Journal

A double standard on questionin­g race

- COMMENTARY

PDonald Trump Jr. He retweeted a post by a black man named Ali Alexander questionin­g whether Sen. Kamala Harris, D-calif., whose father is from Jamaica and mother is from India, is an “American black.” Alexander’s tweet reads: “Kamala Harris is *not* an American Black.

She is half Indian and half Jamaican. I’m so sick of people robbing American Blacks (like myself ) of our history. It’s disgusting. … These are my people not her people.”

Predictabl­y, the reaction was furious. It caused Trump Jr. to quickly delete the retweet — but not, of course, before he was slammed as “racist.” A Harris campaign spokeswoma­n said: “This is the same type of racist attacks his father used to attack Barack Obama.”

But wait.

In January, Trump-hating hyper-left MSNBC host Chris Matthews had the following exchange with black

Democratic pundit Jamal Simmons:

Matthews: “Is she (Harris) seen as African-american?”

Simmons: “Yes, I think she’s seen as African-american. The fact that she was at Howard University (Harris’ alma mater) today … She’s really planting her feet in the African-american community.”

If Simmons bases Harris’ status as an “African-american” on having attended Howard University, a historical­ly black college, and “planting her feet in the African-american community,” what about Rachel Dolezal? Dolezal, a white woman who claimed to be black and even served as an NAACP chapter president, also attended Howard University. Dolezal essentiall­y argued that “blackness” is a state of mind, that if one identifies as black, then he or she is black. Based on Simmons’ logic, Dolezal is owed an apology. After all, writer Toni Morrison said President Bill Clinton, “white skin notwithsta­nding,” was America’s “first black president.” Clinton, born poor in Arkansas, was a “saxophone-playing, Mcdonald’s-and-junk-foodloving boy.”

Consider this February exchange between black CNN host Don Lemon and black female reporter April Ryan. Lemon said, “There’s a difference between being African-american and being black.” Ryan replied that, yes, Harris is a “black woman.”

Lemon: “I agree with that, but is she African-american? There is a difference, and there’s nothing wrong with that. No one’s trying to take anything away from her. I think you’re falling into the trap of that. All she had to do was say, ‘I am black, but I’m not African-american.’ … Jamaica’s not America. Jamaica did not come out of Jim Crow.”

Confused? Now consider this exchange from an interview during Harris’ 2008 Senate race:

Interviewe­r: “And certainly you could become the first Indian senator in U.S. history.”

Harris: “Knock wood.” President Obama, in a 2016 commenceme­nt address at Howard University, said: “One of the great changes that’s occurred in our country since I was your age is the realizatio­n that there’s no one way to be black. Take it from somebody who’s seen both sides of debate about whether I’m black enough. … There’s no litmus test for authentici­ty.” So, Trump Jr., if you remain perplexed, join the club.

Larry Elder is a bestsellin­g author and nationally syndicated radio talk show host.

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