Comments by "craxd1" (@craxd1) on "" video.
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Like Simon, I remember it from the eighties as well. I believe it was introduced in the US by those like Farrakhan, and a few other charlatans. Of course, it had roots in the Middle-East, and the Soviets were behind generating most of it via their puppet state dictators.
It was to turn their community against ours, by claiming that the white man culturally appropriated their history.
When Brigham Young University made a find in an Egyptian cemetery, which disproved this nonsense, a certain Egyptian antiquities director, it was said, forced them to leave. They had found the graves of some of the upper class of that time, and they had red and auburn hair, which was much the same as those from the north. They were cousins.
It fits in with the Kurgan hypothesis, tracing language back to the Yamnaya, the mound builders. The ziggurats and pyramids are more modern recreations of those mounds. It requires a migration of people for that to occur, and DNA supports what happened. Those that came from the Eurasian Grass-Steppe, came down into Anatolia, and migrated as far south as the lands along the Nile. With them also came their knowledge. They had also spread down into Mesopotamia, and Persia, as well as part of India, and over into the Mongol territory of China.
They domesticated the Aurochs, creating today's cattle, and the horse. They also invented the wheel, and the chariot, making them the fiercest of warriors. The Middle-East was where they mixed, creating the dark-haired people spoken of by the ancient Mesopotamians.
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