Cornel West Responds to Dr. Gina Paige of African Ancestry: “I’m Not Giving You My DNA”

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  • čas přidán 16. 06. 2021
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    This week on The Tight Rope, the professors are joined by Dr. Gina Paige, co-founder of African Ancestry. African Ancestry is the world leader in tracing lineages of African descent with a database of over 30,000 indigenous African DNA samples. Join us for a rich discussion on why Black people are the original victims of identity theft and how African Ancestry is working to rectify this.
    In 2003, Dr. Gina Paige co-founded African Ancestry, Inc. (AfricanAncestry.com) and in doing so, pioneered a new way of tracing African lineages using genetics, and a new marketplace for people of African descent looking to more accurately and reliably trace their roots. Paige travels the world helping people demystify their roots and inform on identities so that they may better understand who they are by knowing where they’re from.
    Paige resides in Washington, D.C. and holds a degree in Economics from Stanford University and an MBA from the University of Michigan Ross School of Business. Paige was honored with an Honorary Doctor of Philosophy from Global Oved Dei Seminary University.
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    Credits:
    Creator/EP: Jeremy Berry
    EP/Host: Cornel West
    EP/Host: Tricia Rose
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Komentáře • 279

  • @antseif
    @antseif Před 2 lety +19

    These are the people who still suffer from the “shame” of being connected to Africa…It tells you how deeply the wound is….

  • @Angbwillinspireu
    @Angbwillinspireu Před 3 lety +76

    People are afraid of DNA test, yet we give doctors much more all the time. I am sure, as children or as adults we give blood and other bodily medical lab samples for testing and our genome is on file somewhere-without our knowledge or consent.

    • @ilovelife3328
      @ilovelife3328 Před 2 lety

      Exactly. They already have everyone's DNA because they prick babies' feet when they are born!

    • @mrbaab5932
      @mrbaab5932 Před 2 lety

      It is expensive to do that test and not get paid for doing that. Businesses try hard not to lose money.

    • @victorycomeswithpatience8975
      @victorycomeswithpatience8975 Před rokem

      👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻

    • @mikejones-wn1sw
      @mikejones-wn1sw Před rokem

      @AngBwillz22 they're afraid for a good reason. You are too comfortable with following the crowd. They clearly tell you they sell your dna

  • @vbarbara3235
    @vbarbara3235 Před 2 lety +36

    “I feel like I’m from New York” and “I’m just not on fire for it” (learning my African heritage). These comments are interesting and a sad reminder that not all black Americans connect with who we are as Africans. Sadly, many are in complete denial, even while being in a country that repeatedly lets u know it doesn’t want you there,.
    Even with Dr. West having an active history of focusing on black culture in America one would expect him to be more in tune with our African roots. Unfortunately, there are many that are still unaware in our black culture and “are not on fire to be aware”…just like these two.
    This is also their prerogative - to feel more connected to a system that enslaved our ancestors and have abused black people over the years. Everyone wakes up in their own timing.
    I would encourage everyone else to consider finding out your African roots, and take a trip to the Motherland so that you can be more aware than this. It will likely be the healing you never knew you needed.

    • @Xenoyer
      @Xenoyer Před 2 lety +4

      It's sad that more people aren't interested in learning about their true cultural origins. I have been watching videos of tribal people in Africa lately. They totally rock! I want to go there and hang out with them. I doubt I could last 500 yards of one of the hunts I saw on videos, but I could last a long time listening to their awesome tunes.
      Hey! Maybe music can unite people? That would be so cool!

    • @Xenoyer
      @Xenoyer Před 2 lety +2

      I mentioned highlighting text in another post. I highlighted "tribal people in Africa" and found loads of neat videos. I'm going to check them out.

    • @vbarbara3235
      @vbarbara3235 Před 2 lety +6

      @@Xenoyer - Yes, but please know that Africa is wayyy more than tribal people- that’s what the media shows you. There’s so many countries with cities and areas with beautiful neighborhoods, and Africans living wonderfully just like u see in the U.S. You have to visit to see. It’s not mostly huts with starving kids and a jungle…it’s beautiful cities with fruit trees and lots to do.

    • @Xenoyer
      @Xenoyer Před 2 lety +4

      @@vbarbara3235, Africa is a fantastic place with diverse people. All the way from the Mediterranean to South Africa, the wonders never cease. Before I retired, I worked in aviation. I met people from all over the world. I met and conversed with many people from Africa. They came from Nigeria, Egypt, and Ethiopia. They were cosmopolitan coming from a big city urban environment. We worked together on airplanes. I learned some, but have much more to learn.
      The reason I mentioned the tribal people there is because they are what we emerged from. That is the culture I wish people would remember, their origins.
      Like with my ancient ancestors, the Picts. They were the "painted ones" from the Scottish Highlands. They were Celtic people with their own culture. They too were persecuted. The Romans invaded and for 400 years they subjugated my ancient ancestors. The Romans enslaved them and even were entertained by the death of a Celtic prisoner in the Coliseum.
      Just like the Africans, I want the Celtic people to also remember who they are. Just look what happened. When I think of it too much, I want to cry out. Our people were effectively stripped of their culture by colonial forces. For centuries, we were given a false identity. My people were sent to schools where they were whipped if they spoke Galic, just like the indigenous people of North America who were also sent to schools to take away their identity.
      Now we have people who don't even know who they are, carrying Nazi and Confederate flags, and chanting hatred. I swear, if a real Nazi from WWII Germany viewed one of the clowns marching with a tiki torch, they would fall down rolling on the floor laughing at them. Then they would round them up and send them to a concentration camp as sub-human trash to be burned in an incinerator. The ignorance is displayed by them can only be explained by the brainwashing they received from the moment of their birth.
      Ho Ho Ho, Santa Claus. Capitalist brainwashing to keep the wheels of industry going. My ancestors were not Christians. but the descendants of the Celtic people here follow that religion, even the End Times lunacy. Our ancestors, who built Stone Hinge, must be rolling over in their graves howling in anger because of their willing subjugation.
      Just like with the Africans. They were brought here 100s of years ago because of a labor shortage. A labor shortage caused by the extinction of entire groups of indigenous persons. The Africans were stripped of their ancient culture and given a new one. The slave masters even wrote a book about using Christianity to keep Africans enslaved. People need to know these things.
      Some right-wing jerk can get all up in arms about it. They can get all indignant about it when these things are being taught. They yell and holler, complaining about Critical Race Theory, thinking a finger is pointed at them. I find that kind of weird! They are complaining about the truth coming out? They don't care to learn the truth about all of our pasts? Do they love ignorance so much that they will not even admit the truth?
      Some ignorant person might look at me and call me "white". They might remind me that my ancestors held slaves in North Carolina. They may inform me of the truth, but that doesn't mean they are blaming me personally for it. I was born over 100 years after that heinous situation. I'm not going to deny it either. I am owning all of my ancestor's past. The truth of the matters, and not some Ho, Ho, Ho Santa Claus fantasy invented by money-grubbing capitalists.
      That's why I reject the label "white". To me, it is an insult. I am Celtic! That is my true cultural identity. I swear all of our people have got to learn their real past and the cultural identity that was stolen from them. Once all of our people do that, they might be able to live in peace because they will know that we all are truly brothers and sisters, who were harmed greatly by colonial forces.
      Critical Race Theory, if people want to call the learning of the truth that, is immensely important to the healing of our nation.
      Sorry for going on and on about this. I'll stop now by asking if people will look up the story of Boudica czcams.com/video/9G01vm9MVa4/video.html. She was a freedom fighter, who I would follow to the gates of Hell and enter therein the fight. Like Shaka Zulu czcams.com/video/cPzM04IARb0/video.html, she was a fighter against the tide of colonialism. Perhaps, in the end, they were unsuccessful in their struggle. Or perhaps the end of the struggle has never come.
      I ask us to remember.

