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posted ago by kogar ago by kogar +804 / -13

Eat a bag of dicks, then go back to Gab.

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Onehellofagoy 0 points ago +1 / -1

They currently administer the only ethnostate on earth though. Why? Because another ethnostate existed briefly 60 years ago. And the leader of that etnostate said some mean things about them.

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Brooklyn_Patriot_76 2 points ago +2 / -0

that is a false assertion pede. There was never a sovereign state in the Land of Israel since the fall of Judea. It was always a territory ruled by various empires.

Every Arab state only allows citizens of it's own tribe. Everyone else is a slave.

Israel is the only poly-ethnic state and the only democracy in region that grants representative rights to everyone. Armenians, Arabs, Turks, Druze, Samaritans, Sudanese, Thai, whatever.

I believe the Zionist government is illegitimate but to stand against the right of Jews to live in Israel is anti-God, anti Trump and anti-American.

Manifest Destiny.

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Onehellofagoy 1 point ago +1 / -0

The Ashkenazis are not the "Jews" of the bible, pede.

They have no "right" to anything, other than to be treated the same as any other group of humans.

The problems they have always brought onto themselves throughout history stem from the way they view/treat all people outside of their group.

I believe it is a biologically encoded MO for them.

I believe the cycle that is their hallmark has occurred over 800 times in recorded history so far?

And yet every time the lesson is eventually forgotten.

The founding fathers were even VERY specifically concerned with the question surrounding them.

This is currently the most important issue facing all pedes and yet most cannot see it/fall for the deliberate obfuscation.

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Brooklyn_Patriot_76 2 points ago +2 / -0

Based on the complete sequencing analysis in Ashkenazi Jews and existing complete sequences from non-Jews, the exact phylogenetic branches in which the Ashkenazi lineages could be traced were identified. The new information was used to screen a global set of haplogroup K samples to include or exclude them from these Ashkenazi lineages. The results showed that the Ashkenazi lineages were virtually absent in other populations, with the important exception of low frequencies among non-Ashkenazi Jews. These results indicate that the three Ashkenazi haplogroup K lineages are virtually restricted to this population, and were of Near Eastern rather than European origin. The same approach was followed for mitochondrial DNA haplogroup N1b, and concluded that for this haplogroup all samples belong to one expanding lineage. Taken together, these four lineages indicate that four individual women gave rise to fully 40% of contemporary Ashkenazi Jews, or approximately 3.5 million people. The coalescence times for the expansion of these four lineages coincide well with the historical timeframe of less than 2,000 years for Ashkenazi population expansion from a small founding deme, providing the most powerful and detailed information about the maternal Ashkenazi population founding event.

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Brooklyn_Patriot_76 1 point ago +1 / -0

so why do the Ashkenazim share the same genetic markers as the Sephardim?

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Onehellofagoy 1 point ago +1 / -0

Surely you jest?

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Brooklyn_Patriot_76 1 point ago +1 / -0

More specifically, self-identification with the Jewish priestly caste reflects an oral tradition of transmission by inheritance from father to son with no halakhically sanctioned mechanism for introgression of males who are not descendents along the paternal line from the founder of this male dynasty. Accordingly, this tradition carries with it specific scientific predictions based on the molecular genomics of the Y-chromosome. Since, as noted, the Y-chromosome is also transmitted from fathers only to their male offspring, it is predicted that the Y-chromosome of historically and geographically dispersed priests should have a significantly greater similarity of DNA sequence markers compared to Y-chromosomes of other groups. Comprehensive clarification of the patterns of paternal relatedness, based on NRY marker analysis, requires combining haplogroup with haplotype analysis, to trace actual lineages. Indeed, several research studies beginning in 1997, and carried out over many years and across several continents, reveal a statistically significant greater degree of similarity of such NRY markers among contemporary Jewish priests compared to other groups tested. This similarity applied equally when tested across Ashkenazi and non-Ashkenazi communities. This finding has been durable and has withstood the test of a decade of verification.