"Surely you're joking right?", was my exact thought on YOUR comment. I took was in healthcare for about 20 years, as well as the school system and I have seen every race come in all colors and variations of what is assumed typical. Most biracial people, regardless of the combination of races, don't appear as only one race.
My Dad's parents had 21 children and about half were dark skinned and half were very light skinned with red hair, freckles and combinations of green, hazel and grey eyes. Some of the dark skinned ones had hazel and grey eyes with very fine hair. You're in healthcare so you took anatomy and science and should know the probability based on the parents what eye/hair color offspring would have. You also should know that dormant genes surface in every race, just as the genes of one parent are dominant and sometimes are more visible. There are many people on both sides of my family, people I've known and people I've seen in passing that are black and hair various natural shades of red hair. My Mom's side has a few that are blue eyed and biracial, but ironically they are brown skinned with very course sandy brown hair. Again, blacks, whites, Hispanics, Native Americans, etc come in a range of colors, how do you NOT know that.
I have a biracial child that is Black, Irish and Italian and many people ask if she's Hispanic or East Indian. Bottom line is there is no one way people of a race look. You are either a liar in regard to being a nurse for 20 yrs or ignorant to say blue eyes and red hair is rare among biracial children (even if you are limiting biracial to describe black and white). The probability for blue eyes AND red hair is low for any race, add OR to that statement and it becomes more frequent.
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