maddyone
Re the discussion about skin colour; I have a grandchild who is mixed race, Arab/English (White English.) His skin colour is white, whilst his eyes are dark brown and his hair very dark. He does go very brown in the summer though, but he doesn’t burn. My pleas to his parents to put plenty of sun cream on him often fall on deaf ears although I’ve explained, his skin can still burn and skin cancer in later life is still a risk.
Maddyone If my daughter has children, I honestly don't care what colour their skin is. Their father was born in Didsbury, went to a British public school, is highly intelligent, well-educated, is funny, kind, thoughtful, has a well-paid senior job, which benefits humanity, and makes my daughter very happy. If any grandchildren turn out like that, I will consider myself to be a very lucky person.
It truly gets up my nose that anybody can be so bigoted because his skin is brown and somehow thinks that people who might look different are inferior and don't belong in the country in which they were born.