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View Full Version : DNA test results for sale; your data goes to the highest bidder.



Bigjon
29th December 2018, 04:38 AM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IxR0rCfP6H8


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IxR0rCfP6H8

Tumbleweed
30th December 2018, 10:17 AM
Rossette Delacroix has a video out on what a scam the DNA tests are. The results are bullshit that the Jews come up with on the tiniest bit of dna. They lie and make shit up to further their agenda. They've banned her video on youtube but you can watch it on bit chute.

https://www.bitchute.com/video/BMwoFvWUjdsF/

or read in on her site.

http://rosettedelacroix.com/?p=19032

End Times
30th December 2018, 12:13 PM
The only "smoking gun" is the tests by the three identical triplets. Triplets come from a single embryo - with absolutely identical DNA. The tests should have near-zero variation (the minute variation being due to very small errors during processing). Since the triplets had substantial variation, the process used was either defective and/or deliberately manipulated. The specific test was by Family Tree DNA, not exactly the most reputable of the "home DNA kits."

Most people do not understand what DNA tests do for ancestry analysis. They cannot assess with certainty one's ancestry. What they do do is correlate your genetic markers with similar genetic markers of known or claimed-to-be known genetic populations.

Yes, I've taken a 23andMe test. Was I "disappointed" or even "outraged" by the results? No, not at all. In fact, I believe the test results are near or even 100% accurate for me. ZERO Nigger ancestry was reported. ZERO "Native American" ancestry, as well - and this for a family (my Mom's Dad's) who have been in America for over two centuries, arriving in California in 1852 from Tennessee, and, prior to that Virginia. My results indicate substantial "Scandinavian" ancestry, which, initially, may seem erroneous, since I have absolutely no genealogical Scandinavian ancestry on paper records. However, when one understands what I said previously, comparison to known populations, it makes perfect sense. Scandinavian markers are not unique only to modern Scandinavia. The peoples of Scandinavia colonized much of Europe, both West and East, and my grandmother was Ukrainian. Of course, Russia was founded by the Rus - Swedes - centuries ago, in Kiev. This "Scandinavian" heritage persists, clearly. Likewise in the West, in Britain and Ireland.

I didn't use a fake name when I submitted my test. I'm sure I'm on every Jew list of "problem Goyim" there is. If 23andMe wanted to fuck with me, my results could have come back 6.4% Nigger, 4.9% "Native American," and even 18.6% Ashkenazi. They didn't. Hence, I have confidence the results are reasonably accurate within the context of what these tests are able to show.

As for whether customers are "the product" for these tests, yes, of course, you are the product! Genomics is an industry that will just keep getting bigger. Submitted DNA has myriad uses...monetizable uses. I certainly don't advocate people pay full price for such tests, especially since the costs of the processing are covered by the resale of your allegedly-anonymized data. If you are concerned about privacy, that is another matter...but understand that if you have ever given a blood sample in the last two decades, the System already has your DNA.

Finally, I advise no one to rely on paper records as "proof" of anything. Documents are easily forged, facts are erroneously recorded...and adulterous affairs were almost never noted in birth records. If one is looking to determine who is "White," The Lane Standard is probably the only relevant one in regards to racialist purposes: "If someone looks White, acts White, fights White, then until their actions prove otherwise, they are our Folk. On the other hand, regardless of pedigree or appearance, those who oppose, criticize, hinder or fail to support our cause are no friends of ours."

https://www.davidlane1488.com/whoiswhite.html

Ares
30th December 2018, 01:51 PM
I've never purchased a kit. No desire to pay a bunch of Jews to collect and store my DNA indefinitely so that they can sell later.

woodman
30th December 2018, 06:35 PM
I've never purchased a kit. No desire to pay a bunch of Jews to collect and store my DNA indefinitely so that they can sell later.


Nor have I. My mother was heavily into geneology so I know what stock I am from.