I have trouble understanding what people mean when they say that "race" is not biologically based, or not a scientific concept, or similar things.
I understand the feel-good, politically-correct idea behind it--that people of all "races" are so similar that there's no point in using "race" to classify people in groups that can then be exploited, denied rights, hated, etc. etc. Obviously, I agree with that.
But it seems we're taking it so far that one can't even state the obvious any more, for fear of being labelled a racist.
Clearly, there are clusters of inherited characteristics among human beings that result in easily visible, consistent differences, when similar people mate. If dissimilar people mate, the characteristics are mixed and matched, so of course it's all very fluid.
But there must be a scientifically acceptable name for this. Not "sub-species," of course. What's lower down than that? "Varieties" perhaps?
Garden vegetables have varieties based on color, size, flavor, etc., but they interbreed and lose their unique characteristics if allowed to mix. Yet still, we understand that Kentucky Wonder beans are genetically different from Black Turtle beans and will breed true, even though they're both the same species. Fortunes are made by seed companies, exploiting these (incredibly) minor differences, producing open-pollenated varieties that are just a little tiny bit softer, harder, sweeter, tougher, faster-maturing, more-disease-resitant, or whatever, than the competition's variety. (I won't go into F1 hybrids or things that must be cloned like roses or apples--but there are plenty of open-pollenated garden plants that this really does apply to.)
So why is it not a scientifically valid truth that similar "varieties" of human beings have developed, due to breeding in isolation, and can be named, and individuals can be more or less similar to their distinct types as they begin to cross with other varieties?
Sure, in a few thousand years, any of those varieties may be "lost" if they're cross-bred, just as older seed varieties get "lost" if people don't carefully isolate them. By then we may have new races of Martians and Earthians, if humans are separated by planets rather than continents and new clusters of characteristics begin breeding true.
But why aren't "varieties" or "races" (for lack of a better word) a scientifically valid concept when applied to humans, if they're valid when applied to other creatures which reproduce and pass along genetic characteristics?
Please note that I did manage to avoid the obvious "human bean" pun.