    • @AmandaFromWisconsin
      @AmandaFromWisconsin Před 2 lety +2

      @@vbarbara3235 I'm sure in their minds, those tribal people are also "living wonderfully."

  • @MultiTommie
    @MultiTommie Před 2 lety +22

    To be honest. We shouldn't have to pay all that money for something that was stripped from us. We are basically buying back our identity.

    • @AmandaFromWisconsin
      @AmandaFromWisconsin Před 2 lety +6

      It may not really be accurate to begin with.

    • @ilovelife3328
      @ilovelife3328 Před 2 lety

      We don't have a choice because most of us can't trace our ancestry back past the 1800s. They didn't keep records of where each slave was from.

    • @MultiTommie
      @MultiTommie Před 2 lety +1

      True but still. Just wish it could be cheaper for us

    • @Njoofene
      @Njoofene Před rokem +1

      Why isn't your government paying for this?

    • @MultiTommie
      @MultiTommie Před rokem +2

      @@Njoofene because they do not want us knowing our roots.

  • @kiswahiliworldwide
    @kiswahiliworldwide Před 3 lety +16

    I have taken both the Paternal and Maternal tests. I am very glad that I did.

    • @mykaelajones7780
      @mykaelajones7780 Před 3 lety +2

      If you don't mind me asking, are you Black (I am)? And, what made you glad that you took the tests.

    • @kiswahiliworldwide
      @kiswahiliworldwide Před 3 lety +7

      @@mykaelajones7780 Yes I am Afrikan. My avatar pic is my real pic. Curiosity got the best of me. People treat AAs like we are not really Afrikan because we cant name our tribes. So I have put an end to that. I am Hausa on my Moms side and Kota on my Dads side.

    • @crescendyr8438
      @crescendyr8438 Před 3 lety +1

      @@kiswahiliworldwide You don't know that. They can tell you anything. In fact, I know of 4 instances of AA giving different results to people who had the same STR or HVR markers. I know of 3 individuals given Spain/Portugal in their Patriclan who ended up being of African paternal descent. Every single instance where an African from the continent has taken AA's tests they have gotten the tribe wrong.

    • @kiswahiliworldwide
      @kiswahiliworldwide Před 3 lety

      @@crescendyr8438 Links please. Provide ur proofs. I took 23 and Me first, and both company's results match up.

    • @crescendyr8438
      @crescendyr8438 Před 3 lety +1

      @@kiswahiliworldwide Do you have access to the African Ancestry's private FB group? I will have to point you to the certs in question or send you the files via email.

  • @panafricanismstrikesback
    @panafricanismstrikesback Před 3 lety +9

    Cornel West is still hoping white zaddy will give him a butter biscuit. He sees no value in a connection with his true lineage.

    • @woodcrest4655
      @woodcrest4655 Před rokem

      Brandon I’m thinking about using this company. Is this the one you used?

  • @MyRapNameIsAlexbitsnpieces
    @MyRapNameIsAlexbitsnpieces Před 3 lety +10

    It's very reassuring just knowing this option is out there.

  • @ahnraemenkhera7451
    @ahnraemenkhera7451 Před 3 lety +7

    “Lack of information as a strategy” has a familiar ring.
    It is of important constructive & compensatory value for all unofficial prisoners & their descendants to undertake the (potentially) painstaking work of reclassifying themselves (to whatever extent they are permitted to do so), particularly in light of that privilege having been controlled & held for 500 years by those who classify themselves, & under whose authority all vital records in the Northwestern hemisphere are issued & validated to this day.

  • @ArtsyLadyCrafter
    @ArtsyLadyCrafter Před 3 lety +3

    What is official website address for African Ancestry?

  • @demeitricelestain1820
    @demeitricelestain1820 Před 3 lety +10

    Shalom...I'm skeptical on using any of these DNA companies claiming to get accuracies of who you are...in essence, the results always seem to be similar in nature...

  • @jackharbor2236
    @jackharbor2236 Před 3 lety +3

    Corney you are Official My Brother 👊. God Bless You 🙏

  • @goldenchild3315
    @goldenchild3315 Před 2 lety +6

    For her to say that we are all mix is just not true. A lot of those Africans are not mixed. And a some of us here in America are not mixed. THANK GOD! I would hate to have white European blood running through my veins. They once walked on all fours at one time.

    • @tvs9978
      @tvs9978 Před 7 měsíci +1

      Those Africans?

