Big Triece wrote:Broomstick wrote:You realize that Iman has largely been living in England for the past few decades? Many people who are brown under the African sun will lighten up a bit after a few years in England.
You can't be that fucking stupid to actually suggest that such a drastic reduction in skin pigmentation occurred because she moved out of the tropical climatic zone? Iman was as black as the fucking Senegalese American Akon who has lived in America for most his fucking life and is still as black as a fucking kettle! The clear reason why the fucking
MODEL has such a dramatically different look from her 20 year old self is due to skin bleaching and other cosmetic procedures.
Please provide proof of Iman's alleged cosmetic procedures.
Some Africans are extremely dark regardless of sun exposure. Some are dark because of a tan over medium brown. I'm sorry if you have trouble with this concept.
You actually deny that a model, fucking pioneering black African model at that had plastic surgery, when you have been presented with the fucking before and after picture.
Is this like the accusations Michael Jackson chemically lightened his skin? Because he didn't, and I even did a thread on the topic shortly after his death. He really did have vitiligo, and because he stayed out of the sun so thoroughly his non-affected skin lightened as well.
Iman doesn't have vitiligo, but due to less sun exposure her skin has lightened. She's still a black woman, but she's not as dark as she used to be. It's also a fact that as people age their melanin production can slow down as well, resulting in a "fading" of skin color that is more noticeable in people who start off darker skinned. Iman is a 50+ woman (though, god
damn, I'd like to look that good at her age!) who has lived in London most of her adult life. Sorry, it's entirely plausible she's not going to be as dark as her 18 year old self living in Mogadishu and spending considerable time out in the intense African sun.
Sorry if it rocks your boat, but the skin of brown people can change in response to sunlight or lack of it just as that of people with European, or Asian ancestry, or ancestry from the Americas. Maybe if you put down the keyboard and got out of your mama's basement occasionally you'd even notice that in yourself.
And, as I noted, her group is not the only one in Somalia. There are many groups in that part of the world, which is why I specified those represented by specific individuals.
Then why not use to the pre cosmetic example of Iman to relay your point?
Provide proof that she has had cosmetic surgery. There are plenty of internet sites detailing the procedures done to various celebrities, but she is notably absent from them.
So... no other culture than the one you grew up in could possibly have a different way of expressing the same concept?
Not to my knowledge!
AMERICAN culture along (with arguably South African culture) is heavily race based and tends to be one of the only cultures who groups people according to distinct races in the manner that we do.
Two points:
1) America actually, in fact, has more than one culture. Only ignorance or bigotry would hold otherwise.
2) You do realize that not everyone in this thread is American, correct?
Just as an Irish man would generally know more a Celtic culture than I would.
Given the amount of European ancestry in many African-Americans, no matter how dark you are I wouldn't rule out Irish heritage as well based solely on appearance. In any case, I don't see why a dark skinned man couldn't be a scholar of Celtic culture (which actually encompasses far more than just the Irish) and more knowledgeable than the
average Irishman who, like most people, have only a nodding acquaintance with history. Biology is not destiny. Back when I spent a lot of time with the Chicago Irish there were several black people fully involved with the culture either because they did have Irish roots or just because
they liked the culture. They ranged from the award-winning drummer in a bagpipe band to a couple of girls learning step dancing to the bartender who'd picked up Irish Gaelic from his customers.
You see, I don't look at a person and assume "Well, he's black, he can't possibly be Irish, or like Celtic things, or know anything about that culture". It's a little unusual, but it happens. Just because
you aren't interested doesn't mean others aren't. YOU are not the measure of mankind.
But I why am I telling you this, you are in the fucking Rust belt region of the Midwest, you know damn well what I'm talking about, just as you know how deceptive you were attempting to be by referring to black African skin tone variance as "paler".
I live in Gary, Indiana. A city that is 85% black. Whether someone living here is black or not, that person is going to be familiar with all the variations of "black people" possible. At least in this area, when the media is providing a description of someone who is being sought (might be a missing child, a missing elderly person, or someone wanted for a crime, or someone lying in a hospital the authorities want to identify - whatever reason) hearing terms like "light skinned black man" is hardly unusual - and rational people understand that to mean someone with "African" features who is on the pale end of the "black" skin color spectrum. Likewise, if someone is described as a "dark skinned Caucasian" rational people know that person isn't as dark as a Bantu, but someone on the dark end of the Caucasian spectrum, perhaps of Greek or Italian ancestry.
Really, it takes a bigot not to see and hear this, and to get THAT fucking upset over the word P-A-L-E. Relax, man, white skin is not contagious, it's not something you can catch, like cooties.
