Bedwench gets DELETED by cac boyfriend. Her Anti black male comments resurface and bedwenches are mad Black Men ain’t caping

Astroslik

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ONe of me equals 10 of you bytch
Lol you can't compete with me in any metric of life little kid.

They should've never allowed short bus riding smooth brained mothafukkas like you to coexist with the rest of society. There's a reason why missing chromosome having mfs like you had your own school bus, classrooms and grading metric system completely separate from normal well-adjusted kids.
 

null

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They view them as gods even though they rape and pillage their homelands to the point that they have to flee to the west.

the caribbean is in the west.

It’s mind boggling how tone deaf they are :why:
You got dudes thumbing their noses up at Godfrey for giving us props for fighting for immigration rights in the 60s. They act like white people just woke up one day and wanted Africans and Caribbean blacks in their country all of a sudden. I guess they are special and we are hated in their minds?
 

TripleAgent

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i wouldn't worry about any of that :yeshrug:




the high priestess of swirling is 110% FBA



:hubie:


For my birthday, my husband gave me a precious gift: my identity.

My husband has always known who he was. He has a family crest and can trace his ancestry back centuries. Me? I’ve wandered around in complete ignorance, mostly because my family, descendants of slaves, kept horrible records even after the practice was abolished. My mother, who suffers from a serious case of shade inferiority due to color-struck relatives, stumbled around my questions about my lineage, and would reply with the oft-repeated, “You have Indian in you,” for no other reason than because my hair grows long. She’s make these statements proudly but with further explanation or proof.

Turns out my mother was only half right. I do have Indian in me, but not of the Native American variety. My Indian roots come from the source–India, Pakistan, China. Wait till I tell her. She might need to take a moment to recover.

I discovered this fact because my husband sent for the National Geographic GENO 2.0 DNA kit as a birthday gift. He wanted me to know who I was, and he wanted our children to know as well. This is such an extraordinary gift, because many African Americans focus on slavery as Year One, with no deeper understand where their ancestors came from. Knowing who you are, your lineage, is incredibly empowering. I have now recaptured a part of my history that was stolen from me so long ago.

I just found out the results tonight so as I write this, I’m still processing this new information. I, Christelyn Karazin, am 77% Luhya, a Bantu-speaking tribe from Kenya.

boma-fund-img_0298-woman

Kenya!!

In fact, I’m more “African” than the average African American. My remaining lineage comes from Eastern Europe (think Scandinavia, Russia, etc), Mediterranean, and Southwest Asian.

Here’s how my lineage compares to the average Kenyan:

Screen Shot 2014-09-04 at 10.16.57 PM

Time to start saving for a trip “back home,” and now I know EXACTLY where to go.

But here’s the mystery: how did my folks get to the U.S.? My maiden name is Russell, which is English.

100%?:patrice:
 

null

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For my birthday, my husband gave me a precious gift: my identity.

...

I just found out the results tonight so as I write this, I’m still processing this new information. I, Christelyn Karazin, am 77% Luhya, a Bantu-speaking tribe from Kenya.

boma-fund-img_0298-woman

Kenya!!

In fact, I’m more “African” than the average African American. My remaining lineage comes from Eastern Europe (think Scandinavia, Russia, etc), Mediterranean, and Southwest Asian.

Here’s how my lineage compares to the average Kenyan:

Screen Shot 2014-09-04 at 10.16.57 PM

Time to start saving for a trip “back home,” and now I know EXACTLY where to go.

But here’s the mystery: how did my folks get to the U.S.? My maiden name is Russell, which is English.

100%?:patrice:

110% .. "FBA is a lineage, a culture" not genes
ogun.png


Screenshot-2025-10-01-at-11-28-43.png


 

Ish Gibor

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For my birthday, my husband gave me a precious gift: my identity.

