Joe Shearer
PROFESSIONAL
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- Apr 19, 2009
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@eastwatch
This discussion is going in a particularly bad way. I hope that you will take stock of the situation before you paint yourself into a corner.
Where is this taking us?
It is quite impossible to distinguish between various castes in scientific terms. From the chromosomal and haplotype point of view, there is less than 1% variability throughout South Asia, including Pakistan, except for defined parts of the east of India, and for one ethnic group in what is now Pakistan.
The rest is uniform.
The Brahmins are in no way distinguishable from the rest, genetically. Variations in pigmentation that have been pointed out are Mendelian in character, and have no value of any kind.
I have a joke answer for you - because his father was a black man?
Before writing any more of this kind of unbelievable school-boy stuff, please take the trouble of looking up Mendel's Laws, the Law of Segregation and the Law of Individual Assertion.
Where on earth do you live that you managed to retain this Brahminical superstitions?
Are you out of your mind?
Yes, you are out of your mind.
Eastwatch, you are a Hitlerian, Stewart Chamberlain brand of racist of no education and of no knowledge of genetics and of colour issues.
98% of the Bengali population today is Muslim. They are totally indistinguishable from the neighbouring population in the Gangetic Valley, in genetic terms. Skin colour is not and has not been since the darkest days of Nazi Germany or the worst period of Brahminical oppression in South Asia a criterion for differentiation, on any basis. I have said before and say again, there is a less than 1% variability in the DNA of residents in South Asia, with exceptions already mentioned.
And to you this is a bad thing?
Please explain which group you seek to represent by this nonsense? Who is the 'we' here? And in what way are you being demeaned?
If I have understood you right, your claim is that the people of Bangladesh are largely the descendants of 13th to 15th century migrants from central Asia, and are genetically different from all others (all other what?). Presumably you have not come across the extensive genome mapping studies, and their descendants, the haplotype identification studies which have been taken up in South Asia along with other parts of the world. These studies, the closest scientific tests taken to determine genetic identity, show very clearly that there is no significant racial or ethnic variation in South Asia. fullstop.
I advise you to take a cold shower the next time this idea rears its ugly head. It is deeply regrettable that you thought fit to articulate this idea.
This discussion is going in a particularly bad way. I hope that you will take stock of the situation before you paint yourself into a corner.
You are right upto a certain extent. But, it is very difficult to retain the facial features of a group of of people who migrate to a moist climate of a foreign land and in the next two or three generation they intermarry with the local convets.
Where is this taking us?
Look at the Bangali Brahmins. Those who still live under shades and do worshipping may retain their complexion. Otherwise, the Brahmins who are forced to do cultivation in the hot and humid climate lose their complexion in two generations. Bengal weather is not good for fair complexion. This is what Rabidranath Tagore also said.
It is quite impossible to distinguish between various castes in scientific terms. From the chromosomal and haplotype point of view, there is less than 1% variability throughout South Asia, including Pakistan, except for defined parts of the east of India, and for one ethnic group in what is now Pakistan.
The rest is uniform.
The Brahmins are in no way distinguishable from the rest, genetically. Variations in pigmentation that have been pointed out are Mendelian in character, and have no value of any kind.
President Obama's mother is a white woman. Then why her son should look like a black man?
I have a joke answer for you - because his father was a black man?
Before writing any more of this kind of unbelievable school-boy stuff, please take the trouble of looking up Mendel's Laws, the Law of Segregation and the Law of Individual Assertion.
Where on earth do you live that you managed to retain this Brahminical superstitions?
But, of course, he is less black than many other blacks. But, you cannot say that he is less white than other whites.
Are you out of your mind?
Same thing happened to the Bangali Muslim population, too. Like Obama, the descendents of all those immigrants look more like the local population and less like some of their forebearers.
Yes, you are out of your mind.
Eastwatch, you are a Hitlerian, Stewart Chamberlain brand of racist of no education and of no knowledge of genetics and of colour issues.
98% of the Bengali population today is Muslim. They are totally indistinguishable from the neighbouring population in the Gangetic Valley, in genetic terms. Skin colour is not and has not been since the darkest days of Nazi Germany or the worst period of Brahminical oppression in South Asia a criterion for differentiation, on any basis. I have said before and say again, there is a less than 1% variability in the DNA of residents in South Asia, with exceptions already mentioned.
Even then you will find quite a percentage of sharp nosed and fair complexioned tall Bangali Muslims. I sometimes wonder how it is possible after many centuries of mixing some of us are still retaining those? But, the reality may be that these mixings truly started when most of the descendents of foreign muslims lost their identity due to poverty during the British period, and started to mix with all other muslim groups of populations.
And to you this is a bad thing?
Now-a-days no one tries to identify himself with foreign blood line. So, truly we have become Bangladeshis. But, history must not be allowed to be written in a way that unfairly and intentionally demean our status.
Please explain which group you seek to represent by this nonsense? Who is the 'we' here? And in what way are you being demeaned?
If I have understood you right, your claim is that the people of Bangladesh are largely the descendants of 13th to 15th century migrants from central Asia, and are genetically different from all others (all other what?). Presumably you have not come across the extensive genome mapping studies, and their descendants, the haplotype identification studies which have been taken up in South Asia along with other parts of the world. These studies, the closest scientific tests taken to determine genetic identity, show very clearly that there is no significant racial or ethnic variation in South Asia. fullstop.
I advise you to take a cold shower the next time this idea rears its ugly head. It is deeply regrettable that you thought fit to articulate this idea.