But 97% agree.To confirm (or not) what the geneticists have discovered about our genome?
Isn't that how science works?
But 97% agree.To confirm (or not) what the geneticists have discovered about our genome?
Isn't that how science works?
Poor Backhead can't stomach the fact that his white racist bigotry has been shattered by this revelation.
That's a bit of a sweeping assumption to make.
That's like somebody thousands of years from now finding a skeleton of a 21st Century black man in France and then interpreting that as meaning that all, or most, French people in the 21st Century were black.
Europe was the birthplace of mankind, not Africa, scientists find
You must not be so well versed in English to suffer such misinterpretation.
That what you believe was claimed is not what was actually claimed, obviously.
The one about how the OP headline makes a sweeping generalization about the skin colour of all humans during a certain period of time when it in fact does not.
The thread title doesn't imply that all humans during this period were black
It doesn't imply that either.
It implies that they may not all have been white during that period.
I know what it implies... and so so you.
The study also revealed that Steppe-origin Beaker people were among the first British Isles inhabitants to carry genes for light skin and pale hair. Because they belonged to the dominant group in the area, these genes eventually won out as the beaker people mingled with the 10 percent of Britons who remained, many of whom were likely quite darkly pigmented.
so in the past the royals were dark skinned.Early Britains weren't so white after all.
Actually it's obvious you don't. I made that the title to state that early Britains, despite people believing they were white, weren't all white after all.
Oh, and BTW
Ancient DNA Shows That Pottery-Loving Beaker People Took Over Britain Around 4,500 Years Ago | IFLScience
From the article:
Again, seems like early Britians weren't so white after all.
so in the past the royals were dark skinned.
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Again, seems like early Britians weren't so white after all.
Well that's immigration for you. A wave of white immigrants came to the country long ago and turned the country white. Of course, immigration policy in the Mesolithic and Neolithic eras have no bearing on Britain's immigration policy today. Immigration still needs to be massively cut.
LOLOL!
So instead of actually saying "Well damn, okay, maybe Britain wasn't so white after all, my bad", you come out with this?
Wanker.