Listen very closely:
I have seen you post for over a decade and you have always been and always will be anti-african american. There is nothing in your nature that appears to be worth a damn, especially your opinion of anything that has to with a person or persons who are black.
*sigh* You didn't read my original post. And if anything, you don't get it, do you?
There have been plenty of great African civilizations and cultures through the centuries dominated by humans of the Bantu genetic makeup. But Ancient Egypt 3,000 B.C. to 1,000 B.C. simply is not one of them.
By trying to pretend something that isn't true is accurate, you shame the deeds of an entire race of people who did do something.
Mostly you shame yourself and your family which did a pretty shitty job teaching you academic dignity.
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Here's EXACTLY what I said in my first post.
And, here,
I will quote for the third fucking time, the considered opinion of a recognized scholar in the field, Dr. Ben Bronson, the long time Curator of Asian Archaeology and Ehnology at the Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago, and now it's Director, :
First of all, in that great mess of html, Dr Bronson and his colleagues are delicately skirting the issue at hand, in order to avoid offending people like classy who gets butthurt because he didn't learn about the Kushites or So cultures during his stay in school.
It is without a doubt that Cleopatra was
mixed-race but, she was certainly Greek, having come from the line of Ptolemy. With that established, it was likely she was Semitic, since the Semitic Egyptians had been the most populous peoples in that region since at least 3,000 B.C. It is most likely that these Semitic concubines the Ptolemies had at their disposal were responsible for Cleopatra's mixed descent. Her features noted by Roman scholars include an elongated hooked nose--this has long been associated with Semites and not for any undue reasons. It could very well be that she was perhaps 50-25% "Bantu" but that is extremely doubtful simply because those people did not have access to higher tiers of society.
So while Bronson is right that it is impossible to tell, it's a very distinct unlikelihood.
Furthermore, my original point still stands: Ancient Egypt from 3,000 to 1,000 B.C. was composed of Semitic peoples, not the classic Bantus. The people (namely Black "scholars" enabled by their progressive and politically correct "scholars") that perpetrate this destructive misconception shame not only themselves, but embarrass the people they think they are "helping."