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Blasian Forums

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I have added a link to the Blasian Forums in External Links. However, two individuals have removed this link claiming it is not a credible resource.

If that is true, why are there links to such sites as Eurasian Nation on the Eurasian page? If the link to the Blasian forum is to be removed constantly, I move to have the links to forums on the Eurasian page removed as well.--Joel Lindley 19:34, 9 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]

WP:EL recommends not linking to forums. External link sections, from what I can tell, is for more reliable information that may not have been sourced yet, or may not be encyclopedic (trivial statistics, for example). Forums don't really satisfy either of those criteria (they're for social networking, and Wikipedia isn't a social networking site) unless they have reliable information. Eurasian Nation, though, wouldn't not be a valid removal (the yahoo group link on the page is), because it has articles and resources (though I'd probably prefer a link to New Demographic instead), and it's not solely a forum. ColourBurst 07:02, 12 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks for the reply, ColourBurst, but I still believe the Blasian forum has a right to be listed on the page as any other interracial forum. As the site[Blasian] is still in it's early stages, and may have links and articles posted on the site now or in the future, I think it would make a good additional source of information.--Joel Lindley 21:16, 12 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]
It does have the same right to be listed as any other forum - that is, almost nil. The site it's hosted on is a dedicated forum host, which tells me that social networking is its primary intent. The fact that it might have links (which isn't information) and articles (which would mostly be opinion by forum users and not reliable information) is exactly the reason why forums are not supposed to be linked to in WP:EL. It's not that the forum isn't good or anything like that (frankly, I have no idea), just that it's misleading. ColourBurst 07:50, 13 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Alright, I'll go ahead with this one. Maybe once the forum builds we'll be able to add it.--Joel Lindley 01:38, 16 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Interestingly, I noticed on the Asian Fetish article there is a link to the Asian/White forum(a social networking site). Now, it is arguable whether or not the site is used to depict an Asian Fetish by it's posting on the article [or showing articles of such interracial relationships or and/or a community of white Men who like Asian Women in a BBS]. That also goes along with the forums posted on the Eurasian page, which also includes a link to a Yahoo Group for Eurasians. Even further, on the Oriental article there is a link to a forum debating the term.
Nevertheless, I see no reason as to why the Blasian forums cannot be added and kept. Hence, I'm going to put back the link to the Blasian forums once again. Feel free to remove it at your behest, but I'll do my best to make sure it remains part of the article.
Of course, I'm open to other ideas.--Joel Lindley 23:01, 17 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Two of my golden rules for editing in Wikipedia is "copy good articles, don't copy non-good ones." and "precedent doesn't mean a thing." In other words, if an article falls under the good article criteria or is a featured article, then it's a good idea to take elements of style from them, but the Asian Fetish article is not a good idea to take elements from (it's been repeatedly edit-warred if you've noticed the history). Also, because everything is a work in progress here, that text or links exist in an encyclopedia and hasn't been challenged doesn't mean that it's actually good text/links. If you can convince me that it even as a forum it falls under one of the uses of WP:EL, then I will stop challenging your use of the forum. Or I can post this in the Wikipedia:Village pump (policy) to get more editors to look at it. In fact, since we can't seem to come to an agreement it should probably be placed there anyway to get more people looking at it. ColourBurst 05:45, 18 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]
ColorBurst, sorry for my late reply. Again, looking at your comments, I believe we'll take your suggestions. In the future what I'll do it post my thoughts here rather than making changes in the main article if there are to be disagreements.
Like you, I want what is best for this article. Cheers.--Joel Lindley 19:29, 19 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]

No notable people

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It's perfectly relevant to have NOT NOTABLE people shown on this page because this page is not dedicated to people who are notable. That is what the notable list is for. Blasians do not just exist in the media, they exist everywhere, which this page is showing.


"The term Blasian is not similiar to the term Eurasian seeing as we are dealing with those of African descent and not those of European descent. The term Blasian was created before it ever became a popular internet lingo. We hear the term more often, whether it be cyber or not, due to the massive increase in black/asian relations. Yes the same can be said for Eurasians, a term which not to long ago, was a rare term. Contingent to what can be classified as internet lingo, our society uses the internet as one of it's main sources for information, therefore if one were to create a term such as "heify", and it got picked up through the main stream web, there is no stopping it from becoming a world wide definition if society accepts it as one."