  • @JanicePayne-d6s
    @JanicePayne-d6s Před 15 dny

    Loved the exchange of information

  • @MROOOZZZZZ
    @MROOOZZZZZ Před 3 lety +9

    Dr. West maybe concerned to not take the test because he might find out that he's more DNA percentage white European white than African black and his more immediate ancestors going back just one or two generations (great-great grandparents (s) is white.
    Not too good for a fire breathing African American social activist in America.... or maybe Dr. West already knows his ancestry because someone like him would seem a little strange to not know at his age.
    Dr. Louis Gates did his own ancestry and that's exactly what he found out about himself, he's more European than black.

    • @brentwiley3426
      @brentwiley3426 Před 2 lety +1

      A bit of a late post here, but I think Dr West said he just wasn’t interested in taking the patrilineal and matrilineal tests.
      He did take the autosomal test for his family, so it seems unlikely his decision is tied to fear of European ancestry. The autosomal results would have revealed that he has more euro ancestry than african ancestry.

    • @johndean5036
      @johndean5036 Před 2 měsíci

      He's not more European than Black. He is 50/50, but his maternal origin is European, and the same for the fathers side

  • @edwardcortes6668
    @edwardcortes6668 Před 3 lety +28

    Being of Puerto Rican descent, I am sure that I have some European, African and Native American blood.

    • @Mocha69A
      @Mocha69A Před 2 lety

      Take a test find out all the African ethnic diverse DNA they say. And remember the borders in Africa have changed many times over and Empires there have changed.

    • @Kent12366
      @Kent12366 Před měsícem

      We are the original Americans

    • @Kent12366
      @Kent12366 Před měsícem

      No saliva can tell u where you're from. This woman should go to jail for lying.

  • @kingsunenterprises7047
    @kingsunenterprises7047 Před 2 lety +1

    Hello, how did you test the people in Africa to be able to connect those tested to the different African tribes becoz there thousands of tribes in Africa.

  • @natashagold7877
    @natashagold7877 Před 3 lety +11

    Due to slavery and rape of enslaved women numerous families were split. Those who could pass for white did. There is a percentage of white people with African ancestry as a result.

    • @spaceghost2473
      @spaceghost2473 Před 3 lety

      that's a lie. who taught you that. all socalled black people are not african as if no other lands had its own dark peoples. your imagination has been colonized. go do your genealogy.

    • @alanaweaver8942
      @alanaweaver8942 Před 3 lety

      @@spaceghost2473 Africans moved in and out of Africa before Rome Empire collapsed and before Britain went through their battles with Scotland.

    • @spaceghost2473
      @spaceghost2473 Před 3 lety

      @@alanaweaver8942 what does that have to do with other lands already having there own dark peoples just as they had there own trees and animals. All socalled black people are not african.

    • @criticalthinking2018
      @criticalthinking2018 Před 2 lety

      Not all of the mixing was due to slavery

    • @nyckidd6004
      @nyckidd6004 Před 2 lety

      @@spaceghost2473 they're African

  • @vme6892
    @vme6892 Před 2 lety +2

    I have not done a saliva test with ancestry . com, but I did see Caucasians in my family tree! The thought of taking a test makes me nervous! When I look in the mirror, I see a light skinned African-American.

  • @sankofabeauty88
    @sankofabeauty88 Před 2 lety +3

    Its sad to see 2 academics, who are supposed to encourage critical thought and exposure to new ideas, be so closed off to something.

    • @mikejones-wn1sw
      @mikejones-wn1sw Před rokem +2

      You have to ask yourself why. Maybe they have not romanticized thus myth of out of africa

  • @cheleftb
    @cheleftb Před rokem

    I would love to see his dna analysis. I am marveled by my own.

  • @mikebunch5553
    @mikebunch5553 Před 3 lety +28

    I thought I was a white man, but then found out that my x 2 grandfather from Kentucky was half black and guess what, I'm proud to be ❤✌

    • @mikebunch5553
      @mikebunch5553 Před 3 lety

      @Noneya Mybiz Could be.

    • @limonesycafe8898
      @limonesycafe8898 Před 3 lety

      A Human of European, African and possibly Asian descent?

    • @crescendyr8438
      @crescendyr8438 Před 3 lety +2

      If you thought you were white, you're white. 1-drop is such a racist concept. You're effectively saying that 1-drop of piss in the lemonade ruins the whole pitcher so it might as well all be piss as nobody will drink it.

    • @mikebunch5553
      @mikebunch5553 Před 3 lety

      @@crescendyr8438 🤣

    • @limonesycafe8898
      @limonesycafe8898 Před 3 lety +1

      @@crescendyr8438 That is not a good analogy. Most people are not drinking lemonade containing a half a drop of piss in it. The whole idea of racial categorization is a racist concept.

  • @gypsieladie
    @gypsieladie Před 3 lety +2

    Ppl's reasons for not getting their DNA done always sound pretty dumb to me. Such vague responses. The closest thing to an answer I've ever gotten is "I don't care about my ancestors" (I'm rephrasing for optimum butthole-itude) or "I don't want 'them using my DNA." 😒

  • @reubentobias2512
    @reubentobias2512 Před 2 lety +3

    She sounds scared because she doesn't think she is very black

  • @lorriet2922
    @lorriet2922 Před 3 lety +1

    Okay Gina, tell us how many snaps or hyper variables are being tested by African Ancestry and what does that mean in reference to the accuracy of your test results. How many markers need to be tested to come to a semblance of accuracy. I heard that you actually test about 8 snaps or markers and that you need at least 12 to be somewhat a little valid in your results. Is what I have been hearing is true? Clarify so that I know exactly what it is that I am paying all that money to get.

    • @Im.Etheric
      @Im.Etheric Před 3 lety

      No you can use 8 on a specific website calculator stevemorse.org/dna/hapest.php

    • @lorriet2922
      @lorriet2922 Před 3 lety

      @@Im.Etheric Oh do you work for African Ancestry? If so where can I find the reference to how many markers that are being used and etc breakdown to the science and how confident is their results that they stand by. This is something all dna companies disclose to their buyers to help them feel confident in their decision to buy what you are selling and proclaim to be an authentic product with what percent of authenticity. We are dealing with science after all. As for the website for 8 markers, there is probably thousands of cites offering the same service. I am asking African Ancestry how many do they use, how much accuracy does that yield and the science behind their claim. That is the least I am asking, I expect a lot more for the money they are asking.

