babyjax13 wrote:Tons of men under 30 wear it, especially under 25, including the straight men (I teach at a University).
I understand that, but they're also big basketball fans? There's enough of those people?
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babyjax13 wrote:Tons of men under 30 wear it, especially under 25, including the straight men (I teach at a University).
Stanford wrote:babyjax13 wrote:Tons of men under 30 wear it, especially under 25, including the straight men (I teach at a University).
I understand that, but they're also big basketball fans? There's enough of those people?



M2J wrote:My note on the nail polish thing is I have a friend in late 30s that does it. He's kinda an artist, but it looks way better than Jared's because it's art, he gets designs not just full color on big ass hands.
Jared's nail beds look larger than most people's fingers because of the full color and it's odd looking. He should get like 76er logos or create his own logo to put onto it. Jared's said Clarkson was his inspiration as he was for many, but Clarkson often gets designs too
For example
Vs
Arsenal wrote:Being the next Steph will sell a ton of nail polish no doubt!

sodmoraes wrote:In a not at all related to basketball question, would you guys, in the US, classify Mccain as a black person? Probably a polemic question, but here in my country( Brazil), in the last 10 years, we are having a lot of laws reserving a percentage of hires in the public sector to black and brown people( mixed race, known here as "pardo"), like a kinda of DEI hiring you guys got there.. As here there are a lot of good jobs in the government, there has been a lot of problems with this law ( known as "cota"), since a lot of people tried to pass as black or mixed race, so they invented like committee in every government hiring process known as "Banca de Heteroidentificação", which,in reality, can be described as a Racial Court, since they will decide if you are apt to use this benefit.
The thing is that this is really problematic in brazil, since we are a really mixed people( most part of the population is considered pardo), but, in reality, in most selections the" bancas de heteroidentificação" tend to privilege the black people, and most mixed people are rejected( doesnt matter if your parents are black, they only consider your phenotypes). So thats why im asking the question about Jared. Looking at his features( hair and nose) it seems evident his mother or father are black, but here, in brazil, i have my doubts if he would be able to use the "cota", since his skin isnt black enough to be considered black by this ridiculous committes.
Arsenal wrote:sodmoraes wrote:In a not at all related to basketball question, would you guys, in the US, classify Mccain as a black person? Probably a polemic question, but here in my country( Brazil), in the last 10 years, we are having a lot of laws reserving a percentage of hires in the public sector to black and brown people( mixed race, known here as "pardo"), like a kinda of DEI hiring you guys got there.. As here there are a lot of good jobs in the government, there has been a lot of problems with this law ( known as "cota"), since a lot of people tried to pass as black or mixed race, so they invented like committee in every government hiring process known as "Banca de Heteroidentificação", which,in reality, can be described as a Racial Court, since they will decide if you are apt to use this benefit.
The thing is that this is really problematic in brazil, since we are a really mixed people( most part of the population is considered pardo), but, in reality, in most selections the" bancas de heteroidentificação" tend to privilege the black people, and most mixed people are rejected( doesnt matter if your parents are black, they only consider your phenotypes). So thats why im asking the question about Jared. Looking at his features( hair and nose) it seems evident his mother or father are black, but here, in brazil, i have my doubts if he would be able to use the "cota", since his skin isnt black enough to be considered black by this ridiculous committes.
In the US historically, we've gone by the "one-drop rule" meaning any black ancestry whatsoever would classify you as black. Functionally, that would be if you have around 1/4th to 1/8th black ancestry or more, since if it's less than then people would typically "pass" as white (or not black).
So Jared McCain would be classified as black in the US by most people.
However, we also have cases of people like Elizabeth Warren who claimed to be Native American with virtually zero native ancestry, in order to abuse affirmative action programs similar to your cota laws.

