General statistics
List of Youtube channels
Youtube commenter search
Distinguished comments
About
Sam O
OxfordUnion
comments
Comments by "Sam O" (@samo6083) on "OxfordUnion" channel.
Previous
1
Next
...
All
Β @truthxposed8975Β https://www.newscientist.com/article/dn22308-europeans-did-not-inherit-pale-skins-from-neanderthals/ . Actually they couldn't have been anything else but black. At least when it first started. White people didn't even exist 11k yrs ago and with the water erosion on the sphinx it was standing at least 12k yrs ago so could be much older. Everyone then was black so either way it's a black civilisation. And if you want to stick to the mainstream timeline of Egypt when it started white people likely wouldn't have even finished the process of becoming white π and if they were in Egypt they wouldn't have been white they would gave stayed black. Everyone during that time that wasnt in Europe was black and even Europeans wouldn't have been white yet ππ So the gene to become pale just surfaced in Europe when the sphinx was already standing. Scientists even agree that Neanderthals in the middle east stayed black because they were getting enough vitamin D for the sun meaning they wouldn't just turn lighter because it seems coolππππ Becoming lighter isn't something people do when they are bored of being black unoππ can your brain not comprehend it's an evolutionary phenomenon and being in Egypt wouldn't warrant lighter skin than of black people today. South Africa gets the same UV concentration as Egypt and they are still black. Put the dots together its not that hard to figure out they were obviously black them being anything other than black would literally make no sense especially on an evolutionary stand point.
9
Β @truthxposed8975Β so you think the original Egyptians were not black ?π
5
Β @truthxposed8975Β do you even know the reason for humans even getting lighter skin? And when it changed ? Knowing that will show you that there is no way a population native to Africa is anything other than blackππ
4
Β @truthxposed8975Β nothing you sent pertains to my point πππ wtf ππ
3
Β @truthxposed8975Β why would black people there make sunscreen. Because there is no disputing the first people in Africa were black, it's even proven the first homosapiens in Europe were black. So now back to Egypt, if you have a natural sun barrier that mother nature gave you to be protected there would be no need for sunscreen πππ that's bull. Maybe when the white greeks came and ruled Egypt but I'm on about the original ones. That makes 0 sense.
3
Β @truthxposed8975Β http://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/Roman/Texts/Diodorus_Siculus/3A*.html It's funny how the people who were actually there say they were black. That's just one of many Greek scholars that said they were black. You're telling me Greeks couldn't tell the skin colour of the people in front of their eyes ?
3
Β @truthxposed8975Β question why would the first Egyptians not be black. Tell me right now where they came from.
3
Β @truthxposed8975Β bro I said they were black I didnt say negro. People forget that the black race is the most diverse race in the planet and is the only people that have caucasians, mongaloid and negroid ππ basically every feature found amongst a non African can be found in a black population. Heck even white skin was a black feature before there were white people π(albinism) this because obvious when you realise that black people were first on the planet. Again I must reiterate them being anything but black makes no sense if they were actually native to Egypt on a evolutionary standpoint.
2
Β @truthxposed8975Β let me scroll up to copy and paste it because I don't think anything I said got to you ππ
2
Β @truthxposed8975Β and this is why I asked you if you know why people became lighter π you clearly dont know what you're on about. Because lack of UV radiation is only one part to why humans evolved lighter skin. It was a combination of low UV radiation and a move to agriculture(which meant less vitamin d in diets) that caused the skin to go lighter. Humans in Europe were still black only up until like 8-6k years ago and that was just on the really northern regions. They were still black in places like spain for a bit longer. But either way in Egypt the natives didn't have both factors to suggest the lightening on their skin colour. Again people didn't just become white for funπππππ it had an evolutionary advantage in Europe and evolutionary disadvantaged in places like Egypt, which is why the natives were black and the whites there today get burnt to a crisp. πππ
2
Β @truthxposed8975Β Β @Truth XposedΒ https://www.newscientist.com/article/dn22308-europeans-did-not-inherit-pale-skins-from-neanderthals/ . Actually they couldn't have been anything else but black. At least when it first started. White people didn't even exist 11k yrs ago and with the water erosion on the sphinx it was standing at least 12k yrs ago so could be much older. Everyone then was black so either way it's a black civilisation. And if you want to stick to the mainstream timeline of Egypt when it started white people likely wouldn't have even finished the process of becoming white π and if they were in Egypt they wouldn't have been white they would gave stayed black. Everyone during that time that wasnt in Europe was black and even Europeans wouldn't have been white yet ππ So the gene to become pale just surfaced in Europe when the sphinx was already standing. Scientists even agree that Neanderthals in the middle east stayed black because they were getting enough vitamin D for the sun meaning they wouldn't just turn lighter because it seems coolππππ Becoming lighter isn't something people do when they are bored of being black unoππ can your brain not comprehend it's an evolutionary phenomenon and being in Egypt wouldn't warrant lighter skin than of black people today. South Africa gets the same UV concentration as Egypt and they are still black. Put the dots together its not that hard to figure out they were obviously black them being anything other than black would literally make no sense especially on an evolutionary stand point.
1
Previous
1
Next
...
All