    • @crescendyr8438
      @crescendyr8438 Před 3 lety

      They use 8 STRs for Patriclan. To put things in perspective, a 12-STR match indicates kinship going back 4 *THOUSAND* to 5 *THOUSAND* years ago. You'd need a 25-STR match to indicate kinship within the last 500 years. 8-STRs is genealogically useless and Dr. Kettles and Paige know this. They are intentionally preying on African American desire to know our roots for personal profit. On FTDNA I have matches at the 12-STR level who have taken the full sequence test (Big Y) and they have different haplotypes. The common ancestor and split point of these paternal haplotypes goes back 4.5kya. That is before these tribes even existed as they do today. That's before the Bantu Migration. This is why I have many Middle East matches because the relationship is before my ancestors even left the middle east as these guys have their own middle east specific branches of E-P252 that developed after the split.
      There are publicly available STR databases compiled throughout the course of DNA studies. I have collected several databases. The main one has 2736 samples from all across the continent. I enter my 8-STRs that AA uses and I got 49 perfect matches, split between 37 tribes, across 10 counties. Even at fact value it's ridiculous to take less than 1% of ones DNA and ignore all the rest to claim you're just from this or that particular people. So all the R1b-V88 Chadian men who are 95-99% African are Eurasians because of yDNA from the neolithic ancestors??? What Gina Paige fails to mention about AncestryDNA autosomal test is the DNA relatives. After combing my relatives I have found to date 1 Temne, 1 Wolof, 1 Hausa, 4 Ewe and 9 Igbo relatives. These are all 100% African people from the continent who I have actual kinship with within the last 300-500 years. Based on my own genealogy research my oldest know paternal ancestor was born in Virginia around 1818. Virginia was know for having mostly Igbo slaves which fits with the relatives I have. My paternal like is more than likely Igbo, but AA would claim I'm Tsogo, Ateke, Kota and Fang of Gabon. I found this out by using YTer's result sheet to fake my way into their FB group and collect result sheets until I found one that matched my STRs. I collected about 68 Patriclan and 150+ Matriclan results. I've noticed 4 instances of them giving people with the same STRs or HVRs different tribe assignments. And thru FTDNA I know of 3 case where they told men they were Spain/Portugal and they ended up having African paternal lineages. Two where E-U175 and the other E1a.
      For Matriclan they used to test just HVR-1. More recently they do HVRs 1-3, but still not a full sequence. HVRs work like SNPs in y-chromosome testing. This is why they give haplotypes with Matriclan tests. STRs aren't good for assigning haplotypes so Patriclan doesn't give one. What this means is that they are effectively claiming certain haplotype belong exclusively to certain tribes. anyone who has done any research, read any mtDNA studies, will know that L-haplotypes are scattered all over the continent. It's is patently absurd to claim otherwise. Again, they know this. Dr. Kettles is a genetics professor. He is intentionally lying. I recall an episode of 60 Minutes several years back dealing with DNA testing and he got called out by all his colleagues.

    • @LarryJFly
      @LarryJFly Před 2 lety +1

      @@crescendyr8438 Sounds like you know your stuff...I did Ancestry DNA and like most of my relatives were Igbo,Bateke,Ewe and Asante tribes.My lineage is out Virginia, Maryland and Barbados so just testing Haplogroups doesn't give you an exact tribe or ethnicity.

  • @skyblue-lb9kr
    @skyblue-lb9kr Před 3 lety +8

    Yes! I'm Sicilian and I've gotta be black.

    • @the2ndcoming135
      @the2ndcoming135 Před 3 lety +1

      Oh okay😂

    • @justmyopinion9883
      @justmyopinion9883 Před 3 lety +1

      Sky Blue, do Sicilians have kinky hair?

    • @rafaelpena4269
      @rafaelpena4269 Před 3 lety +10

      @@justmyopinion9883 Sicilian's are VERY olive-skinned..REMEMBER.."The Mediterranean" is RIGHT above North Africa..Hannibal Barca's conquerin' of Rome..who's INCORRECTLY depicted in MODERN-day X's🤷..Modern day Tunisia is full of arab's & Ancient Carthage is in AFRICA..& The Moors..Rome had African mercenaries'..so THAT'S why MANY Italian's, Greek's & Spaniard's are OLIVE-skinned as OPPOSED to Northern & Eastern European's..you ALSO gotta' remember..Greece & Rome CONQUERED Egypt & MIXED w/ the population unlike Britain

    • @trueamerican769
      @trueamerican769 Před 3 lety +2

      @@justmyopinion9883 : The original ones did.

    • @gannibalof21st
      @gannibalof21st Před 3 lety +1

      @@justmyopinion9883 are all black people have kinky hair? Have you been to the continent or are you regurgitating what you're conditioned to think and believe?

  • @johnhill9445
    @johnhill9445 Před 2 lety +1

    Teach The Youth The Truth

  • @FirstPersonHood
    @FirstPersonHood Před 3 lety +1

    Great

  • @virgilwilliams3178
    @virgilwilliams3178 Před 3 lety +3

    Love you brother West. Even when you say no it’s in such a loving manner. Peace and blessings.

  • @macrograms
    @macrograms Před 3 lety +6

    I'm such a pushover. Cornel's attitude almost makes me cry sometimes. I don't care where he got it -- he's got magic deep down and it is contagious.

  • @EncouragedEvolution
    @EncouragedEvolution Před 6 měsíci +1

    I am West African HOWEVER I also have East African, and North African in my dna.I have dna from ancient Kemet Egypt on my Paternal side and my Dad is Black American. So I think we should do dna tests.I did several with different companies INCLUDING African Ancestry (because I'm a woman but also wanted to know my autosomal dna and paternal dna from my dad too) I did 23andme livingdna my heritage and African Ancestry dna.