sodmoraes wrote:Arsenal wrote:sodmoraes wrote:In a not at all related to basketball question, would you guys, in the US, classify Mccain as a black person? Probably a polemic question, but here in my country( Brazil), in the last 10 years, we are having a lot of laws reserving a percentage of hires in the public sector to black and brown people( mixed race, known here as "pardo"), like a kinda of DEI hiring you guys got there.. As here there are a lot of good jobs in the government, there has been a lot of problems with this law ( known as "cota"), since a lot of people tried to pass as black or mixed race, so they invented like committee in every government hiring process known as "Banca de Heteroidentificação", which,in reality, can be described as a Racial Court, since they will decide if you are apt to use this benefit.
The thing is that this is really problematic in brazil, since we are a really mixed people( most part of the population is considered pardo), but, in reality, in most selections the" bancas de heteroidentificação" tend to privilege the black people, and most mixed people are rejected( doesnt matter if your parents are black, they only consider your phenotypes). So thats why im asking the question about Jared. Looking at his features( hair and nose) it seems evident his mother or father are black, but here, in brazil, i have my doubts if he would be able to use the "cota", since his skin isnt black enough to be considered black by this ridiculous committes.
In the US historically, we've gone by the "one-drop rule" meaning any black ancestry whatsoever would classify you as black. Functionally, that would be if you have around 1/4th to 1/8th black ancestry or more, since if it's less than then people would typically "pass" as white (or not black).
So Jared McCain would be classified as black in the US by most people.
However, we also have cases of people like Elizabeth Warren who claimed to be Native American with virtually zero native ancestry, in order to abuse affirmative action programs similar to your cota laws.
Yes i think the one drop rule makes the most sense. But here i think they there was a bias when they made the law. I think, in the begining, it was only meant be used by black people, but they inserted the possibility of being used by mixed race people after, just to inflate the numbers of the cota laws.
Explaining, the law dictates that 20% of the governamente hires ( which occur by a test, known as a "concurso") will be reserved for black or mixed people. But in reality, only 8% of brazilian people consider themselves as black, while 45% of the population see themselves as "pardo"( here we had a lot of portuguese, italian and germany immigration, but a lot of african people were brought to work as slaves too). So if the lawmakers made a law that only black people would be able to use, the percentage would need to be lower (its going up to 30% next year, until 2050, without any public policy analysis of the gains of this law, that started in 2014). So they kinda used the pardos just to inflate the percentage of the DEI hires, but in reallity the committes tend to just aprove the black people, which is kinda bizarre. If your dad was black but your skin is lighter your arent black? That doesnt make sense. SO because of that, we have a lot of weird cases, like people who gets tans to try to pass as blacks and all that.
I think the affirmative action programs should focus in hiring poor people, since what tends to happens in the best jobs( like "concursos" for law judges) is that the majority of the people who are hired by the "cotas", are people who are wealthy, so it kinda ruins the true objective of the law.
sodmoraes wrote:In a not at all related to basketball question, would you guys, in the US, classify Mccain as a black person? Probably a polemic question, but here in my country( Brazil), in the last 10 years, we are having a lot of laws reserving a percentage of hires in the public sector to black and brown people( mixed race, known here as "pardo"), like a kinda of DEI hiring you guys got there.. As here there are a lot of good jobs in the government, there has been a lot of problems with this law ( known as "cota"), since a lot of people tried to pass as black or mixed race, so they invented like committee in every government hiring process known as "Banca de Heteroidentificação", which,in reality, can be described as a Racial Court, since they will decide if you are apt to use this benefit.
The thing is that this is really problematic in brazil, since we are a really mixed people( most part of the population is considered pardo), but, in reality, in most selections the" bancas de heteroidentificação" tend to privilege the black people, and most mixed people are rejected( doesnt matter if your parents are black, they only consider your phenotypes). So thats why im asking the question about Jared. Looking at his features( hair and nose) it seems evident his mother or father are black, but here, in brazil, i have my doubts if he would be able to use the "cota", since his skin isnt black enough to be considered black by this ridiculous committes.