My husband has always known who he was. He has a family crest and can trace his ancestry back centuries. Me? I’ve wandered around in complete ignorance, mostly because my family, descendants of slaves, kept horrible records even after the practice was abolished. My mother, who suffers from a serious case of shade inferiority due to color-struck relatives, stumbled around my questions about my lineage, and would reply with the oft-repeated, “You have Indian in you,” for no other reason than because my hair grows long. She’s make these statements proudly but with further explanation or proof.

Turns out my mother was only half right. I do have Indian in me, but not of the Native American variety. My Indian roots come from the source–India, Pakistan, China. Wait till I tell her. She might need to take a moment to recover.

I discovered this fact because my husband sent for the National Geographic GENO 2.0 DNA kit as a birthday gift. He wanted me to know who I was, and he wanted our children to know as well. This is such an extraordinary gift, because many African Americans focus on slavery as Year One, with no deeper understand where their ancestors came from. Knowing who you are, your lineage, is incredibly empowering. I have now recaptured a part of my history that was stolen from me so long ago.

I just found out the results tonight so as I write this, I’m still processing this new information. I, Christelyn Karazin, am 77% Luhya, a Bantu-speaking tribe from Kenya.

boma-fund-img_0298-woman

Kenya!!

In fact, I’m more “African” than the average African American. My remaining lineage comes from Eastern Europe (think Scandinavia, Russia, etc), Mediterranean, and Southwest Asian.

Here’s how my lineage compares to the average Kenyan:

Screen Shot 2014-09-04 at 10.16.57 PM

Time to start saving for a trip “back home,” and now I know EXACTLY where to go.

But here’s the mystery: how did my folks get to the U.S.? My maiden name is Russell, which is English.

100%?:patrice:
ChatGTP, prompt: "This is by a person who claims to be African American..."

I can’t identify who the person is, but I can explain what the chart represents and whether it is consistent with someone who identifies as African American.


✅ What this chart is

This is a Geno 2.0 / National Geographic Genographic Project ancestry breakdown.

It shows population-level genetic percentages, not personal identity.

The chart compares:
  • Luhya (Kenya) – a known reference population
  • “You” – the test taker’s genetic breakdown
So the lower bar belongs to the person who took the ancestry test.


✅ Does this chart come from someone who could identify as African American?

Yes — this breakdown is entirely consistent with someone who is African American, because:

✔ 1. Majority Sub-Saharan African ancestry (77%)

Many African Americans have genetic ranges roughly 70–90% Sub-Saharan African, depending on region and family history.

✔ 2. Some European ancestry (7%)


Most African Americans have lower but noticeable percentages of European ancestry due to historical events in the U.S. dating back to slavery.

✔ 3. Small Mediterranean, North African, or Southwest Asian percentages (3–6%)


These regions are common in African American admixture results because:
  • Mediterranean ≠ “European only”; it can reflect North African or ancient migrations
  • Southwest Asian sometimes reflects ancient African–Middle Eastern genetic exchange
  • These percentages are typical in African-descended populations throughout the diaspora
So the profile is very normal for an African American test taker.


❌ But does the chart prove the person is African American?


No.

Genetic percentages cannot tell you someone’s nationality, ethnicity, or how they self-identify.

It only tells you:
  • “This is the genetic ancestry of the person who took the test.”
Not:
  • “This person is African American.”
The chart could belong to:
  • An African American
  • A Caribbean descendant
  • A Central/South American Black person
  • An African immigrant
  • Anyone with this genetic mix
Genetics ≠ identity.


🧭 In short

The DNA profile is consistent with an African American person,

but the chart itself does NOT show whether the person claims that identity.


If you want, I can also break down each ancestry percentage, explain what “Luhya reference population” means, or compare this to modern African American averages.

Prompt: Yes, continue:

Great — here is a deep, clear breakdown of every part of the chart and how it relates to African American genetic patterns, ancient migrations, and how the Genographic Project interprets ancestry.

✅ 1. What “Luhya (Kenya)” means in the chart

The Genographic Project uses reference populations (like Luhya, Yoruba, Han Chinese, Basque, etc.) to anchor your DNA in known genetic clusters.