  • @kudjoeadkins-battle2502
    @kudjoeadkins-battle2502 Před 5 měsíci

    You need to get “on fired for it Elder. You are a voice that is respected. Big UPs Virginia!!

  • @THEsoulquarian
    @THEsoulquarian Před 5 měsíci

    I’ve avoided the other ancestry companies because I was concerned about them giving my info to the government. But African Ancestry claims they never give data to government so I’m signing up. That may change or they could be lying but I’m going to give them a shot.

  • @G11713
    @G11713 Před 3 lety +10

    Twenty thousand years from now we are all in-laws just as twenty thousand years back we shared grandparent.

  • @pattirockgarden4423
    @pattirockgarden4423 Před 3 lety +6

    Just watched "High on the Hog" on Netflx & it starts in Benin, then goes to US. I learned so much, as a "white" person, I watched it twice. All about the roots of American food. This discussion reminds me of that show, which brought people together, sharing a history.

    • @danielleb7416
      @danielleb7416 Před 3 lety +4

      There’s a great exhibit on African-American cuisine at the Museum of AA History in DC. You should also visit the museum.

    • @louise-yo7kz
      @louise-yo7kz Před 3 lety +2

      High on the Hog is a terrific program. Very evocative

    • @mikejones-wn1sw
      @mikejones-wn1sw Před rokem

      @Patti RockGarden you do know over 90% on the african continent are indigenous to the America's right? Let that sink in

  • @Sanderson2Orr
    @Sanderson2Orr Před 3 lety +1

    These are three wonderfully intelligent people in our country. I would not put Skip Gates in their category.

  • @sha1841
    @sha1841 Před rokem

    Wow! I’m thoroughly impressed by Dr. Gina Paige. She politely put respect on your own name when she said Skip Gates was using African Ancestry from the start. Interesting!

  • @jacquesalberttobbohugo3304

    For the first time Cornel West wasn’t able to give a serious answer as to why he doesn’t want know where his from, but after sixty years or so in Amerikkka it is understandable why Cornel thinks the way he rationalise this issue.

    • @vbarbara3235
      @vbarbara3235 Před 2 lety +1

      @Jacques- I was l surprised at his lack of passion for wanting to know his African roots. But it’s his prerogative to want to be plugged into a system that’s been abusive to black people. The sad reality is that many black folks don’t care to know who they really are as it relates to our African heritage. That’s their choice though and I guess their right to have it….though it’s sad. People have to wake up on their own accord.

  • @Xenoyer
    @Xenoyer Před 3 lety +11

    I sure am glad I found this video. I have liked listening to Dr. West for a long time. I learn from him. I think I picked up calling people "precious" from him. My precious brothers and sisters.
    I am commenting here because I would like the learned Dr. West's opinion about what I'm about to say. Having a lady present who is with a genealogical company is extremely fortunate too. I'll take all the help I can get on this one. I have got to get this right! Here goes.
    From what I can gather, there is no such thing as a "Black" or a "White" person. That those terms were used by 17th-century slave traders, and pretty much invented by them. My ancient ancestry is Celtic Scot, not bland and incorrect, White. Nevertheless, there are plenty of folks who have the same ancestors as I, but they call themselves White, carry Nazi and Confederate flags, and try to act like they are better than the next fellow. As far as I can tell, when their ancestors first hit these shores, they were persecuted too. Two thousand years before that, they were fighting the Romans, who often enslaved them.
    So I have this problem with all of it. It is as if they all had their identity stripped from them. The same thing happened to the enslaved Africans too. The native population of this land was also subjected to a type of attempted cultural genocide. I admire them because they have managed to hold onto much of their ancient culture. Maybe the reason is that they were not transplants like the Irish, the Scots, and the Africans.
    I try all the time to bring light to these ignorant people, whose identity has been taken away. Most of the time I get pushback from the so-called whites. I haven't talked to any people of color about it until now. I live in a rural area of New Mexico, and I don't even know any people of African descent here. The population is mostly Indigenous, Hispanic, or so-called Whites. I hope you all give me your insight.
    How do I get to them? Am I on the right path? The truth is incredibly important to me. I think all the illusions, deceptions, and foggy forgotten history have contributed to all of our problems with the division. I believe that the truth can bring all people together and it is required if we are ever going to heal. So, how can I convince them to be proud of their ancient ancestors who fought Roman barbarity, and who were also persecuted and have forgotten? How can I help to remove the blinders, and bring truth?
    I don't want to refer to persons by the color of their skin, but rather like MLK said, "by the content of their heart". I'm not a white person. I am Celtic Scott. I want all of my brothers and sisters who have bought into the illusion to wake up. The ones who hold onto such hatred can't be very happy. What can I do to help them come around and drop the hate? They are prisoners of their own illusion.
    Please answer!

    • @vbarbara3235
      @vbarbara3235 Před 2 lety +2

      Xenoyer- If u feel u are truly educated on this (backed up by clear research), then educate those u feel need to be educated. You can do it by writing an article, offering a seminar (online or in person), or writing a book. U sound passionate about it, so do something about it and share the knowledge on bigger platforms. Be sure to have your research or evidence on anything u present as true facts. (U can incorporate a business around your teaching/training…very inexpensive to do).

    • @Xenoyer
      @Xenoyer Před 2 lety +1

      @@vbarbara3235, I am educated about social things as much as I have read about them. From my own readings, I come up with thoughts, just like any person. I write articles all the time when the passion is roused in me. I share what I find and think about things a lot too. Once upon a time, I referenced everything I wrote. Now I don't. The reason is that people can highlight text and do a search on it. Sometimes when I read something, I highlight some word, or group of words, and do a Google search on them. Normally, I find a lot of articles about what I highlighted. Within the articles I find with the search, I find other words or groups of words, that bacon my highlighted search. One thing leads to the other.
      Writing a book is something I have pondered a lot. I am starting to believe I have enough material to write one. If I did, it would be labeled Marxist propaganda by the oligarchs and ignorant people. I would have to give them away at cost.
      As far as "incorporating" that would be like poison to me. It would have to be like my beliefs. Codetermination would have to rule. Labor has to have an equal voice.
      Yeah, there are all kinds of corporations. There are also all kinds of snakes and criminals. I have a big problem with the very concept of the corporation.
      Thanks for your reply.

