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| That is correct. Genetics are different than race. | |
| Last Edit: Singapore/Fling 04:32 pm EST 02/11/21 | |
| Posted by: Singapore/Fling 04:26 pm EST 02/11/21 | |
| In reply to: Biologically there is no such thing as race? - dramedy 03:59 pm EST 02/11/21 | |
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| As you admit, you are not a historian and have done no research on this. I encourage you to do the work to educate yourself on this. Biologically, there is no such thing as race in the way that we currently understand race in social terms. There are genetic variations within people who share ancestry, but those groupings are not biologically distinct races. Our understanding of the human genome is relatively new, occurring long after the grouping of people into races, and the scientific evidence shows that these groupings are not based in biology. (How could they be? The creation of race is from a time when leeches were the height of science.) In terms of Sickle Cell Disease, you can do some relatively quick Googling to find reading material showing that the prevalence of this disease in Black Americans can be traced to a relatively small number of specific African communities, including the Yorubans, Mandenkas, and Bantu people. Black Americans with that ancestry are linked to specific genetic communities, but we don't talk about the Yorubans as a race, because people of that ancestry have been folded into the larger grouping of "Black". |
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| Exactly right. | |
| Posted by: Quicheo 03:03 pm EST 02/12/21 | |
| In reply to: That is correct. Genetics are different than race. - Singapore/Fling 04:26 pm EST 02/11/21 | |
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| And as a physician, I would like to comment further that Tay-Sacks and Sickle Cell and other diseases that have a genetic component can jump across the cultural divide sometimes called race or emerge independently in other ethnic, cultural, regional, and family lines. 3 out of 1,000 children from two white parents are born with Sickle Cell trait. Slightly less from two Asian parents. Race, if being most generous to the idea, could be scientifically analogous to a "breed" of dogs or cats, except the variability is significantly greater in the groupings humans have made of themselves, and I hesitate to give any credence to the idea of the superiority of any "pure line". |
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