Sorry but the quote above was not written by me. Please make sure you are aware of who wrote what before you start applying names to them. As far as the interracial couple, "blasian" doesn't just concern an individual of black and asian descent. It includes black and asian couples who provide way for blasian individuals. It's where their heritage begins. So quite frankly, it doesn't matter which comes first. Americanbeauty415

Where's this quote from? In addition, why is an interracial couple - not a Blasian - the first picture in the article? --ColourBurst 17:14, 15 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I wasn't suggesting that the quote was from you - I was suggesting that you placed it in the talk page, which you have done (according to the history). Anyways, you and HongQiGong's edit warring is getting a little out of hand - both of you, come out and support your arguments. The only reason I asked about the quote is because it looks like original research. --ColourBurst 21:43, 15 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Oh, I noticed that you added "or are in a relationship consisting of a black and asian individual." to the article. Do you have any sources? --ColourBurst 22:19, 15 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]

You don't need a source to define a blasian relationship as one that consist of black and asian. Just like an interracial couple would come out with interracial children, or a latin couple would come out with latin children. I figured it should've came easily without having to clarify it, but I found myseld corrected and decided to put it in there to side step confusion. The mix in the relationship is what makes the mix of the individual. And what argument do I have to support of behalf on Hong Q? Where does it say anywhere on this page it is dedicated to notable blasians? We have a page specifically geared for that, why do we need another? The name of the page is blasian, not "notable blasians". Americanbeauty415

Okay. I did a search and found that some online forums seem to use it in the relationship sense as well as in the ethnic mix sense. However, if that's the case, then I think the two articles should be split (the two may be interrelated, but they're not the same concept and the article doesn't seem to separate the two). Google only gives me 655 hits for the search blasian relationship, so it doesn't seem to be common. You don't have to support HongQ (in fact, the edit war shows that you two do not agree) - I'm asking him to come out and support his edits. --ColourBurst 16:55, 16 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]
To me, the use of "blasian" to describe interracial relationship is basically neologistic. But I'm really not interested enough in the subject matter to be engaged in edit wars over it. --- Hong Qi Gong 19:15, 16 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Keep in mind Hong Qi Gong, your edits were not made in part of the relationships, but on opposing non-notable blasians. That's the argument Colourburst was asking you to support.Americanbeauty415

blasian

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"In terms of origins of the term "Blasian", people of full European and people of mixed European and Asian descent may have created the term "Blasian" in the first place to describe this ethnic mixture with a term similar to their own Eurasian. Furthermore, the term seems to be only used in Cyberspace. Subsequently, in real life, the term "Blasian" is rarely used or even heard of among people who are actually of Black and Asian mixed parentage." What is the source of this assertion? Kemet 7 Jan 2006.

Multiracial vs blasian

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Multiracial people should be considered mutliracial not blasian. Its not fair to say that someone like Tiger wood 1/8 black native ancestry is greater than his 1/8 white ancestry

Race according to the government is an unconsious definition determined by society. Society would look at Tiger Woods as a man of African and Asian descent before they would ever look at him as White and Black or White and Asian. Whenever you listen to ESPN or anything that refers to him, they never fail to acknowledge him as black and asian, not white and whatever else. --lilnessaslove 01:43, 17 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]

blasian

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Did the category blasian get deleted. I think it should be recreated.

Message Boards

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I removed this section from the article, since the only link here is to a commercial site of questionable value to the article:

  • explicitlymixed.com/themixiesboard/index.php?c=6Made for the Blasian Experience: An extremely interactive website meant for people that are a part of the Multiracial Experience. There are an array of resources (including Interracial Support based Resources), from Daily News to Monthly In Depth Features. The forum linked, is a direct location of the newly created Blasian Forum.
Okay, I'm restoring this as an external link (with a less advertising-y description) after a brief discussion with the contributing editor. --Alan Au 06:42, 8 May 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Nevermind, was re-added by author, and promptly removed again by another editor. --Alan Au 06:44, 8 May 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I'm just worried about slippery slope here - anyone can put up a blog or discussion board, and then assert they deserve to have a link. Where do we draw the line? I'm not entirely convinced of a specific line yet, and would appreciate more discussion regarding this. --JereKrischel 15:36, 8 May 2006 (UTC)[reply]

What???

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The entire article seems to be poorly written.

The term Blasian refers to those of mixed Black and Asiatic ancestry, or increasingly, mixed parentage.

In terms of origins of the term "Blasian", people of full European and people of mixed European and Asian descent may have created the term "Blasian" in the first place to describe this ethnic mixture with a term similar to their own Eurasian. Furthermore, the term seems to be only used in Cyberspace. Subsequently, in real life, the term "Blasian" is rarely used or even heard of among people who are actually of Black and Asian mixed parentage. Many of the peoples of the South Pacific are Polynesian, an ethnic group that superficially resembles Blasians, even though their indegenous heritage lines diverged early in human history.

