Message from @Scottish Caeser Mosley
Discord ID: 723309498135216138
can a single person be half r1b?
answer please
as pointed earlier, that you don't have to even know most scientific things if you have common sense You can look at a person and say what they are. It's only the mid tier IQ's that go muh source
yes can be
from the paternal side
i believe germany is 50% r1b
Germany is not a single person
so answer the question
i mean the average german in german
ugh
stop being a brainlet
thats not answering the question
actual german
yes that's answering the question
so you agree that im right that you could only make a percentage based on sample groups and not individual remains?
individual remains don't matter
you don't need meme science to even understand race
common sense and instinct are the greatest of all teachers
so you were wrong in saying this:
> when you find a remain in africa that is 90% r1b, you know its from europe and its not black or brown
@Scottish Caeser Mosley
ugh no because ireland is near 90%r1b
Ireland is not a single remain
ireland is a nation of individual irish added up
and...?
and since ireland has been near pure with western european dna, we can certainly say shit
i can say without any doubt that australoid aborigins are dark
why?
because they aren't conflicted with migrations
Irrelevant
and we can trace the Irish as well
you can say stuff to near 100% accuracy in regions with no repeated migration and changes
we have traced them to the bell beaker migration
again with your meme trace
using identity by descent
trace an irish vs an anglo
you can't
we are 80%r1b and they are 85% to 88%
that actually has been done
bro, haplogroups are low resolution, why not use autosomal dna studies that utilize identity by descent?
bell beaker population is more accurate because the region haven't been invaded by different races causing a problem in the remains. But its still not very much accurate to make huge claims. Western european nations have been relatively homogenous with very very related ethnicities
haplogroups are common sense