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Because some fools don't know how to make their own thread about the race of kemet
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[QUOTE]Originally posted by Oshun: [QB] [QUOTE]Originally posted by JoshuaConnerMoon: [qb] We're talking pigmentation [i]only[/i]. As others have pointed out - Doug is a massive "flip-flopper" who constantly shifts definitions of who is black from pigmentation to the social construct (that has different criteria that depend on the classifier). Make up your mind. I don't consider these examples you posted to have black skin pigmentation. Also note that Doug is cherry-picking the lightest brown skinned Ethiopians he can find. As a comparison, here's the Ethiopian football team: [IMG]https://sites.google.com/site/ethiopiannationalteam/_/rsrc/1472769727357/home/8.png[/IMG] :rolleyes: [/qb][/QUOTE]Doug wasn't arguing every SSA or African that identifies as "black" has literal jet black or dark brown skin. Why can't ethiopians, west Africans, etc have lighter skin without mixture? I don't think Doug was trying to say that darker tones are absent, but that it's not unheard of to see lighter skin in these ethnic groups. It's not something that needs whites either. [IMG]https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-BhB78ZKRUkI/VxhPA4_5JoI/AAAAAAAACVI/yEUjlJPtTFAdN43UL2hVgdlv0mLOZayKgCLcB/s1600/ngwa_lightskin_african_skin_color_diversity_redigbo.jpgp[/IMG] Genetic Architecture of Skin and Eye Color in an African- European Admixed Population – Mark Shriver (2013) "Our results indicate that Cape Verdean pigmentary variation is the result of variation in a different set of genes from those determining variation within Europe, suggest that long-range regulatory effects help to explain the relationship between skin and eye color, and highlight the potential and the pitfalls of using allele distribution patterns and signatures of selection as indicators of phenotypic differences.. The strong effect of genomic ancestry on skin color is also striking in the context of eye color; there is only a weak correlation between skin and eye color in Cape Verdeans (R‘2 =0.14), and African genomic ancestry is also weakly correlated (R‘2 = 0.08) with eye color (Figure 1c, 1d). Overall, these observations point to different genetic architectures for skin and eye color... These results suggest that an APBA2 (OCA2) mutation conferring light skin arose BEFORE the spread of humans out of Africa, and that a HERC2 (OCA2) mutation conferring pale eye color arose much later." No. Stop. Light Skin is indigenous to Africa. You already admitted your issues accepting Egypt as part of Africa is political and has nothing to do with science. [IMG]http://i42.tinypic.com/2lkzfo9.jpg[/IMG] [IMG]http://i39.tinypic.com/9uuumb.jpg[/IMG] [IMG]http://i41.tinypic.com/vxcf85.jpg[/IMG] [IMG]http://i42.tinypic.com/4so0wh.jpg[/IMG] 1. There are FOUR skin pigmentation gene not ONE. The four genes are ADDITIVE!!! That means the more you have of the four genes the lighter is that population/person. 2. They concluded that there is NOT a direct correlation between so called “European” admixture and light skin in Cape Verdeans. Hence “unexplained heritability”. This what one of the charts I posted shows. They used mathematical models to come to that conclusion. 3. They included other primates in the study, which is sound science, to determine the ancestral (underived) genotype. Concluding that the genes origin is IN Africa. Thus their conclusion “light skin originated” BEFORE AMH left Africa. [/QB][/QUOTE]
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