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2007-01-23 16:07:55 · 5 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Cultures & Groups Other - Cultures & Groups

Master Race,

Thank you very much for that enlightening bit of information. Imbecile...

2007-01-23 23:55:54 · update #1

5 answers

if you want to spend the money try www.dna.com

2007-01-23 23:14:04 · answer #1 · answered by Marvin R 7 · 0 0

I haven't learned anything surprising about myself, but it may interest you to know that through (repeated) DNA testing on convicts, it has been learned that some people can have more than one kind of DNA in their body-- totally different kinds! This is how it works. Sometimes a woman is pregnant with twins. Sometimes a single egg divides to form twins, and sometimes they do not separate properly. They each have very similar, but distinctly different DNA. Sometimes it is recognizable and we call them 'conjoined' twins. Sometimes, one embryo may begin to absorb the other. This can also give rise to conjoined twins. However, in some cases, either the bodies never develop enough to be recognizable as conjoined bodies, or one body absorbs so much of the other that they are effectively one. The person that is born does not look like conjoined twins. They may have the regular complement of arms and legs, etc. But repeated testing has revealed the fact that a body might have different DNA on, say, the left side than on the right side. Or on the upper body than on the lower body. You can see how this would give rise to problems. Due to the fact that the body developed to full term maturity, they may be relatively healthy (although I would not be surprised if this was where some autoimmune diseases arise.) But there may already have been cases where DNA testing falsely proved someone innocent of a crime they actually committed, because the DNA was taken from the wrong part of the body. Furthermore, in cases where different portions or different organs originally arose from embryos of different sexes, then we have problems. It is not surprising that such a person would have a conflict of interests, so to speak. The only realistic thing to do in such a case is to reconcile oneself to the gender of the body. Nobody can expect all of society to adapt to their birth defect. In the future, tests will be developed for this and related prenatal problems. Embryos will be made to separate properly, or not begin to absorb one another in the first place. This may be difficult and expensive, but it will be better than setting up an entire new culture in parallel to our own, and, ultimately, in competition with it.

2016-03-14 23:10:07 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I would suggest leaning more toward genealogy to answer this question...Find out who your grand, great, great-great and great great great grandparents are...but as a mostly mixed up mutt...your character is much more important than you racial/ethnic background...plus i have never heard of such a laboratory test...

2007-01-23 17:05:17 · answer #3 · answered by marycolletta 2 · 0 0

You are beautiful, can't you see how many people are burning their skin and their cash just to get your beautiful color.?
And good job on showing some love for that scum bag Maser Race. he wasn't given as a kid.

2007-01-24 09:53:53 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

And if you think you are a master race mixture, you
are always stupid!

2007-01-23 16:39:05 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

There is such a thing?!

2007-01-23 16:14:22 · answer #6 · answered by AxisofOddity 5 · 0 0

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