Fake Black Woman Rachel Dolezal Reveals She’s ‘Too Black’ in New Book ‘In Full Color’

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Some quotes from the Washington Times

Her new memoir, “In Full Color: Finding My Place in a Black and White World” … compares her childhood chores to slave labor. “[In college, I was] finally able to embrace my true self,” she wrote. “I allowed the little girl I’d colored with a brown crayon so long ago to emerge.”

She comments on the crumbling of her first marriage – to a black man – as due to his inability to be black enough. “[I] was a little too black” for his “tastes” she wrote, adding that she learned post-divorce, “that a Black man could be, culturally and philosophically, as white as any white man.”

“Living as a Black woman made my life infinitely better. It also made it infinitely harder, thanks to other people’s racist perceptions of me. The Blacker I became – not just in the clothes I wore or the books I read but in terms of how I was being seen and treated – the more distant and isolated I felt from white people. [I stopped] feeling obligated to check WHITE on medical forms and once I started claiming my identity and check[ed] BLACK, any whiteness I possess became invisible.”

Rachel Dolezal, famed black wanna-be, pens memoir of being ‘too black’

Rachel Dolezal, the white woman who snuck into the leadership ranks of the Spokane, Washington, NAACP offices by passing herself off as black, has just delivered the world of psychiatry another project to disseminate and study: Her new memoir, “In Full Color: Finding My Place in a Black and White World.”