Sounds like a racist publication ...
My husband, mother and I went to Kenya for Christmas way back when my husband and I lived in Saudi Arabia.
I HAD thought that all black people were like American blacks...sort of coffee colored, depending on how much racial intermixing there had been.
In Kenya I saw AT ONCE why "black people" were called that. The Kenyans, ALL their tribes, were stone, cold EBONY...not cafe au lait whatsoever.
There WAS an African-American couple there, but not on our tour. They THOUGHT that they were on a "back to Africa" trip but they look WHITE compared to the native Africans.
THAT is when I SAW, with my own brown eyes, what BLACK people REALLY looked like. There AIN'T too many Americans who are African-black...maybe a few immigrants born from African parents.
American "blacks" aren't even CLOSE to being "African" anymore, even if they hold on to that "one drop of African blood" makes them black crap.
Just an FYI Heads-up
Paul McGuire on Hagmann and Hagmann Report at 7 p.m. Central Time http://www.blogtalkradio.com/cfp-radio/2014/08/22/paul-mcguire-on-the-hagmann-hagmann-report?utm_source=Copy+of+Copy+of+raceriots&utm_campaign=4448&utm_medium=email
The standard answer is usually something like "100 million" or other crazy nonsense.
A more academic number is 11 million (which is all the slaves ever transported to the Western Hemisphere).
The shocking true answer: about 365,000. That's all.
About two thirds were men.
Yet, by 1860, there were 4.5 million African-Americans in the US.
There has been an enormous amount of mixture in the US - most African-Americans would be considered of mixed background in most South American and African countries.
That's because they are.
I once remarked to an American black who was “mourning for the apartheid suffered by my African brothers” that if he was in South Africa and the revolution occurred, he would likely be one of the ones going up against the wall with the whites since he wouldn’t be considered black by the people there.