• Ever wanted an RSS feed of all your favorite gaming news sites? Go check out our new Gaming Headlines feed! Read more about it here.
Status
Not open for further replies.

Cantaim

Member
Oct 25, 2017
33,300
The Stussining
http://www.wtsp.com/news/transracial-man-born-white-feels-like-he-is-filipino/491290902

transracial1_1510536310384_11683196_ver1.0.jpg

TAMPA, Fla. -- Riding in a flamboyant purple vehicle, Ja Du shows up to a coffee shop to open up about his new identity.

Ja Du, born a white male named Adam, now considers himself a Filipino. Turns out the purple ride he drives around in is called a Tuk Tuk, an Asian-derived vehicle used for public transit in the Philippines he says.

Ja Du is part of a small, but growing community of people who considers themselves transracial. It refers to someone born one race, but identifies with another.

Sound weird? Not to them. Ja Du says he grew up enjoying Filipino food, events and the overall culture.

"I'd watch the history channel sometimes for hours you know whenever it came to that and you know nothing else intrigued me more but things about Filipino culture."

If you're thinking this sounds familiar, you might remember the story of Rachel Dolezal. Dolezal was born white, but identified as black and portrayed herself as such. She was even the president of the Spokane, Washington, chapter of the NAACP.

After she appeared on an episode of Dr. Phil, the term transracial started to become more widely known. Now, we are finding out this community of people who identify as another race is growing. If you look on Facebook, where we found Ja Du, groups dubbed transracial are popping up with dozens of members.

Standpoint from a psychologist
Dr. Stacey Scheckner is a licensed psychologist with a B.A. from Washington University, plus M.A. and doctorate from Florida State. She hasn't had a client who wanted to change their race but has worked with many clients wanting to change their body in some way.

"If someone feels that they feel at home with a certain religion, a certain race, a certain culture, I think that if that's who they really feel inside life is about finding out who you are. The more knowledge you have of yourself, the happier you can be," she said.

"And, as long as it's not hurting yourself or anyone else, I don't see a problem with that."

Ja Du hasn't told his family yet because he believes they will laugh at the notion of changing your ethnicity. The public was very critical of Dolezal and might be for him as well, but Scheckner believes everyone should be more understanding.

"If that's who they are and they want to celebrate it and enjoy it, then you have to think what harm is it doing? All they want to do is throw themselves into that culture and celebrate it."

"I think before we get offended, we need to take a step back and think about what is the harm."

But, with someone making such drastic changes, she does think they should speak to a professional.

"I work with a lot, in my 15 years, a lot of transgender people. Before the doctors that I send them to do any type of physical changes to their body, they go through a long process with me and actually most the people, they are not upset about it because they want to make sure that they're doing the right thing."

That brings up another major change with Ja Du. He is also transsexual and is considering changing his gender as well. He has spoken to his mom and family about that.

Preventing fraud
Your race can make you more marketable and in some cases eligible for certain benefits, jobs and scholarships. After quick Google search for ethnic scholarships, we found that a Filipino scholarship was the second option that popped up.

Many might question Ja Du's intentions or say that he is a perfect case of cultural appropriation.

He knows this can be a problem, but says he's not trying to take advantage of anything.

"I believe people will [take advantage] just like other people have taken advantage of their identity to get their way, but the difference between me and them Garin is that I don't want that. I think that we all have the freedoms to pursue happiness in our own ways," he said.

More about transracial
The term was normally used to describe someone (or a couple) of a certain race adopting a baby of another race. But, now after the story of Rachel Dolezal, it's becoming associated with someone who identifies with another ethnicity or race.

If you Google the term now, you will find plenty of stories and information referring to both definitions for the term

Thread made on behalf of litebrite from the adopt a user thread
 

EMM

Banned
Oct 27, 2017
180
I for for one do recognize both transgender and transracial as valid concepts. It's just how the mind eventually develops.
 

Deleted member 11157

User requested account closure
Banned
Oct 27, 2017
3,880
This is like when you get bopped on the head, fall into a coma, and the next day you can speak French.
 

Geist

Prophet of Truth
Avenger
Oct 25, 2017
4,579
I can understand someone identifying with and wanting to integrate into another culture, but I just can't understand wanting to be another race.
 
Oct 25, 2017
19,035
Ah yes, hand picking a race you want to be like a piece of clothing with all of the privilege and none of the discrimination.
 

Weiss

User requested ban
Banned
Oct 25, 2017
64,265
So, like, there is no basis to this, right? Transracial cannot be a thing.

