The point is someone has taken racial features and found a cluster of genetic markers that consistently predict the person will have those features.
No, they searched for ANY natural genetic grouping the genome might yield, and found that the ONLY groups that exist in the genome happen to match physical racial observations without being based on them. Repeating your claim that they were merely looking for something to match the physical observations will not make it less of a lie. Nor will it make a couple of the background requirements built in to it (that such a thing is even mathematically possible with correlation studies, and that genetic causes for physical traits can reliably be found at this point)
even possible at all. What you're accusing a bunch of scientists of doing not only isn't what's been done, but
can't even be done, at all, even if anybody wanted to try.
But I can show you one can do the same thing for ANY cluster of features, no matter how common or rare said clusters actually are, and find the same evidence!
No, you can not. If all you do is randomly/arbitrarily come up with traits and make a list, then all you've got is a list, not an internally mutually correlated "cluster".
So what else makes your (or Wade's) racial identifiers different from the same thing given any cluster of traits?
Correlation. Also geographic reproductive isolation or near-isolation.
What isn't genetic is a clearly delineated subset of people that constitute a biologic grouping consistent with how biologists group species and subspecies.
You keep claiming this, but have yet to show any actual difference between this and how "biologists" deal with any other species. Where are these mysterious cryptic standards that you keep vaguely alluding to biologists using which nobody else ever finds an example of a biologist using?
You can pick any grouping of traits you want, label the group whatever you want (a race, an ethnic group, whatever) and find the cluster of genetic markers which will predict if an individual will be in the group or not.
No, that not only bears no resemblance to anything that actually has happened, but also is not even a possibility, either within mathematics or within current genetics. A correlational "cluster" can not be invented where it doesn't exist but can only be
found if it does, and geneticists have only found direct links between genes and their physical results in some scattered cases, not reliably for every/any/all trait(s) they try to; they're still struggling to find such elusive links between a trait and its gene in many cases.
Your depiction of how statistical studies are done and how genetics is done is
cartoonishly unreal, the kind of utter nonsense we complain about around here in Star Trek scripts where they use genetic gibberish to turn crew members into children and back or have them undergo metamorphosis toward ancestral forms from eons ago.
it reminds me somewhat of the pattern searching done by bible code fanatics and numerologists etc.
In that the results are something you don't like, no doubt, but they're nowhere near even faintly similar procedures. The equivalent of a correlation study in books would be searching for cases in which words keep appearing together with the same other words instead of separately. If there are any combinations of words that actually do routinely appear together instead of separately, then you'll find whatever words actually do that; for any words that don't tend to appear together with some other word, you'll find that they don't. That's all.
no one is saying racial characteristics are not biologically based.
Except for when that's exactly what y'all do, over and over again.
In the proper spirit of scientific/skeptical honesty, abandoning a position that's been shown beyond any doubt to be false is a good thing... but only when it involves both
actually abandoning it (not running back to it over and over again when you think nobody's looking) and
admitting that you held it before but are now abandoning it (not pretending you never held it in the first place). That's what makes the difference between following-the-evidence integrity and mere goalpost shifting.
people have such a hard time shifting paradigms.
You keep saying there's a paradigm shift happening on this subject, but have yet to show an example of any aspect of a paradigm shift actually happening.
Despite bpesta22's dismissal of the importance of blood types as a subgroup, the amount of genetic code responsible for blood type is significant
So three genes for A, B, and O, plus five for Rh +/- (C, c, D, E, and e), plus a couple dozen for Kell (K
1 through K
4) and other types that show up in cross-matching, is a "significant" amount, but hundreds is not. (
And there's also no significance to the fact that those hundreds appear together in a few groups whereas no combination of the dozens does so.) Got it.