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originally posted by: TheLaughingGod
a reply to: Noinden
I've already made my position(and lack of credentials) very clear in earlier posts.
If there are differences then there is no reason to hide or try to suppress that fact, if these differences aren't enough to constitute different "races" then that's that. Though I don't see any problem with using the word race, it serves a function even if it isn't technically correct. To me the colloquial meaning of the word is pretty clear.
I think differences in skeleton structure, musculature, skin colour, resistance to various diseases, testosterone level, high-altitude adaptation etcetera is sufficient enough to warrant the use of the word.
BLACK and white twins Hayleigh and Lauren Durrant proudly hold their new sisters Leah and Miya — who incredibly are ALSO twins with different coloured skin.
Their mixed-race parents Dean Durrant and Alison Spooner repeated the two-tone miracle after a seven-year gap.
Beautiful black and white twins Kian and Remee turn seven
It can usually be difficult to tell twins apart - but not this pair. These beautiful twins share the same cheeky smile but Kian Hodgson's skin is dark and she has black hair while her sister Remee is blonde with pale skin.
The twins, who were born within a minute of each other, owe their different appearances to a one in a million combination of their parents' genes. Their mum Kylee Hodgson and dad Remi Horder both have white mothers and black fathers.
Professor Bryan Sykes, head of Human Genetics at Oxford University and Britain’s leading expert, yesterday called the birth “extraordinary”.
He said: “In mixed race humans, the lighter variant of skin tone may come out in a child – and this can sometimes be startlingly different to the skin of the parents.
“This might be the case where there is a lot of genetic mixing, as in Afro-Caribbean populations. But in Nigeria there is little mixing.”
Prof Sykes said BOTH parents would have needed “some form of white ancestry” for a pale version of their genes to be passed on.
But he added, “The hair is extremely unusual. Even many blonde children don’t have blonde hair like this at birth.”
The expert said some unknown mutation was the most likely explanation. He admitted: “The rules of genetics are complex and we still don’t understand what happens in many cases.”
Read more: straightfromthea.com...
originally posted by: Noinden
a reply to: TheLaughingGod (hell frizzy hair, and dark skin is also not accurate as another poster has already shown).
originally posted by: ChaosComplex
a reply to: Spider879
I clicked the first link hoping to see the parents, but it won't let me read it without signing up. No thanks. The second two pictures are almost positively albinism.
The first girl looks almost indistinguishable, but to me she looks like she is black/hispanic with very light skin. One or both of their parents is likely racially mixed, if I had to guess. The quote says "Their mixed-race parents", but does that mean each is a different race, or that one (or both) are racially mixed themselves?
However all the things I've said are out the window when you start to look at 'mixed' babies. Also, how can the argument of "There are no races" be supported by pages saying things like "mixed-race"? I guess the writers of your proof must also have outdated ideas.
Sure, many people have mixed ancestry that crosses racial boundaries, but there are undeniable physical differences between people native to different parts of the world. Many of those physical differences reflect genetic differences, and over the past two decades, researchers have used those genetic differences to pinpoint the geographical origins of people’s ancestry with ever-increasing precision.
And there are clear examples of recently evolved adaptations in different human populations, such as the high-altitude physiology in Tibetans and Andeans.
One natural definition of race is a group whose members are genetically much more similar to each other than they are to other groups. Putting a number on what counts as “much more” is a somewhat arbitrary exercise
originally posted by: Spider879
No in fact non of the kids are albinos and all or one of the parents are "socially black"
According to the Daily Mail, the twins were born to a British couple of mixed ancestry: Both parents had white mothers and black fathers.
This pic is of the Kien family of the first set of twins at a younger age
cabinet-of-curiosities.blogspot.jp...
originally posted by: ChaosComplex
originally posted by: Noinden
a reply to: TheLaughingGod (hell frizzy hair, and dark skin is also not accurate as another poster has already shown).
Sorry but ask any hairdresser to describe the difference between black people's hair and white people's hair. Frizzy might be on the long list of descriptors, but you've got a long way to go before you can simplify it to one word.
Socially black??? WTF does that even mean?