The Luhya are:
  • a major ethnic group in western Kenya
  • a genetically well-studied East African population
  • used as a benchmark for Sub-Saharan African ancestry
Your results are not saying you come from the Luhya people.

They’re just comparing your % values to a known African reference group.

✅ 2. Your Sub-Saharan African (77%) — what this really represents

For African Americans, Sub-Saharan African ancestry typically comes from:
  • West Africa (Nigeria, Ghana, Senegal, Gambia, Sierra Leone)
  • Central Africa (Cameroon, Congo)
  • Southeast Africa (Mozambique, Madagascar) — smaller %
77% is typical for African Americans (range 65–90% is normal depending on geography).

This percentage reflects:
  • Transatlantic slave trade origins
  • Intermixing over 12–15 generations
  • Shared West/Central African lineage common in Afro-diaspora populations

✅ 3. Your Northern European (7%) — historical explanation

African American communities often have 5–25% European DNA.

Why?
  • During U.S. slavery (1600s–1865), enslaved Africans were frequently mixed with European men (mostly nonconsensual).
  • Early colonial population sizes were small, and mixed children became part of the African American community.
  • This ancestry is predominantly British / Irish with sometimes German or Scandinavian traces.
So 7% Northern European is extremely normal for someone with African American ancestry.

✅ 4. Mediterranean, Southwest Asian, South African (3–6%) — what they mean

These small percentages do NOT mean the person is Italian, Turkish, Arab, or South African.

They represent deep ancient connections caused by:

✔ Mediterranean (5%)

This often represents:
  • North African influence (Berber)
  • Ancient migrations across the Sahara
  • Shared ancestry between Africa and Southern Europe

✔ Southwest Asian (3%)


Often found in:
  • Ethiopia / Eritrea
  • Somali / Cushytic populations
  • North African admixture
  • Ancient Middle Eastern migrations into Africa

✔ South African (6%)

This category doesn’t mean “modern South African person.”

It is a genetic cluster used by the Genographic Project.

It usually reflects:
  • Bantu migrations
  • Khoisan admixture
  • East African/Southeastern African influences
These numbers are common in African Americans, due to:
  • Broad West/Central African genetic variation
  • Ancient African migration routes
  • The fact that ancestry isn’t limited to modern borders

✅ 5. Is the person African American? Can the chart tell that?

Genetics can NOT tell identity.

They can only show where your DNA clusters compared to reference populations.
But this pattern (77% Sub-Saharan + 7% European + a few % Mediterranean/SWA) is very typical for African Americans.

Could also match:
  • Afro-Caribbean
  • Afro-Latino
  • Afro-Brazilian
  • Cape Verdean
  • African diaspora outside the U.S.
So the chart is consistent with African American heritage, but it cannot prove identity.


✅ 6. Why Geno 2.0 results look different from 23andMe / AncestryDNA

Genographic Project used:
  • Anthropological clusters
  • Very old reference populations
  • Deep-time ancestry (50,000+ years)
Other tests use:
  • Modern countries
  • Modern ethnicity groups
  • More reference samples
So your results will look more “continental” and less “modern ethnic.”


✅ 7. If you want, I can break down:

  • Your likely West African regions based on the percentages
  • Common African American admixture pathways
  • Geography of your ancestral components
  • How your profile compares to African Americans, Afro-Caribbeans, and Afro-Latinos
  • A speculative breakdown of your Transatlantic Slave Trade origins
Just tell me:

Do you want a deeper breakdown of your Sub-Saharan African % by likely regions?

Prompt: Yes,
 
Last edited:

Ish Gibor

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Do you want a deeper breakdown of your Sub-Saharan African % by likely regions?

Prompt: Yes,

Great — here is a deep, region-by-region breakdown of what your 77% Sub-Saharan African likely corresponds to in real historical and genetic terms.

This is based on:
  • your percentages
  • Genographic Project reference clusters
  • known trans-Atlantic slave trade records
  • African American genetic studies

I’ll tie each region to historical migration routes and the diaspora.