    • @vbarbara3235
      @vbarbara3235 Před 2 lety +2

      @@Xenoyer - By “incorporating” I actually mean simply starting a business. U don’t have to actually incorporate it, u can LLC it or simply have a sole proprietor. The idea is just to start a business around your passion….let your natural gifts and passions make way for you.
      BTW, Corporations or businesses in general only become corrupt because of their corrupt owners. As long as your heart is pure and good, your business will be the same whatever organizational style it’s built on. Best wishes with getting your ideas out and educating others.

    • @AmandaFromWisconsin
      @AmandaFromWisconsin Před 2 lety

      *Scot

    • @Xenoyer
      @Xenoyer Před 2 lety

      @@AmandaFromWisconsin, typo.
      The reason people use the term "so-called" is that even though they are called something, that is not what they are.
      Example: I am called a "white person", but that is not what I am. The term was invented by slavers long ago when this continent was first being settled by Europeans. What I really am is a Celtic Pict, not a white person.
      Divide and conquer, right? People are divided in every way imaginable, including by the use of "so-called" labels of color. It's disgusting.
      I hope that clears up the usage of that term. Maybe your eyes will get a rest.

  • @muhammadal-farouq7342
    @muhammadal-farouq7342 Před 2 lety +1

    If you think about it, we really don’t know what is done with all the blood we’ve given for labs, or urine for urinalysis, hair samples for drug tests…🤷🏾‍♂️. Oh, every office discard our material after “they” test for what they promise they were testing for…😒

    • @ilovelife3328
      @ilovelife3328 Před 2 lety +1

      It's pretty obvious that they keep it and use it for research. Look at Henrietta Lacks! Her cells were used without her permission. You don't think they do the same with the rest of us?

    • @muhammadal-farouq7342
      @muhammadal-farouq7342 Před 2 lety +1

      @@ilovelife3328 Agreed. The last sentence was my sarcasm

    • @ilovelife3328
      @ilovelife3328 Před 2 lety

      @@muhammadal-farouq7342 LOL. We probably already have clones of ourselves running around the earth somewhere with all of the samples they take at the doctors offices.

    • @muhammadal-farouq7342
      @muhammadal-farouq7342 Před 2 lety

      @@ilovelife3328 Right!

  • @TroyKC
    @TroyKC Před rokem

    I should contact them because we have a family legend that used to be hush hush but we've been openly talking about it for the last few years. Supposedly I have an African Ancestor from Angola that was sold into a Dutch Family in the middle of New York but was a Dutch colony back then. I know that would make me like one millionth African but I wonder if there are other Africans in the old family tree?

  • @tisonj532
    @tisonj532 Před 2 lety

    I physically from earth but spiritually I am not sure. I am good with that.

  • @rebeccacrumpler2421
    @rebeccacrumpler2421 Před 3 lety +7

    I feel some kind of way about Dr West not supporting a Black-owned company but supporting 23 and Me

    • @mikejones-wn1sw
      @mikejones-wn1sw Před rokem

      Has nothing to do with the being blacked own. He probably just doesn't support defrauding his people. Kinda like these fake celebrities with crypto currency and now they have had ti distant themselves because it was a scam. Most of us know we do not come from the african stock. We are a different people and that is not something to be ashamed about.

  • @cw8499
    @cw8499 Před 3 lety +2

    Dr. West, doesn't want to Risk loosening his Black Card, the results might damage his Brand.

    • @jpaultelchannel1702
      @jpaultelchannel1702 Před 3 lety

      Bull shit! He is the foremost propounder of European classics. He is by training a philosopher. So, your charge here is bogus. Besides he says he is OK from his ancestry being from West Africa for the reason he stated. If I am correct he was married to an Ethiopian woman. Get rid of you wild and evil slander.

    • @cw8499
      @cw8499 Před 3 lety +1

      @@jpaultelchannel1702 you keep Believing in the White man's Philosophy, and I'll believe in Scientific, Facts, you have every right to live in Denial, and all of the Dark Ages.

    • @jpaultelchannel1702
      @jpaultelchannel1702 Před 3 lety +1

      @@cw8499 I don't see any science in anything you've written in the few disjointed sentences that do not make sense. I gave you facts in an earlier post which you chose to ignore. In fact, every sentence from the second is a fact.

    • @cw8499
      @cw8499 Před 3 lety +2

      @@jpaultelchannel1702 Sweet Sugar, any Educated person whom wants to specialize in the Black Community, Should participate in Cultural activities, that will promote a healthy environment for a family of people, whom are unaware of who they actually are, I'm Sorry that I touched your nerves, African Ancestry, has the Science when it comes to identifying, Lost Black people, whom are unaware of their True, identity.

  • @Jamestele1
    @Jamestele1 Před 5 měsíci

    I am a white person of mostly Scottish and Welsh origins, and I have a lot of respect for Dr. Gina Paige. I have actually found similar issues, of bias toward one specific country.

  • @barbarabobbyscott1560
    @barbarabobbyscott1560 Před 2 lety +1

    We need The KINGDOM!

  • @abdulsharif6541
    @abdulsharif6541 Před 2 lety

    I have no problem doing a DnA test with African Ancestry.

  • @marioantoniolawrencesr.8371

    Cornell my brother set the example!😄

  • @AmandaFromWisconsin
    @AmandaFromWisconsin Před 2 lety

    I have ancestors who came from the Black Forest area of Germany. Does that mean I'm part black?

  • @JG-qt3pn
    @JG-qt3pn Před 5 měsíci

    There's no law that says you have to be interested in this. Good on you if you are but also good on you if you aren't. Choice.

  • @JanicePayne-d6s
    @JanicePayne-d6s Před 15 dny

    ❤❤❤

  • @tambythwood9004
    @tambythwood9004 Před 2 lety

    I sense some ignorance because knowledge is power.

