Psychological Consequences Of Race-Mixing
For decades the enemy has influenced to normalize race-mixing and to lobby law-makers to create a legal framework to punish opposition to it. However something happened which public opinion and mainstream media have swept under the rug as if it never existed instead of addressing the reality of the situation.
As in nature, race-mixing is an anomaly among humans as much as it is among animals. Decades have past since the last countries in the world legalized miscegenation and criminalized the entire notion of “racism” as the enemy has modernly re-defined the word to represent any negative opinion towards other races. Mixed-race families have become relatively common particularly in Western Europe and North America however they still remain a rather rare occurrence in comparison with single-race marriages. Nevertheless, the past and present totality of mixed-race couples and families in developed countries helped paint a picture about the difficulties that multiracial people have been facing in societies which historically and until recent times have been racially homogeneous and conservative.
Enough evidence has been accumulated over the years on the integration of mixed race families in the society and mixed-race offspring in the education system to conclude that multiracial people generally have been found to be at higher risks of depression, health and mental issues, social exclusion, behavioral issues and drug/alcohol addiction due to their multiracial profile in countries and societies that are still consistently homogeneous. A study titled
“Health and Behavior Risks of Adolescents with Mixed-Race Identity” posted in the US National Library of Medicine concludes that [1]:
“Adolescents who self-identify as more than 1 race are at higher health and behavior risks. The findings are compatible with interpreting the elevated risk of mixed race as associated with stress.”
A second study from National Library of Medicine titled “The Relationship Between Mixed Race/Ethnicity, Developmental Assets, and Mental Health Among Youth” concludes [2]:
Results show that, compared to white students, mixed race/ethnic students have significantly higher rates of poor mental health condition and significantly fewer protective factors.
(...)
Study findings indicate that youth of mixed race/ethnicity are more likely to be at risk for poor mental health outcomes, yet less likely to mitigate this risk even with similar number of external developmental assets as their single race/ethnic counterparts.”
A third study from the same source titled “Mental health and Multiracial/ethnic adults in the United States: a mixed methods participatory action investigation“ states [3]:
“Findings indicate over half of the participants endorsed at least one mental health concern with prevalence of anxiety, depression, post-traumatic stress disorder, and suicidal thoughts and behaviors surpassing available national estimates. Exposure to trauma, discrimination, and microaggressions were found to play a significant role in these outcomes. Conversely, strong social support and strong ethnic identity emerged as protective factors.”
A study published on the scientific database ScienceDirect titled “Mental health outcomes of multiracial individuals: A systematic review between the years 2016 and 2022” that observed multiracial people from United States, United Kingdom and Netherlands concludes [4]:
“Among studies comparing multiracial individuals with monoracial groups, multiracial individuals tended to have worse mental health, with notable exceptions depending on the multiracial subgroup, the mental health outcome, and the reference group. Among studies that only examined multiracial individuals, discrimination and ethno-racial identity emerged as complex explanatory factors that can shape mental health, though each of these constructs can be explored more deeply across social milieu.
(…)
Multiracial individuals tended to have worse mental health outcomes compared to their monoracial counterparts, with variations depending on the outcomes, populations/subgroups, contexts, and reference groups. Racial discrimination and ethno-racial identity may shape mental health trajectories of multiracial people, calling for more research to inform targeted interventions.”
Same conclusion has been published by Anxiety & Depression Association of America, citing [5]:
“The multiracial population is one of the fastest-growing communities of color in the United States, but it also faces significant mental health challenges, including anxiety, depression, substance use disorders and psychosis. While not a mental health diagnosis, many people of multiracial heritage also experience “imposter syndrome,” or feelings of self-doubt and personal crises in relation to how they identify themselves. These feelings may come from internal reflection, but they are often perpetuated by the negative reactions, attitudes, and perceptions of them by others.”
The statement from the last reference that feelings of self-doubt and inability to identify oneself being also perpetuated by how other people perceive them is certainly well rooted into the real life and social interaction of multiracial people. An unrelated interview recorded by the popular Youtube channel As/Is shares the experiences of mixed-race people and the challenges they face in social integration and in being accepted by all social groups of their multiracial identity [5].
Predictably, difficulties of identity and other particular issues exist also inside mixed-race families and is not a phenomenon of solely social ramifications, as addressed by the American Association for Marriage and Family Therapy [6]:
“All families, regardless of race, encounter challenges and stressors, but there are a variety of unique racially-based issues and struggles that tend to confront multiracial families.”
The scientific literature around mixed-race people and their integration of society and in the family unit is therefore very consistent and abundant. With all of the above considered, there are a few conclusions to draw that are closely and tangentially related in most studies mentioned:
- Multiracial people face difficulties in integrating in a homogeneous or predominantly uni-racial society;
- There is an inherent, subconscious tendency of rejection and other negative reactions from a uni-racial society towards multiracial elements;
- Multiracial people tend to face psychological issues and other mental-health related conditions as a result of social exclusion and lack of social integration;
- Multiracial families are naturally exposed to conflicts of ethnic nature and potential racism between parents or between brothers/sisters. Informally and unofficially this is likely happening a lot more than is being reported to the public opinion;
The reasons why this phenomenon is happening is that race-mixing / miscegenation is a foreign and abnormal practice among humans exactly in the same way that it is among the vast majority of animal species. Historically humans lived within their own socio-racial boundaries for most of our existence, and cases of uncontrolled and widespread miscegenation have shown to bring the end to various ancient civilizations that have thrived for thousands of years prior. Most people have a natural instinct of rejecting elements that are foreign to their ethnic group and a natural tendency to be socially drawn towards other people from their own race.
Multiracial families are also exposed to clashes of different cultures, nonacceptance from the families of the partners and difficulties integrating in societies that perceive multiracial couples as foreign or abnormal elements. All of these factors have demonstrated and severe psychological consequences on multiracial descendants who as a result face various difficulties both as students within the education system and as adults in work and social environments. The enemy that has engineered the entire phenomenon of creating this new “ethnicity” of multiracial people has used legal coercion, fear and other forms of programming and punishments to remove from the national consciousness of particularly Western nations the natural instinct towards conservation of one’s species.
The only solution to address the unavoidable consequences following race-mixing is to prevent such toxic practices altogether. Only in a racially segregated society with consistently and strongly defined and applied laws and boundaries that do not interfere with or affects anyone’s normal way of living and prosperity can racism and all of its problems be overcome and resolved.