If you mean this, from the link you provided:
I think you mean the second set, the first set of twins are named "Hayleigh and Lauren Durrant", according to your quote. The twins mentioned in the above link are named "Kian and Remee".
originally posted by: Spider879
It means that those people in the pic regardless of their shade and actual ancestry are Black by law and tradition both of which are social as they would have to put Black on their official papers or census forms.
originally posted by: Noinden
a reply to: TheLaughingGod
Ok so what I am saying is these "differences" are more pronounced inside what we term "races" than between them. I am also saying that the genetic coding for the physically prominent differences (skin colour, hair etc) are single gene mutations. We have 20000 to 30000 genes (the number keeps being revised so I'm putting a broad range here). So if humans are 99.9% similar, all those differences are coming out of 0.1%, and if those are small (and they are) then they are a tiny % of the human genome. Why would this matter? No seriously why would we be all about thousandths of a % making someone different? I'll repeat that of that 0.1% difference in humans most differences (85%) are inside the old racial groups. Two Caucasians are likely to be more different from each other than one Caucasian and a Black person.
So these are vanishingly small things to judge someone on. I've also said previously in this thread but I will also repeat here, the differences lie on a spectrum and there are no clear boundaries between the "Races" on that spectrum. Basically there are no traits unique to any one "race", so you can't use them as ways to define the race.
While the misuse of the facts irks me, I could give a fat rodents rear if someone believes it. I'll also thank you for not being a troll and trying to reword what I said to suit your own agenda
Slan agat
Gareth
originally posted by: ChaosComplex
originally posted by: Spider879
It means that those people in the pic regardless of their shade and actual ancestry are Black by law and tradition both of which are social as they would have to put Black on their official papers or census forms.
So that means that in a discussion relying heavily on genetics and their effect on human physiology, we can just ignore that 50% of each parent's genetic material is 'black' and 50% is 'white'?
Any more straws you care to grasp at before I stumble dumbfoundedly from this thread?
originally posted by: Spider879
originally posted by: ChaosComplex
originally posted by: Spider879
It means that those people in the pic regardless of their shade and actual ancestry are Black by law and tradition both of which are social as they would have to put Black on their official papers or census forms.
So that means that in a discussion relying heavily on genetics and their effect on human physiology, we can just ignore that 50% of each parent's genetic material is 'black' and 50% is 'white'?
Any more straws you care to grasp at before I stumble dumbfoundedly from this thread?
Yes we do it all the time that's why it is " SOCIALl " and not based in science because then you have to get into 1/4th 1/3rd 1/8th 1/16th and so on add infinitum earlier I posted this pic
Of a man from Anglo Saxon England if he had kids by the local and their descendants remained in tact to this day in England would they not be socially White despite having a Black ancestor going back to 12th cent England? and would he not still be an ancestor.
Well that's idiotic. Two bi-racial (in this case black/white) individuals have a light skinned, light haired kid and all of a sudden the fact that they are each half white has no bearing on the physical appearance of the child? Because they identify as black the other half of their genetic material doesn't matter. Hilarious.
The centuries-old “one-drop rule” assigning minority status to mixed-race individuals appears to live on in our modern-day perception and categorization of people like Barack Obama, Tiger Woods, and Halle Berry.
So say Harvard University psychologists, who’ve found that we still tend to see biracials not as equal members of both parent groups, but as belonging more to their minority parent group. The research appears in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology.
“Many commentators have argued that the election of Barack Obama, and the increasing number of mixed-race people more broadly, will lead to a fundamental change in American race relations,” says lead author Arnold K. Ho, a Ph.D. student in psychology at Harvard. “Our work challenges the interpretation of our first biracial president, and the growing number of mixed-race people in general, as signaling a color-blind America.”
In the United States, the “one-drop rule” — also known as hypodescent — dates to a 1662 Virginia law on the treatment of mixed-race individuals. The legal notion of hypodescent has been upheld as recently as 1985, when a Louisiana court ruled that a woman with a black great-great-great-great-grandmother could not identify herself as “white” on her passport.
originally posted by: Spider879
Like I said it's social .