  • @tyronejones7341
    @tyronejones7341 Před rokem

    MrOooZzz ; I'm "Black" and I would hate to find out I had "european blood" infecting my genes whether I was an Activist or not !!!!.
    Just the thought of it makes me cringe !!!!!!!.

  • @Diligently2U
    @Diligently2U Před 2 lety

    You would think if Oprah took a test everybody else would want one too..
    But that's not moving Doctor Cornell at all!

  • @tyronejones7341
    @tyronejones7341 Před rokem

    @vmc6892; Just because you like me are a light-skinned Black person doesn't mean you have any white/European blood in your family. There are a lot of light_skinned tribes in Sub-Saharan Africa with the exception of white South Africans and former Rhodesians (that name now thankfully gone).

  • @nerdlarge4691
    @nerdlarge4691 Před 3 lety

    Former White Supermodel with a secret African maternal lineage? I'm going to guess Christy Turlington or Janice Dickinson.

    • @AmandaFromWisconsin
      @AmandaFromWisconsin Před 2 lety

      * eye roll *

    • @nerdlarge4691
      @nerdlarge4691 Před 2 lety

      @@AmandaFromWisconsin What's your guess then wise gal?

    • @AmandaFromWisconsin
      @AmandaFromWisconsin Před 2 lety

      @@nerdlarge4691 Janice Dickinson is of Eastern European descent. As to who it is, well...does it really matter all that much? Will it prove that that model's "greatness" or "beauty" is a result of her having a black African ancestor?

  • @dorotheamohibi7342
    @dorotheamohibi7342 Před 3 lety +1

    I really don’t think 🤔 all Africans American can find out where their first grandparents came from. There were many different people here already that choose to have relationships with other ethnic groups which means some people who we may say are African Americans first ancestor could have been Asian or Native American and as time goes by by being mix with others blacks here in American we all now relate as African Americans. Just saying.

    • @spaceghost2473
      @spaceghost2473 Před 3 lety

      who says socalled african americans are african? are you saying the americas didnt have its own dark peoples? who told you that black americans are african?

    • @AmandaFromWisconsin
      @AmandaFromWisconsin Před 2 lety +3

      @@spaceghost2473 Go take your medications, sweetie.

    • @ilovelife3328
      @ilovelife3328 Před 2 lety

      @@spaceghost2473 Those dark skinned Native people were of Asian and Australian Aboriginal/Melanesian descent. Not African Americans.

    • @spaceghost2473
      @spaceghost2473 Před 2 lety

      @@ilovelife3328 most african americans arent african

    • @ilovelife3328
      @ilovelife3328 Před 2 lety

      @@spaceghost2473 Yes we are. Our DNA is African, not Indigenous American. That pipe dream needs to die once and for all because it is not based in logic or science. African Americans typically have no indigenous DNA and if we do, it is 1% at most.

  • @gullygoddess617
    @gullygoddess617 Před 2 lety

    Comment is bout the title I salute yu.
    Our D.N.A is precious, now they want to 👀 find the royal bloodlines of wat was b4. Remember 1900 -2000 isa 100 yrs.
    We are a 2decade in the millium +2 suh yur in 5th 6th 7th genre.

  • @bert3163
    @bert3163 Před 3 lety +2

    😶
    🤣😂🤣

  • @FlavoredGenuine
    @FlavoredGenuine Před měsícem

    These two are supposed to be scholars yet they’re not familiar with African Ancestry and how it’s different from Ancestry and 23andMe.
    I’ve recently done my African Ancestry test for my maternal side of the family and looking towards doing the paternal side since it’s more than likely my genetics are African, not European but it’s not guaranteed.

    • @FlavoredGenuine
      @FlavoredGenuine Před měsícem

      I’m currently awaiting results until July or August.

  • @buddinganarchist
    @buddinganarchist Před 3 lety

    Toure Reed showed racist Ancestry commercials.

  • @valerieherron4185
    @valerieherron4185 Před 8 měsíci

    That lady on the left sound ignorant

  • @Diligently2U
    @Diligently2U Před 2 lety

    A lot of the Portuguese need to take this type of test I have a co-worker who is from an island of Africa.. she was shocked.

    • @char08fal
      @char08fal Před 11 měsíci

      Are they from Cape Verde or Sao Tome?

  • @trcr5473
    @trcr5473 Před 3 lety +4

    I don't like how she (Gina paige) seems to put words in their mouths

    • @theelectricant98
      @theelectricant98 Před 3 lety +2

      I thought she was relatively respectful but she has her angle of course

    • @trcr5473
      @trcr5473 Před 3 lety +1

      @Gia I think you mean *askew*, and that's why your opinion is different. You weren't paying attention

    • @trcr5473
      @trcr5473 Před 3 lety +1

      @Gia What you said isn't a word. It isn't proper English, and it shows that you didn't pay attention to detail then and while watching the video.

  • @charlanpennington3989
    @charlanpennington3989 Před 2 lety +1

    I am terribly uncomfortable in my s p irit about this. I felt a bigger interest is in what genetics are in you, was about who could your or-ga--ns be sold to.
    More recently I'm seeing reports of this in past tense, b l a c k or-ga-ns are trans-plan--ting more successfully. Please think on this, act with more caution, especially about children you wish to keep.

  • @azelms.chazjones8653
    @azelms.chazjones8653 Před rokem

    Bs

  • @reubentobias2512
    @reubentobias2512 Před 2 lety +1

    We are all mixed

  • @whoever6458
    @whoever6458 Před 3 lety +2

    My mom took one of those genetic tests and I'm sure it was one of the Euro-centric ones, which makes some sense since any observer would peg her as white. It came back with some percentage of "Black Irish." I tried to look it up but it comes up with everything from have black or brown hair and brown eyes to having some African ancestry, either from slaves in Ireland or from Irish peasants immigrants to the US sometimes working along side African slaves brought to the US (and we know what happens when people get to know one another...).
    From a few features that I share with my mom, it makes sense for us to have some small amount of African ancestry since we have the superior gluteus maximus and my teeth resemble those of Dr. West more than they do of any other white person I've ever known. Then there's the weird thing of my mom having very light skin, blue/green eyes, and light brown hair and my dad having brown hair and brown eyes but also somewhat light skin, plus my brother has blonde hair and blue eyes with super light skin, but I came out with black hair, nearly black eyes (which have gotten lighter as I have aged), and dark skin for a white person (which would probably be similar to what is considered a light-skinned black person). I share enough other characteristics with both my parents that I'm sure they are my biological parents so it seems to me that I inherited some genes that exist in my family lineage but weren't expressed in any of the relatives I know. Anyway, it would be interesting to get my mom to do one of these tests to better define what the hell is means to be Black Irish.

