In the United States, families that cross racial lines often attract admiration and curiosity. Such families are increasingly common, and they are seen by many as living proof that love conquers prejudice, and that the country is moving beyond its painful racial past. When a white mother cradles her brown-skinned baby, or a Black father teaches his lighter-skinned daughter to ride a bike, the image seems to embody progress and racial harmony. But as Professor Chandra Waring of the University of Massachusetts Lowell shows in her 2025 study, the story is far more complicated. Her article, titled “My Dad Is Racist as Hell: Navigating Racism, Monoracism, and White Privilege by Proxy in Multiracial Families,” reveals what really happens inside many multiracial households. Through interviews with 30 multiracial Americans, Waring reveals that love does not necessarily cancel racism. In fact, racism, and its quieter cousin, monoracism, often lives right inside these families. More
Waring begins with a paradox. Society tends to view interracial couples and their children as symbols of racial progress, yet this view assumes that personal relationships automatically erase structural inequality. Her participants’ stories suggest otherwise.
Many of the multiracial adults she interviewed, all of whom had one white parent, described a childhood or adulthood marked by racist comments, awkward silences, and outright prejudice from the very people who were supposed to love them unconditionally.
One woman, Natalie, recalled her white father, a police officer, making derogatory remarks about Blackness and even about his African wife. Another participant, Andre, said his white grandmother regularly used racial slurs in front of him. These are not isolated incidents, Waring argues, but part of a pattern that shows how racism can thrive even within families built on interracial love.
However, because these families look “progressive,” society assumes they are beyond racism. That assumption, Waring writes, shields the deeper realities from view. One of the most eye-opening parts of Waring’s research is her discussion of monoracism. Monoracism refers to the specific oppression and discrimination multiracial people face in a society that still thinks of race in rigid, single-race categories.
For example, Lola, a young woman with a Cuban father and white mother, told Waring that when she mentioned being biracial, her mother looked startled, as if she had never thought of her daughter that way. “It’s weird to think about it like that,” her mother said.
 
That reaction may sound somewhat harmless, but it reveals something powerful: even within loving families, there can be a deep resistance to acknowledging mixed racial identities. Society has taught us to think in monoracial terms, in that you are either Black or white, Asian or Latino, and when someone doesn’t fit, discomfort sets in. Waring calls this form of bias monoracism, a term coined by researchers Johnston and Nadal in 2010. It’s subtle, often invisible, and even harder to confront than overt racism because it hides beneath the surface of normal family interactions.
Perhaps the most original concept in Waring’s study is what she terms white privilege by proxy. It’s the unearned benefit that multiracial people may receive when they have a white parent or caregiver, in the form of things like better access to safe housing, leniency from authority figures, or social acceptance in certain spaces.
For instance, Andre’s white mother, though poor, was able to find a home in a safer neighborhood simply because landlords saw her, not her Black partner, during the application process. That’s white privilege working through proximity.
But Waring also found that this “white privilege by proxy” is fragile. It can be given, and taken away. One participant, Louis, described how his white relatives offered him financial help only if he obeyed their expectations; when he didn’t, they withdrew support. Meanwhile, his Black relatives assumed he didn’t need help because he was light-skinned and in college.
His story shows that even with white connections and light skin, privilege is conditional. It can evaporate depending on class, behavior, or the whims of others. Waring’s insight reframes privilege not as a static possession but as a fluctuating, context-dependent resource, especially for those who live at racial intersections.
What Waring’s study ultimately uncovers is that multiracial families are microcosms of America itself. They can hold within them the full tension of race in the United States: the aspiration toward equality, the persistence of prejudice, and the messy, emotional middle ground in between.
Racism is not just an external force; it’s learned, repeated, and sometimes lovingly rationalized within homes. Monoracism, the belief that people must fit one racial box, seeps into parenting, language, and even silence. And white privilege, far from being a simple advantage, can be conditional, inherited, or rescinded depending on the social setting. In short, multiracial families do not automatically transcend America’s racial hierarchies. They live within them and can perpetuate them.
Despite the pain in many of these stories, Waring’s work is not cynical but courageous. Her participants, ranging from 18 to 64 years old, were willing to name uncomfortable truths, not to shame their families, but to tell a full story about love and identity.
 
One participant, Isaac, recalled how his white father-in-law wouldn’t let him enter the driveway when he came to pick up his girlfriend in the 1990s. Years later, the same man greets him with hugs. Such stories reveal that real change is possible, albeit slow and imperfect.
Still, this research emphasizes that transformation requires racial literacy, meaning an active effort, especially from white family members, to understand racism and monoracism and to unlearn them.
Waring’s research arrives at a crucial moment. Multiracial Americans are the fastest-growing demographic group in the country. According to the U.S. Census, more than one in ten people now identify with two or more races. Popular culture celebrates this as evidence of diversity and inclusion. However, numbers don’t tell us how those individuals actually live and feel.
By centering the voices of multiracial people, instead of merely counting them, Waring offers a more human, and more honest, account of what racial progress looks like. It is not linear and not guaranteed, and it is not free of pain.
In the end, Waring’s research challenges a comforting national myth: that interracial love equals racial progress. Multiracial families may look like symbols of unity, but they often contain the same racial hierarchies that shape the wider world.