Message from @Puppet Master

Discord ID: 644712109976059925


2019-11-15 01:15:06 UTC  

<:pepebuddha:621564953173950494>

2019-11-15 01:16:39 UTC  

*We identify a gradient of likely autochthonous Maghrebi ancestry that increases from east to west across northern Africa; this ancestry is likely derived from “back-to-Africa” gene flow more than 12,000 years ago (ya), prior to the Holocene.*

2019-11-15 01:17:14 UTC  

They're not necessarily Slavs, but there was definitely a White migrations into Africa 12kya

2019-11-15 01:19:18 UTC  

There's another study though and Im trying to find it. I need to ask a friend

2019-11-15 01:25:06 UTC  

this is a video about a tribe and they touch on how the out of afirca theory may not be correct. i think you would like it. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p6I6L8b6mQs&t=2s

2019-11-15 01:25:16 UTC  

my opinion, blacks and whites are different species.

2019-11-15 01:25:23 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/619334636241289231/644709500707930135/unknown.png

2019-11-15 01:26:00 UTC  

*this means that the european migration that brought the whg among the berbers predates the ANE dispersal in Europe during the bronze age* - he says

2019-11-15 01:26:04 UTC  

Which this is a very good case

2019-11-15 01:26:51 UTC  

*the caves and skeletons in NW Africa match those found in spain during the mesolithic
there was a biological continuity there*

2019-11-15 01:30:09 UTC  

but how do you know if those are berbers? how do you know the whites who moved in were not the ones with the berber culture and dress?

2019-11-15 01:30:37 UTC  

Tbh, as far as the cultural continuity is concerned between the Mesolithic and now, who knows?

2019-11-15 01:31:17 UTC  

The fact of the matter is that the Mozabite Berber population, at the very least, is showing a genetic signature could have only come from Mesolithic Europe.

2019-11-15 01:31:53 UTC  

solutrean?

2019-11-15 01:31:53 UTC  

It's possible that, if you were able to find one of the most segregated of their populations, you may be able to piece together culturally what happened between then and now.

2019-11-15 01:32:26 UTC  

+++ I think so

2019-11-15 01:32:42 UTC  

sounds about right

2019-11-15 01:34:46 UTC  

But as I said before, I think that those ancient Berbers were just as much a mystery people during the time of the "Moors" as they are today.

2019-11-15 01:35:05 UTC  

I think the Moors were of mixed Levantine/African ancestry.

2019-11-15 01:35:24 UTC  

White Berbers however are much much older.

2019-11-15 01:35:45 UTC  

i think moor includes berber though

2019-11-15 03:28:55 UTC  

-p hava nagila

2019-11-15 03:33:22 UTC  

@Mr. Skelly tell him to stop speaking jew to me

2019-11-15 06:16:34 UTC  

All I want

2019-11-15 06:16:40 UTC  

Is actually fight club

2019-11-15 06:16:44 UTC  

From fight club

2019-11-15 06:17:07 UTC  

We should make this happen

2019-11-15 06:17:13 UTC  

<:smugpepe:619749634402942998>

2019-11-15 06:34:28 UTC  

AltHype **melting** these arguments. Love it.

2019-11-15 06:35:39 UTC  

David Pakman is a stupid kike.

2019-11-15 07:24:12 UTC  

I just bumped into this, and it's new even to me, but apparently some studies have been done concerning the heritability of *political views.* Take a look: @chonkyfire

2019-11-15 07:26:05 UTC  

Funnily enough, I could have made the same graph based on my own personal observations about each country and the people's history without any technical data at all. 🤸

2019-11-15 07:37:02 UTC  

*individualism–collectivism
In order to study the relationship between biological factors
and collectivism, Fincher et al. (2008) compiled a comprehensive database of four different measures of individualism–collectivism for each nation in the world. These
measures were drawn from global surveys (Hofstede, 1980;
Gelfand et al., 2004), expert opinion (Suh et al., 1998), or
language (e.g. pronoun) usage (Kashima and Kashima,
1998). Recently, Chiao and Blizinsky (2010) surveyed the
literature for studies on the 5-HTTLPR from different countries and correlated the relative proportion of short and long
alleles in the population of each country with that country’s
individualism–collectivism score. A robust relationship was
found such that the 5-HTTLPR short allele, which we have
referred to here as a social sensitivity allele, was much more
prevalent in collectivistic populations than individualistic
populations*

2019-11-15 07:38:07 UTC  

*Using a similar approach, we have found a robust correlation (Way, B.M., Hunter, J.F., and Lieberman, M.D. manuscript in preparation; see Supplementary Material) between
the A118G polymorphism and individualism–collectivism
(Figure 1). Again, the putative social sensitivity allele, the
G allele, was more prevalent in populations with greater
collectivism. The relationship remained significant when
per capita Gross Domestic Product was entered as a covariate
as well as when latitude, a measure of historical climate as
well as ultraviolet radiation exposure (Hancock et al., 2008),
was controlled for. Also, when cultural region (Gupta et al.,
2002) rather than nation was used as the unit of analysis, the
relationship was significant.*

2019-11-15 07:38:35 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/619334636241289231/644803421286825984/unknown.png

2019-11-15 07:39:34 UTC  

**And would you look at that; there is a very noticeable racial distribution for the frequency of this allele.**