A leftist.More to the point of trump's challenge, who in their right mind would identify themself as something of which they were the merest fraction?
I think if anyone tested their DNA they would find evidence of Indian ancestry at such levels. :chuckle:
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Yeah. You probably have to go looking for it. :chuckle:Depends on the test. The one I took didn't register for that.
And, it depends on who spits in the tube. :chuckle:
That's about it. On the plus side...well, no.He won't because $ is too important to him. Plus he is a liar and a cheat.
:darwinsm:That's about it. On the plus side...well, no.
President Trump could not possibly donate his entire $400,000 annual salary for 2018 for the purpose of rebuilding military cemeteries, because he has already donated the first quarter’s worth of that salary to the Department of Veterans Affairs. |
What were the actual percentages of the Warren test showing native American Indian genetics?
None. They used Colombian and others' genetics to stand in for native American.
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:rotfl:Just what is Columbian genetics?
But more to the point, trump does not care. He just likes to call people names. 5th grade is his comfort level.
The geneticist said that it indicated Native American ancestry between the 6th to 10th generation back, so that would be a fairly small percentage.What were the actual percentages of the Warren test showing native American Indian genetics? If it is as minute as some have been saying in the media, does that really mean one can honestly identify oneself as native American Indian?
I don't believe she's attempted enrollment in any particular tribe or would qualify for membership with that sort of generational distance involved. More curious to me is the Cherokee Nation's peculiar response:I have read that some tribes require a minimum of 1/16 degree of blood for tribal enrollment, while the Bureau of Indian Affairs’ Higher Education Grant expects you to have the minimum of ¼ Native American blood percentages. See here. I do not know the accuracy of the data at that site.
What were the actual percentages of the Warren test showing native American Indian genetics? If it is as minute as some have been saying in the media, does that really mean one can honestly identify oneself as native American Indian?
I have read that some tribes require a minimum of 1/16 degree of blood for tribal enrollment, while the Bureau of Indian Affairs’ Higher Education Grant expects you to have the minimum of ¼ Native American blood percentages. See here. I do not know the accuracy of the data at that site.
AMR
"I won't sit quietly for @realDonaldTrump's racism, so I took a test. But DNA & family history has nothing to do with tribal affiliation or citizenship, which is determined only – only – by Tribal Nations. I respect the distinction, & don't list myself as Native in the Senate."
The Nation was silent when the president used a platform with Native Americans being honored for their role in WWII to use actually dishonorable and mocking language that traded on her understanding of that ancestry. Shame on them then and shame on them now.
Meanwhile, Trump, who initially said, "Who cares?" about the DNA evidence is now attempting to answer his own question with, "The Cherokee said what? Oh, then I care again. Pocahontas!" [/sarcasm]
We're going to differ on this one. If someone repeatedly brings up a point that's untrue and you respond to it repeatedly, it's not an equal footing.Both sides seem petty to me about the whole thing.
I don't. They were backed by the university.I find Warren's frequent claims of not using the connection to native American Indians a wee bit suspect.
To me it's more like this, an element of the hard right found out about her claims relating to her ancestry and used it to mock her repeatedly, to make it an issue that Trump took and ran with at some point. Eventually she did something objective about it. I can't blame her. Taking it out of the realm of lore and ending the speculation seems reasonable to me, as does rubbing it in his face a bit (and by extension the originators).She may well have been motivated by honorable intentions when raising the matter. Perhaps cynicism borne out of the past and present political environment these past few years underlies my opinion.
I suspect it's largely due to the hay the other side was attempting to make.When someone goes out of their way to specifically point out their heritage, I tend to assume an unstated motive is at work. Whether the motive is honorable or not, is sometimes difficult to determine if it is not made plain.
Mine was recently updated. I'm about as white as a human being can be and still jump, apparently.The remaining issue I wrestle with in this topic is the reasonableness of laying claim and then making a big deal of it, when 6-10 generations are required to establish the claim. Most of us are mongrels at some level, so going back 240-400 years to find a connection to some race and then checking a box labeled Norwegian on some law directory listing my name would be odd given the fact that my grandparents on one side were Irish citizens and second-generation German citizens on the other side. I mean, why exactly would I do this if not for some other reasons less than prudent?
True enough. :sigh:At the end of the day, the recent ruling against Stormy Daniels seems to settle the issue that political hyperbole is protected. Of course, that does not mean these tactics on all sides are not worthy of scrutiny and denunciation where warranted. It saddens me that this behavior is the new normal.
To me it's more like this, an element of the hard right found out about her claims relating to her ancestry and used it to mock her repeatedly, to make it an issue that Trump took and ran with at some point. Eventually she did something objective about it. I can't blame her. Taking it out of the realm of lore and ending the speculation seems reasonable to me, as does rubbing it in his face a bit (and by extension the originators).
What is reason behind this action?
I think she took the family stories as presented and suspect they became a sentimental attachment for Warren. We've romanticized that connection in relatively recent times, a sharp contrast from prior treatment societally speaking. The same has been true of Irish connections and, prior to a couple of WWs it was true of German roots and connections, with that making a comeback of late.This might be the nugget around the whole matter.
I have been speaking to these "her claims" that were found out. That they were discovered by groups with nefarious agendas is not really at issue for me. Rather I am trying to understand the motive(s) underlying the self-identification claim in the first place, especially when she goes to the length of checking a racial group box in a legal directory. I do not know the factuality of that event, but if it is true, and I assumed it to be so, I am wondering, aloud here, what is reason behind this action? I do think it bears some scrutiny as it seems to be at the root of the brouhaha that has resulted.
The action may very well have been with the best or sentimental intentions, "This one's for you, Grandma." I do not know.
Yep. I think that's fair. All the stuff about her ticking the "I'm a minority" boxes were probably just her being sentimental, rather than anything nefarious.I think she took the family stories as presented and suspect they became a sentimental attachment for Warren. We've romanticized that connection in relatively recent times, a sharp contrast from prior treatment societally speaking. The same has been true of Irish connections and, prior to a couple of WWs it was true of German roots and connections, with that making a comeback of late.
And when you think about it, it's as old as the Bible. Roots, associations, lineage have always mattered to us, as if that association imparted something more than knowledge to us.
The test? I think that was a shut up move made in exasperation and with a measure of calculation, as I doubt we'd have heard about it had the matter gone the other way, though I might be mistaken. Maybe she'd have released it and said, "Ah, well, so much for a cherished family recollection."