White Pride SPAM World Wide!!!!

Esav Benyamin said:
I prefer to tell people I'm Asiatic. The land of Israel IS in Western Asia. Since the American Indians seem to have been a peripatetic offshoot of the PaleoAsiatics, that means Siouxish and Jewish aren't so far apart.

:D VERY funny !!!...you have a terrific sense of humor !

-Regards
 
I don't get this post at all. The only thing that I see is the cartoon which I believe was substituted by the (a) moderator(s).

What are the other 40 of you seeing that I'm not that has gotten everyone so riled up?
 
tim8557 said:
I don't get this post at all. The only thing that I see is the cartoon which I believe was substituted by the (a) moderator(s).

What are the other 40 of you seeing that I'm not that has gotten everyone so riled up?

It was Racist Spam posted by a repeat troll offender. :rolleyes:
 
Rat Finkenstein said:
It was Racist Spam posted by a repeat troll offender. :rolleyes:

Thanks for finally clearing that up for me as well. As a good friend of mine always says: "As long as race and religion matter to us, there will always be something the matter with us."
 
pogo said:
It sounds like the American Indians came from the Western Middle East?
The paleoAsiatics are the peoples of eastern Siberia, that is, northeast Asia. They seem to be the last descendants of the people whose other offspring traveled over from Siberia to the New World tens of thousands of years ago as the ancestors of the Indians.

So Jew and Sioux came ultimately from opposite ends, but of the same continent.
 
Esav, I hope you don't mind me jumping in on you topic, but I thought I would pass along some books I have read that show through genetic sampling research, that basically substantiates what you are saying.


Mapping Human History : Genes, Race, and Our Common Origins by Steve Olson
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/t...102-3934796-0631310?v=glance&s=books&n=507846

The Journey of Man : A Genetic Odyssey (Paperback) by Spencer Wells
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/t...102-3934796-0631310?v=glance&s=books&n=507846


Both books are very good, but the Steve Olson one was a better read.

There is an article on Spencer Wells in this months National Geographic Adventure magazine, he has know become a staff member of National Geographic working on a gene collection program in Africa.
 
It's all the same topic. :) If you follow those gene markers, you can see the current "racial" definitions don't go back all that far.

And if you throw in linguistic relationships, it gets even more complex.
 
Esav Benyamin said:
It's all the same topic. :) If you follow those gene markers, you can see the current "racial" definitions don't go back all that far.

And if you throw in linguistic relationships, it gets even more complex.

Yep, one of my best friends has a PHD. in Linguistics ands teaches it. She has shown me some of how the different languages developed. Pretty interesting stuff.
 
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