The Punishment For Miscegenation

Simon Black
Down in the Dingle
Published in
2 min readFeb 3, 2019

The punishment for mixed breeding between different races used to be shunning, jail or even death for the violators.

Thank God times have changed. Now if you’re a White Guy Dating an Asian Woman, for instance, your only punishment is that you have to read blogs about it.

A lot of them.

For instance, here on Medium I have been able to find 534 articles about this fascinating topic.

The latest one was even written by an Asian female complaining about the whiteness of her fiancee and his potential Asian fetish.

She wrote a blog about how her fiancee’s whiteness made her uncomfortable!

Um, I’ve got a great idea. Dump him if you don’t like his race and you are worried that he might have an Asian fetish.

And then you won’t have to write a blog about it.

Disclaimer, I am not dating an Asian woman. I just find it extremely annoying that people complain about these things.

Another example of this kind of miscegenation blogging is the black females complaining about black men dating white women. I did a count on Google. I was able to find more than seven hundred of those. Seven hundred women supposedly standing on some higher moral ground as they complain about miscegenation?

No.

Just no.

People writing against miscegenation do not hold any high moral ground. They hold the low ground. The high ground states humans are free to love whom they love, despite your resentment about it.

Oh, and for the record, I am not white either. (I guess there will be readers squinting at my profile pic trying to figure out what I am then.) I was born on the island of Mauritius. We have a unique cultural mix. There were no native Mauritians. Everyone came from elsewhere. Thus, nobody claims ethnic primacy. On our island, Hindus, Muslims, Christians, whites and blacks live in harmony, because we don’t consider ourselves ethnics first, we consider ourselves first Mauritians.

I had heard that America was similar in this way. Was I wrong?

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Simon Black
Down in the Dingle

This is not the Simon Black that you know. This is a different Simon Black. He does not work in your organization or live in your city.