As for what I base it on - pictorial evidence, not to mention having met dozens of actual Somalis and Ethiopian immigrants over the years. That is also why I know that, after years at a higher latitude, their skin becomes a little lighter due to less sun exposure.
I live near and work with fucking Somalis who have been in this country for decades and are still black as a fucking kettle. Better yet why the fuck does your tropical skin tone adaption theory
NOT apply to a lot of people whom are considered African American? Why the fuck is Wesley Snipes and Shaq still as black as a fucking spade?
Because Snipes and Shaq and those other people you work with come from groups where even without sun exposure their skins are very dark. That is precisely why I am saying "this group" and "that group" and not saying "all Somalis" or "all Africans". Just because Snipes and Shaq are on the extreme end of skin color doesn't mean other Africans aren't closer to the middle. Really, do I have to explain to a black man that not all Africans look alike?
Because, I guess, we don't have enough pictures in this thread
let me illustrate something for you. This is a member of the Wodaabe tribe:
The Wodaabe live in the Sahel - one of the regions from which Ancient Egypt drew its people according to Keita and others. This person is a nomadic cattle-herder who spends pretty much all day out in the tropical sunlight, and this is as dark as that person will ever get. Why not darker skin yet? Because the Wodaabe, while unquestionably dark skinned, are not AS dark skinned as some other African groups. It's about genetics. This person will
never be as dark as Wesley Snipes. And you know what? Snipes will probably never be as light brown as this person. Why? Because his ancestors evolved the genes to churn out massive amounts of melanin, and generations later Snipes inherited a full dose of those genes. Pure luck.
Why has their skin tone not lightened, despite the both of them coming from lineages that have been in this nation for centuries?
Because genes don't "lighten up". If someone's descendants continue to inherit the genes for dark skin they will continue to express dark skin. The only way those genes are eliminated from the gene pool is if those possessing them routinely die before reproducing. Since having dark skin is not
biologically selected against anymore in developed countries (where things such as vitamin D deficiencies from inadequate sunlight exposure are easily detected and corrected) those genes can be expected to persist indefinitely in subsequent generations. It's the same reason that white people whose families have lived several generations in Africa haven't "darkened up" - as clothing and sunscreen can shield against immediate damage, and folate deficiencies caused by excessive sun exposure are easily corrected, there is no longer any biological penalty for having white skin in the tropics. Thus, the genes for less melanin production can be expected to persist for generations going forward.
Of course, if you reproduce with someone of a significantly different skin color then you change things - but the genes themselves don't change, just the mix of them in an individual. It is entirely possible for two people who appear medium brown to produce children both darker than and lighter than themselves. In fact, this is a
common phenomena in the US as most "black" people there are of mixed ancestry encompassing a wide range of skin color possibilities.
But let's step away from black and white for a moment and consider why Eskimos and Inuit aren't as pale as the Saami and other Europeans living near the arctic. Or even as pale as many Asians living near the arctic. And why don't they suffer vitamin D deficiencies? Pale skin (in the European sense this time) is believed to be biologically advantageous in far northern climates where the sun is weak (or even entirely absent much of the year) and people wear lots of clothing against the weather. White skin allows a maximum extraction of vitamin D from minimal sunlight over a minimal skin area. Even
with that adaption northern Europeans at the extreme northern edge of their range are at risk of deficiencies for part of the year. Yet the Inuit, living in some cases even further north, are still a definite
brown. Why?
It's actually pretty simple. Their diet is composed in large part of seafood, and in the dark of the year might be
entirely seafood, and seafood is naturally high in vitamin D. Sure, northern Europeans eat seafood, too, but it's not as large a part of their diet as the Inuit's. The Inuit eat so much seafood
they don't need white skins to extract vitamin D. In their culture dark skin is no disadvantage, so evolution never eliminated it, and thousands of years later they are still brown. Biologically speaking, skin color is irrelevant to Inuit fitness. It
is relevant to European fitness (at least in the past) and to African fitness (at least in the past), but in regards to dark skin being an advantage in Africa, from a biological perspective it doesn't matter if that dark skin arises from the melanin production being genetically slammed to full "on" at all times, or if it arises from a medium brown skin that will tan deeply in response to sunlight. Either way works, so why should anyone be surprised we see both adaptions in Africa? And why would the Khoi-San, who in their hunter-gatherer lifestyle spent all day in the sun and wear little clothing NOT be as dark as their Bantu neighbors to the north? Well, as they say, it's all about location-location-location - the Khoi-San live in a hot part of the world but, in fact, they do not live on the equator, the sun is not quite as intense where they live, and they are "dark enough" to thrive in that location. Their darker neighbors came during a relatively recent migration from the north/equatorial regions and brought their equatorial adaptions with them. Does this mean the Bantu living alongside the Khoi-San are going to "lighten up" over time? Um... actually, no. As long as their very dark skins don't interfere with reproduction there will be no reason for those genes to disappear. Now, any that have children with Khoi-San will have children of an intermediate shade, but that's due to adding genes from elsewhere, and genes remain discrete entities, they don't "blend" - down the line those children of mixed ethnicity will probably produce children of their own ranging from the ancestral dark of Bantu to the ancestral medium of Khoi-San, and everything in between.
