How are light skinned blacks treatedin America?

Answer:

.

There is absolutely NO SUCH THING as a
so-called "light skinned black" person.

To believe in such a concept is to support the teachings
of the racist One-Drop Rule -- which falsely claims that
'Black' lineage is inferior and that any 'Black' bloodlines
found in one's ancestry has both "contaminated" and
"annihilated" all of one's other ancestral lineages --
and thus, amazingly renders a person of Mixed-Race
ancestral lineage as being mono-racial (full) 'Black'.

If a person who has been categorized as being "black"
is also of a "light-skin" complexion, coloring, hue or tone,
it is just one type of evidence that the person is actually of
Mixed-Race and is NOT of a full-Black ancestral lineage at all.

Most people who are given the false label of "light skinned /
light skin black" are actually, again, Mixed-Race people who
are of a Multi-Generational Multiracially-Mixed (MGM-Mixed)
lineage -- which society has replaced with a One-Drop Rule.

As far how these MGM-Mixed people are treated in the
United States is concerned, it actually depends on the
region of the nation -- as well as the socio-economic
level of the people among whom they are found to live.

In some areas and among some people they are treated
very well; in others they are treated like any other group;
and, in still others, they may not be treated the same.

.

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First answer by Greenwood90. Last edit by APGifts. Contributor trust: 5 Question popularity: 2 [recommend question].