Except ethnicity is not what applies in the case I was discussing. It is not cultural, the movement of genetic populations.What is the point of redefining race? What does it accomplish? Racists like the one this thread is about don't use this concept of race, and indeed it would lead to vastly different conclusions about race than the ones we associate with race. Redefining a term so charged and with such a well cemented meaning in our culture is just asking for confusion and cross-talk. Why bother? We already have the term "ethnicity" to address groups which have a significant cultural identity and national history together.
Race as it is currently used is not a real category. However, there are genetic population groups transcending ethnicity that ARE real, can be used to ask valid questions, and have explanatory power.
Actually, that is exactly what I am talking about. The existence of subspecies. Subspecies status has traditionally been assigned on the basis of things like color polymorphisms that are not real. See example below:actually, come to think, an example a little closer to home for you Aly would be trying to keep around the old taxonomic system's terminology even while under the hood you were replacing it with cladistics. If one system is better than the traditional one, why keep around its baggage?
These two turtles are different subspecies of the same species. It is assigned based on a small set of polymorphisms. Both are paraphyletic. However, there are monophyletic clades within the species that can be used to ask real questions about the spread of this species over the course of its evolution. If subspecies status is to be assigned at all, it should be based on those monophyletic clades, and not some artificially constructed category.