It wasn't too long ago that gender was something you were born with also. While it's relatively easy to accept the idea that gender roles aren't what they used to be, now a person's gender and sex are supposedly no longer static either. What used to be "normal" is now "cisgender" due to popularly shifting standards. Based on what? Apparently not biology or medical procedure, since I'm repeatedly told that what's between one's legs isn't as important as what's in one's heart and mind.
So why is it different for someone's skin tone?
"You can be among a different culture, but not a part of it."
"...doing so also means she is taking a culture she isn't a part of and trying make it hers."
Really? The idea that you can appropriate a new culture is one of the foundational tenets of American society. It's what "melting pot" means. You might have been German or Mexican or Chinese before, but when you come to America and gain citizenship you become American and adopt that culture as your own. Why is it such a detestable idea to admire a culture different than one's own, identify with that culture, and wish to integrate oneself into that culture enough that one decides one wants to become part of that culture? The difference between the American melting pot and the white/black boundary lies in skin color and ancestry, but if people are so adamantly opposed to crossing those boundaries can't that be chalked down to the kinds of racial divides that society is trying to eliminate?
What part of black culture, I wonder, is so exclusive that a white woman can't incorporate it?
To be clear, I don't agree with either claim. In my opinion race and gender are both still traits granted at birth that don't change. Because of that, however, I can't see how one is so mind-blowingly offensive if you accept the other as valid. Substitute the words "culture" or "race" for "gender" or "sex" in Marcato's post and things start looking really familiar.
And the idea that race isn't a distinction made at birth isn't a new one either.
http://www.newsweek.com/there-no-such-thing-race-283123For that matter, what do you make of people who've recently been identified as "trans-abled": physically healthy individuals who believe they should have been born as or become disabled and go as far as maiming themselves to more closely meet their self-image?