Im not sure what you are saying here.........all im saying is that dominate genes win out..........if you take half of your cup of coffee and pour it into another mug (the coffee thats mixed with cream) and add more coffee, eventually after repeated process the coffee will be as black as when you first started.
eventually, but thats only because youve overflooded the mug. so by the time you get back to black coffee there's no more remnants of the cream in either mug. right?
That's true but, after so many generations that mixture is going to "fade" away.
My mom is dark skinned and if you check out the ancestry through her maternal line, you'll find that she descends from some mixed race ancestors however, she isn't mixed; she's Black cause everybody faded to Black after so many generations.
I thought mixed was mixed though. What, you're only mixed if your mother and father are of different races? That doesn't make any sense.if it's not your mother or your father it needs no mention in everyday small talk. the end.
who cares if you're Black mixed with 12,5%,25%,50%,75% asian, cherokee or white in america you're still BLACK.
Word. Fools actin like they got a pie chart on their birth certificatehow the fukk do u determine %s that small?
The more coffee you add to either mug will reduce the percentage of cream until their are minuscule amounts of cream. Same thing that I am saying about black people....even the darkest ones.....probably have something more than African Ancestry. A good example of this would be to watch the series "Finding Your Roots" on PBS. I heard that they have never tested an African American person and found that their ancestry was "%100 African". They test famous people and tell them their ancestry. Click on anyone of the videos and fast forward to where they reveal the results of their DNA testing. Sometimes its quite entertaining. I wanna see the one with Samuel L Jackson but I live in Canada so I can't watch these videos online but hopefully I'll be able to catch it on TV.
Finding Your Roots | Watch Online | PBS Video
Video: Samuel L. Jackson, Condoleezza Rice, and Ruth Simmons | Watch Finding Your Roots Online | PBS Video