Actor Taye Diggs recently said he prefers to label his biracial son “mixed” instead of a black, igniting a long-standing and contentious debate about how some people of color should identify themselves.
Diggs has a 6-year-old son with his ex-wife, actress Idina Menzel, who is white. He recently wrote a children’s book inspired by his son called “Mixed Me!.” He explained in Nov. 13 interview with theGrio why he prefers the term mixed to black, which is often how the offspring of black and white interracial relationships choose to be identified.
“When you [describe biracial kids as black], you risk disrespecting that one half of who you are and that’s my fear. I don’t want my son to be in a situation where he calls himself black and everyone thinks he has a black mom and a black dad, and then they see a white mother, they wonder, ‘Oh, what’s going on,’” said Diggs. The “How Stella Got Her Groove Back” star went on to say he also doesn’t necessarily consider President Barack Obama, who has a white mother and African father, to be black.
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“As African-Americans we were so quick to say okay he’s black he’s black, and then there were the white people who were afraid to say he was biracial because who knows. Everybody refers to him as the first black president, I’m not saying it’s wrong, I’m just saying that it’s interesting. It would be great if it didn’t matter and that people could call him mixed. We’re still choosing to make that decision, and that’s when I think you get into some dangerous waters.”
The president has always identified as African-American, even on the 2010 Census form, where he had the opportunity to choose more than one racial identifier.









