
verybasedindeed
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- Joined
- Nov 14, 2023
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I'm pretty sure Whites split racially from Semites about 25,000 years ago and from Asians about 45,000 years ago.
Presumably, races diverge to become species, and this process has been going on for a long time. If we split from Neanderthals about a hundred and fifty thousand years ago, that's a lot of time for various other races from both lines to develop, spread, change, and sometimes go extinct. And Neanderthals aren't even the oldest hominid line.
Humans seem to have about seven races. Technically, these are species, but good luck getting the academics to admit what their data show.
Worse still, there are some problems with evolution theory in general that I don't know what to do with and I can't find any way to explain. There are some problems with the Out of Africa theory that bother me, and I again have no solution.
So far, so good, but the fossil record does not support gradual evolutionary drift creating the various genera of animals. They simply appear suddenly in new forms, and transitional fossils are unacceptably rare.
My point is that all of this is pretty sketchy to me, like these differences we see in humans are more than just evolution. Do you realize the odds of that happening by chance?
Presumably, races diverge to become species, and this process has been going on for a long time. If we split from Neanderthals about a hundred and fifty thousand years ago, that's a lot of time for various other races from both lines to develop, spread, change, and sometimes go extinct. And Neanderthals aren't even the oldest hominid line.
Humans seem to have about seven races. Technically, these are species, but good luck getting the academics to admit what their data show.
Worse still, there are some problems with evolution theory in general that I don't know what to do with and I can't find any way to explain. There are some problems with the Out of Africa theory that bother me, and I again have no solution.
So far, so good, but the fossil record does not support gradual evolutionary drift creating the various genera of animals. They simply appear suddenly in new forms, and transitional fossils are unacceptably rare.
My point is that all of this is pretty sketchy to me, like these differences we see in humans are more than just evolution. Do you realize the odds of that happening by chance?