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Atheist Evilution

 
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Location: Weimar, Germany
F. Nietzsche is a sorcerer and idolater who follows false gods and will rot in Hell.F. Nietzsche is a sorcerer and idolater who follows false gods and will rot in Hell.F. Nietzsche is a sorcerer and idolater who follows false gods and will rot in Hell.F. Nietzsche is a sorcerer and idolater who follows false gods and will rot in Hell.
Default Re: Where did the races come from? - 10-15-2008, 12:53 AM

I don't think this is accurate, from a number of perspectives. Y DNA haplogroup evidence doesn't correlate the Chinese or East Asians to Africans in any way, and these markers show in fact a completely seperate lineage. A particular mutation referred to as M168 is present in a number of Sub-Saharan Africans, but absent in other allegedly 'Hamitic' ethnic groups.

Equally, the notion of Babylonians being a Hamitic people is not accurate. The Babylonians were semites like the Assyrians or Sumerians who spoke a Semetic language, the same holds true for the Egyptians, and the groups of the Levant such as the Phonecians. Equally, the Hittites are not at all a Hamitic group of people, they in fact were Indo-Europeans, related to the Greeks who later became the Anatolian people which existed until the conquest of much of Asia Minor by the Turks after 1071, they spoke an Indo-European language related to Greek before becoming more Hellenized after Rome conquered the area.

Equally, the Slavs actually did not emerge as a distinctive ethnic group until Late Antiquity, roughly around the 6th century AD, speaking a language in part drawn from the Germanic Gothic people, and in part from the Altaic people which lived in the region (such as Bulgars). Finally, the Indians and Persian are not Hamitic and Semitic respectively. Both are Indo-European groups of people, equally, Elam does not at all refer to Persians, that was a former kingdom which existed in the modern Iranian province of Khuzestan and played a role in Fertile Crescent power struggles. Their state was absorbed by Cyrus the Great and its descendents are most likely the Ahwazi Arabs who inhabit the Khuzestan region of Iran.
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