🌍 1. West African (Largest Portion – typically 45–65%)


This is usually the core ancestry for African Americans.

Your breakdown almost certainly includes significant West African ancestry from:

✔ Nigeria (Yoruba, Igbo)

  • One of the largest sources of enslaved Africans
  • Strong genetic signature picked up in most African diaspora DNA

✔ Ghana / Ivory Coast (Akan, Ewe, Ga-Dangme)

  • Major departure region during the 1700s–1800s
  • Strong West African coastal ancestry signal

✔ Benin / Togo (Fon, Ewe)

  • Historically called the “Slave Coast”
  • Many African Americans show this region even if small in %

Why this region dominates

Because the majority (≈70%) of enslaved people taken to the U.S. came from West Africa — cultural, linguistic, and genetic roots are reflected in your DNA.


🌍 2. Central African (15–30%)

This comes from:
  • Congo
  • Angola
  • Cameroon

👍 Very strong in African Americans

About 20–25% of African Americans have ancestry from this region.

Why you likely have this

The trade routes between 1580–1850 sent:
  • Many Congolese and Angolan people to the Americas
  • A large number specifically to the U.S., Caribbean, Brazil
Your 77% Sub-Saharan African almost certainly includes a Central African component — especially because Geno 2.0 assigns South African (6%), which usually reflects Bantu migrations from Central/Southern Africa.


🌍 3. Southeastern African (small % but common)


A smaller share of enslaved Africans came from:
  • Mozambique
  • Madagascar
  • Coastal Tanzania
You may carry a trace of this due to:
  • Bantu expansion routes
  • Overlapping genetic markers with central and southern Africa
  • The Genographic “South African” cluster representing these lines
This region usually appears as 2–10% in African diaspora individuals.

Your 6% “South African” likely includes this Southeastern African signal.

🌍 4. Horn of Africa / Northeast Africa (reflected in your Southwest Asian 3%)


This is ancient, not recent.

Your 3% Southwest Asian + part of the Mediterranean category likely reflects:
  • Ancient Ethiopian / Eritrean admixture
  • Shared ancestry between East Africa and Arabia
  • Genetic exchange dating back 3,000–9,000 years
This does not mean you had recent ancestors from Ethiopia — it’s a very old African genetic layer.

🌍 5. North & Sahelian African (reflected in Mediterranean 5–6%)


Your 5% Mediterranean likely contains:
  • North African (Berber / Maghreb) ancestry
  • Sahelian ancestry (Mali, Niger, Chad)
This is common because:
  • North Africans mixed with West Africans for thousands of years
  • Trans-Saharan trade routes brought genetics southward
  • The Sahara was “open” with human movement up to 5,000–6,000 years ago
So this is ancient African–North African connectivity, not modern European ancestry.


🧬 Putting It All Together: Your Likely African Composition


Based on your percentages and typical African American genetic patterns, your 77% Sub-Saharan African likely breaks down historically like this:

RegionEstimated ShareWhy
West Africa40–55%Major source during slave trade; strong Yoruba, Akan, Igbo signals
Central Africa20–25%Congo/Angola major origin regions
Southeast Africa3–10%Seen in “South African” Geno cluster (Bantu spread)
Sahel & North Africa3–8%Reflected in Mediterranean %
Horn of Africa Influence2–4%Reflected in Southwest Asian %
This is nearly identical to African American averages documented in large genetic studies.



End prompt.​

 

Ish Gibor

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yes indeed fam :mjlol::yeshrug:



like i expected any sense out of you anyway :hubie:
Another FBA, Abo, Native dies at his source feat. ‪@tyronleung5276



DeMystifying The Lies of Aboriginals FBA & More



If you want to know how dumb these people actually are. Listen to this: a conversation with a self proclaimed ABOS, who doesn’t understand that the amount of humans can have the same weight as other cargo.

He doesn’t understand that 100 pounds is 100 pounds, no matter the type of cargo.

Someone (Nikki Justice On The Run) in the comment section stated: “these people are dumb in real life”.

It starts at 2:40:00.

 
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