Message from @Banjod

Discord ID: 634715299223961600


2019-10-18 11:27:50 UTC  

Yes

2019-10-18 11:28:16 UTC  

Anglos literally have more Germanic blood on average than the Austrians do

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/634367565304561675/634714362245939211/Haplogroup_I1.gif

2019-10-18 11:28:32 UTC  

this is wrong again

2019-10-18 11:28:37 UTC  

it' snot wrong that it's true

2019-10-18 11:28:43 UTC  

but haplogroups don't work like this

2019-10-18 11:28:53 UTC  

Yes they do

2019-10-18 11:28:57 UTC  

no they dont

2019-10-18 11:29:01 UTC  

thats just the Y part

2019-10-18 11:29:02 UTC  

I think we all have blonde genes.

2019-10-18 11:29:09 UTC  

<:JFGOD:439598359628611604>

2019-10-18 11:29:12 UTC  

it might be true, but that map doesn't prove it

2019-10-18 11:29:27 UTC  

Markoman BTFO

2019-10-18 11:31:01 UTC  

chat shut down

2019-10-18 11:31:21 UTC  

Haplogroups indicate shared ancestry along the maternal and paternal lines lol

2019-10-18 11:31:37 UTC  

yes

2019-10-18 11:31:40 UTC  

but they don't mean much

2019-10-18 11:31:46 UTC  

That makes no sense

2019-10-18 11:31:54 UTC  

it depends on how the haplogroup got where it got

2019-10-18 11:31:57 UTC  

I think people probably invest too much into maps like this but nonetheless

2019-10-18 11:31:57 UTC  

it's because half is lost

2019-10-18 11:31:59 UTC  

every time

2019-10-18 11:32:25 UTC  

if it was just a few men dominating the whole population in the new place, you might not get that much autosomal dna

2019-10-18 11:32:25 UTC  

Whichever two are most common in a population can best distinguish them from others, although you still need to account for admixture along both lines

2019-10-18 11:32:35 UTC  

You can also infer a lot from language variation

2019-10-18 11:32:43 UTC  

I1 in norway

2019-10-18 11:32:48 UTC  

but if it was a large migration, or a long period of migration, you would

2019-10-18 11:32:49 UTC  

is not the same as I1 in another place

2019-10-18 11:32:55 UTC  

it's not even the same in terms of that

2019-10-18 11:33:03 UTC  

Yes that's what subclades are for

2019-10-18 11:33:07 UTC  

i'm telling you right now

2019-10-18 11:33:13 UTC  

R1b is most common in all of Europe but clearly there are distinctions

2019-10-18 11:33:15 UTC  

Anyway, Anglos took over the world by being chads

2019-10-18 11:33:15 UTC  

you need to throw haplogroups out of the window

2019-10-18 11:33:18 UTC  

it's good for 1 thing only

2019-10-18 11:33:25 UTC  

And your europoor copes are annoying

2019-10-18 11:33:34 UTC  

and that's to show that it's a line of descent

2019-10-18 11:33:47 UTC  

as in

2019-10-18 11:33:48 UTC  

Yes, subclades can distinguish population groups

2019-10-18 11:33:55 UTC  

replacement and movement

2019-10-18 11:33:55 UTC  

Or Norwegian I1 from 'other' I1

2019-10-18 11:33:58 UTC  

Yes