I don't understand NB gender identities but I recognize that research has been done into it and it's a thing.
 

Oneiros

Member
Oct 27, 2017
1,957
Transracialism is not a biological thing. That's why I think its dumb to compare it to transgenderism.
 

John Rabbit

Member
Oct 25, 2017
10,091
No. No I'm sorry this is not a thing. I refuse to even entertain this. You just like Filipino culture a whole lot man, it's cool.
 

Fisty

Member
Oct 25, 2017
20,199
Nah.... nah....

Enjoy the food. Live in Garden Grove. Learn to speak Filipino.

You aren't and will never be Filipino.
 

AuthenticM

Son Altesse Sérénissime
The Fallen
Oct 25, 2017
30,001
RACE ISN'T NEUROLOGICAL. IT'S A SOCIAL CONSTRUCT.

HOW IS THIS SO HARD TO UNDERSTAND
 

Sexy Fish

The Fallen
Oct 25, 2017
4,395
So, like, there is no basis to this, right? Transracial cannot be a thing.

I don't understand NB gender identities but I recognize that research has been done into it and it's a thing.
Transracialism is usually defined as being raised in a culture that isn't your own. Like a black child adopted by white parents.

https://mediadiversified.org/2015/06/15/transracial-doesnt-mean-what-rachel-dolezal-thinks-it-means/
Transracial is a term to describe interracial adoptees and is commonly used in organisational and academic contexts. Simply put, a transracial person is someone raised in a culture or race different from their own. Having been raised by her white parents and choosing to identify as a person of another race, Dolezal does not get to use this term.
 

Hierophant

Banned
Oct 25, 2017
2,196
Sydney
Say you have a Filipino background and that you grew up around them, that'll suffice for most people. Does he even speak Tagalog?
 

JDSN

Banned
Oct 27, 2017
5,129
You can tell that transracial bullshit is not real because it only seems to come from crazy people from an specific race......and Sammy Soza's Pepto-bismol-looking ass.
 
Oct 25, 2017
5,572
Racoon City
"Wow, I'm really like these specific aspects of another culture...I totally am now one of them!"

Some headass shit. Next time a police officer pulls me over, I'll tell him don't shoot, I identify as white.
 

Laiza

Member
Oct 25, 2017
2,170
So, like, there is no basis to this, right? Transracial cannot be a thing.

I don't understand NB gender identities but I recognize that research has been done into it and it's a thing.
Transracialism is not a biological thing. That's why I think its dumb to compare it to transgenderism.
I have to be honest - I really, really dislike this line of thinking.

I should not need scientific research to back up my gender identity. If I decide I want to undergo surgery or hormone therapy for personal reasons I should be allowed to do so without needing to "prove" somehow that I have a biological basis as a need. I should just be able to do it. It's my bloody body, after all.

This is obviously an entirely different thing from making something up like being "transracial", but since you guys brought it up, I felt the need to put in my 2c.
 
Oct 25, 2017
479
I still don't understand trans-racial. I honestly don't understand trans-anything, but this one in particular just doesn't make any sense to me. This is mostly due to the idea of race not really making too much sense to me. Culture makes perfect sense to me, and I get that areas tend to have certain cultures attached to them, but I guess I'm ignorant in the aspect of race. You lose me after anything beyond transgender (not saying I get that either, but I can at least attempt to understand it).
 

fleeting

Member
Oct 27, 2017
311
I can understand someone identifying with and wanting to integrate into another culture, but I just can't understand wanting to be another race.
Why not?

I mean, I don't believe there's any science to transracialism, but why can't you believe somebody would want to be of another?
 

bremon

Member
Oct 27, 2017
7,851
It's possible to appreciate and take part in cultures different than the one you were born into without appropriating them. This seems problematic.
 

iksenpets

Member
Oct 26, 2017
6,483
Dallas, TX
Is Transracialism even proven by science? I don't get it.

That's the thing, it could never be because race and ethnicity aren't scientific concepts. Sex has biological components to it that make it understandable how a brain could be wired to feel itself as being the wrong gender relative to the body it's inhabiting, but there aren't, like, Filipino brain structures or hormones that could be imbalanced in this guy producing some inborn sense of being Filipino. "Filipino" is a cultural concept that's been built up over thousands of years of history. It makes no sense to claim you were somehow born with an innate Filipinoness to you.

You can appreciate a culture and want to immerse yourself in it, that's why we have emigration and university cultural studies departments, but you can't become an ethnicity you're not born and raised into.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.