And how does this relate to Ancient Egypt? Even if
most of Egypt's population came from Nubia or the Sudan it also contained a number of people from elsewhere - some of the relatively lighter brown (but still dark by European standards) peoples from the Sahel (who might have looked like the Wodaabe) and the Horn of Africa (even you admit to some relatively light skinned Africans there) and yes, a dash of people paler yet from the north of Africa, even one or two from the Levant (although give the flow of people and genes from Africa to there they might well have been pretty dark even from there). So, Egypt had a lot of different skin color genes in their gene pool. What factors might or might not eliminate certain of those genes?
Well, Egypt straddles the equator, and the sun shines pretty much all the time during the day as it's also in a desert and gets little in the way of clouds (and even less rain). So even people with the darkest skin are going to make plenty of vitamin D. Having a dark skin is not a problem in that region, it doesn't put you at a reproductive disadvantage. Now, one downside that is that too much sunlight depletes the body of folate. That's serious - folate deficiency is linked to neural tube defects, which, prior to around 1960 or so, almost always resulted in the death of the affected child within weeks of birth, if not days. That's probably the number one reason dark skin so persistently re-evolves in sunny/tropical climates, as having a white skin in those areas
really can significantly impact human reproduction. However, just as the Inuit persisted in retaining dark skins in the north due to their diet supplying vitamin D, relatively pale people can persist in the tropics if their diet supplies sufficient folate to compensate for that lost to "excessive" sunlight.
What's the biggest source of natural folate in the human diet? Whole grains.
What made up a huge portion of the Egyptian diet? Whole grains. They didn't just eat them, they
drank them in the form of beer. So having a lighter skin wasn't going to hurt them reproductively due to their diet. It probably didn't hurt that the Egyptians wore clothing and used heavy cosmetics to protect their skin, which would also cut down on "excessive" sunlight, but mostly they ate a lot of food that contained folate.
The result is that there was NO evolutionary pressure to eliminate ANY gene for ANY skin color in Ancient Egypt. Anything related to skin color added to the gene pool was going to persist. What that means is regardless of the
average skin color in Egypt, you would always see an enormous
range of skin colors - just like you do today.
With that said it is fucking ridiculous for you to deny that based on clear pictorial evidence that the MODEL Iman had cosmetic procedures and clearly bleached her fucking skin. It is not some rapid skin tone adaption as you ignorantly sugguest.
Why is it that any dark skinned person whose tan fades is immediately accused of chemically bleaching their skin?
And who are YOU to decide which populations to group together? What are YOUR credentials? You have not answered that question.
I actually research this shit!
What are your CREDENTIALS? What DEGREES do you have in this subject and issued by which university? What have you PUBLISHED in a PEER REVIEWED JOURNAL? Googling and Wikipedia experience are not "credentials".
On top of which - some of those groups who lack "foreign admixture" nonetheless have features long considered "white" or "Caucasian" such a narrow noses, well within the range of those seen in European populations.
Dumbass that's because early anthropologist thought that life started in Europe, likewise Northeast African descended from those populations of the Caucus which is where they were believed to get their facial features from. Obviously such bullshit has been proven to be the complete opposite.
So... you'll accept some Africans independently evolved narrow noses but you
won't accept they evolved a slightly lighter skin than their neighbors? Or perhaps their neighbors darkened more than they did?
Oh, and just as a note - S.O.Y. Keita has an M.D. and the British equivalent of a Ph.D. in anthropology. He emphatically does not have academic credentials as a historian.
The man obviously has credentials in African history and culture to be invited to Cambridge University to lecture a group of students on a range of topics that require a thorough understanding of African history and culture.
Incorrect. He is seen as someone who can speak authoritatively on EGYPTIAN history, but no, he is not qualified to speak on many, many other cultures of Africa. Egypt is unquestionably African, but there's much more to Africa than Egypt.
Why does this Afrocentric critic concede to the fact that the ancient Egyptians came from Sub Saharan Africa and reference the work of Keita to come to her conclusion?
Just because Keita is black doesn't mean he's Afrocentric in the same sense you are, and just because he's black doesn't mean others will automatically assume he's Afrocentric or dismiss his data-back conclusions. That doesn't mean they agree with him 100%, either.
BigT - you have been asked multiple times to provide your academic credentials. I suggest you do so before the moderators lose patience.