    • @whoever6458
      @whoever6458 Před 3 lety

      This ancestry test might be one I'd be willing to take. What I would like to know is who would have access to this genetic information because I've heard that several companies share the information with various forms of law enforcement. Now I don't think I've ever done anything that would warrant using genetics to track me down but I still value that kind of privacy, not only because I want that level of privacy for my fellow human beings for whom this might be a risk, but because I want to be free to engage in an appropriate level of resistance to the growing fascism in our country with one less way to track me down for whatever reason.

    • @AmandaFromWisconsin
      @AmandaFromWisconsin Před 2 lety +1

      "Black Irish" just means a white Irish person with dark hair. People in Ireland are not part black.

  • @darnellbarnetted.s.3649
    @darnellbarnetted.s.3649 Před 3 lety +10

    In my opinion it's important that African Americans know where they came from. Based on my DNA from 23 and me my DNA results from my dad's side goes back to Ramses the Third!!! Yeah!! This makes me feel really good!! I started in royalty not on a slave ship. In addition, l'm 35% Nigerian. Know yourself!!😀😀✊✊

    • @Darnell
      @Darnell Před 3 lety +6

      I used AfricanAncestry.com tests & I know I am Yoruba from Nigeria. I also was able to obtain citizenship in Sierra Leone 🇸🇱 thanks to proving I am Mende & Temne on my mother’s side.

    • @jusletursoulglobaby
      @jusletursoulglobaby Před 3 lety +4

      why is it important? what actual impact does it have on you? unless.... you already didnt have a sense of pride and reverence for the ancestors you knew.

    • @Fallstorm777
      @Fallstorm777 Před 3 lety +3

      It makes a substantial difference and had nothing to do with lack of pride in our current ancestors but rather a sense of heritage. For example, my friends and I (all of various races and ethnicities) generally love history particular history preceding the Industrial Revolution. In full disclosure, this is partially because we also share a love of fantasy literature and various myths (Greek,Norse ,etc). So when all my friends can say where in England, Ireland, Germany they originated from and they can even go to the tribe they were were from and talk about a specific Celtic tribe and the norms and mores that tribe and all is well I am from somewhere in Africa probably the Western side of the continent...it makes a difference. I am very proud of my ancestors and current family but it would be nice to know what tribe and the norms and mores of the tribe so was from too. I would like to know what my people were generally during in the time period of the Middle Ages. If you have that knowledge it is easy to take it for granted.

    • @jusletursoulglobaby
      @jusletursoulglobaby Před 3 lety +1

      @@Fallstorm777 so in short, it was important to you to feel a sense if belonging

    • @Fallstorm777
      @Fallstorm777 Před 3 lety +4

      @@jusletursoulglobaby More of a sense of historically complete vs. a sense of belonging much the same way an adopted child can completely love and be proud of their foster family but still have a desire to know who their birth parents are/were.

  • @anikacorbett7714
    @anikacorbett7714 Před 11 měsíci

    THEY AINT BLACK 😅 PLEASE 😂

  • @MazBringsby
    @MazBringsby Před 3 lety +1

    How is Dr. Gina Paige not SHREWD or ASTUTE enough to recognize the problematic and possibly FUTILE nature of DNA ancestry tests?

    • @gannibalof21st
      @gannibalof21st Před 3 lety

      She does. Money talks.

    • @crescendyr8438
      @crescendyr8438 Před 3 lety

      Her test is a fraud. They base a Patriclan test of only eight STR makers (out of 700+) and the Matriclan on an incomplete mitochondrial sequence. At the 12-STR level a paternal haplogroup will go back 4,000-5,000 years. I know this for a fact because my 12-STR matches of FTDNA who have gotten their Y-dna fully sequenced have different haplotypes going back to a common ancestor 4.5kya. That's before any of these tribes even existd as they do today. That's before the Bantu Migrations. That's why I have a lot of Middle East matches as well. You'd need a 25-STR match to be related in the last 500 years. And with MAtriclan they are using selective HVRs. HVRs are used to determine haplogtype. They would effectively have to be claiming that certain haplotypes are exclusive to specific tribes, which is beyond ludicrous. This is basic layman knowledge. Dr. Kettles is a genetics professor. He knows better. Both he and Dr. Paige are knowing lying to people for and taking advantage of our want to know our roots for personal profit. It's a scam and it's disgusting.
      She also makes tests like AncestryDNA out to be nothing but "you're west African". They also have DNA matches. I have combed my DNA relatives and found 1 Temne, 1 Hausa, 1 Wolof , 4 Ewe and 9 Igbo relatives who are 100% African. These relatives are related within the last 300-500 years. That's kinship to actual people from which my ancestors are came from. Based on my own genealogical research I'm likely paternally Igbo as Virginia is where my oldest known relative came from which was primarily made up of Igbo slaves.

  • @crescendyr8438
    @crescendyr8438 Před 3 lety +2

    African Ancestry is a scam anyway. They aren't going to be able to tell him a specific tribe based on a measly 8-STR markers. That is beyond absurd. A 12-STR match goes back 4,000-5,000 years. You'd need a 25-STR match to go back 500 years. An 8-STR match is genealogically worthless.

  • @dianamcdougall9251
    @dianamcdougall9251 Před 3 lety +3

    The whole idea of the significance of dna testing - shallow and superficial at best. Incidental garbage.

    • @AmandaFromWisconsin
      @AmandaFromWisconsin Před 2 lety +2

      Some of the testing sites will match you with genetic relatives who may have genealogical information for you to build a family tree.

  • @donellbra3000
    @donellbra3000 Před 3 lety

    You not from Africa cant no genealogy test tell you where you are from Africa