1. Where are your facts that state the term "Blasian" originated from the term "Eurasian"? 2. Where are your references that state that "Blasian" is only used in Cyberspace? 3. Where are your references that say Polynesians "superficially" resemble Blasians?


While most people who are part black are often defined as black, Blasians almost never are. This is because Sub-Saharan Africans are thought to be the oldest population, North East Asians the youngest population, and Europeans intermediate, so peoples of Blasian ancestry are an average of two extremes, with an aggregate genetic mix that is no closer to the ancient African Eve than the typical European's is. In other words, their old African genes and their young North East Asian genes average out to a genetic age comparable to that of most European's. Indeed on the genetic level Europeans are sometimes considered Blasian because they share 65% of their genes with North East Asians and 35% of their genes with Africans1 and so while Europeans are not considered black, Blasian's tend not to be considered black either. Golfer Tiger Woods who defines himself not as black but Cablinasian is the larger than life prototype.

1. Where are your references that state that Blasians are almost never defined as black? 2. How are you making the connection between sub-Saharan Africans being the "oldest" population and North East Asians being the "youngest population" as being an "average of two extremes?" 3. How are Europeans considered "Blasian?"

I know this is wikipedia, but you can't just write anything up and expect it to fly just because you say so. You need to use references and site whatever you're trying to prove.

The genetic arguments are sound. Through DNA research it has now been well established that black people were the first race and those that left Africa evolved into Caucasians and some of those later evolved into Orientals. Thus Caucasians on the genetic level are nothing more than black people turning into Orientals. That's why crossing a black with an Oriental gives you the genetic equivalent of a Caucasian.

I'm sorry, but the genetic arguments are specious. Race is not about genetics, it is about social constructs. There has been no evolution between one race and any other. The only difference between people on a genetic standpoint is their nearest common ancestor, which for nearly all of the world, is less than a few thousand years ago. See the excellend documentary from pbs: http://www.pbs.org/race/000_General/000_00-Home.htm --JereKrischel 01:04, 27 May 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Race is a biological classification. It's now beyond scientific dispute that the first humans started out black in Africa, they migrated to Europe/the middle East/India and turned into Caucasoids and then migrated to North East Asia and became North East Asians. Thus a mix between North East Asians and blacks (i.e. blasians) is the genetic equivalent of a caucasian. Please don't put your politics ahead of science.

This is silly! Race has never conclusively been a biological classification. In fact, the variants between a black American, a black Somali and a black Congolese are so wide that it would be silly to classify these people as the same.

The conclusions you draw about Asians and blacks being the genetic equivalent of a Caucasian are just entirely false. I doubt you have any real understanding of genetics.

Futhermore, you have NO citations or references to back up your claims. Stop trying to rewrite genetics with your own personal ideas.

"Controversy"

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1) Nowhere does Cavalli-Sforza assert that any genetic groups are "opposites";

2) The racial tensions expressed L.A. riots had a long history;

3) None of the cites for Rushton showed any support for the claims made in that section.

If you would like to bring specific citations, rather than an editorial, please feel free - but despite the work found with genetic "Eve" 200,000 years ago, the fact is that your NCA (nearest common ancestor) to anyone on the planet is most likely just a few thousand years back. --JereKrischel 00:30, 14 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Please manke an effort to understand the genetic work done by Cavalli-Sforza. In the "Geography of Human Genes" Cavalli-Sforza provides a genetic linkage tree [[1]] showing the genetic distance between major racial groups expressed by the total length of the line seperating any two populations. In clearly shows that Caucasoid populations are much closer to North East Asians and Africans than either of the two latter groups are too each other. The first population of modern humans emerged in Africa 200,000 year ago. Archaic Caucasians split off from this parent population 110,000 years ago, and archaic North East Asians split off from archaic Caucasians 41,000 years ago. So because Africans emerged first, and North East Asians split off last, those groups are genetic opposites, with Caucasoids falling in between both, just like Blasians. This is further confirmed by the work of Rushton which shows that on 60 different variables, Africans and North East Asians fall at opposite extremes, whith Caucasoids in the middle, just like Blasians. I understand these views are controversial which is why I put them in the CONTROVERSY section, but these views are ESPECIALLY relevant to the unique racial composition of Blasians, and deleting such relevant theory based research just because you don't like or understand the ideas is a form of censorship.
See WP:NPOV#Undue_weight regarding the appropriate treatment for tin-foil hat extremists with views contrary to generally accepted science. These views are not controversial, they are baseless and fringe. Even your assertion that based on a genetic distance tree you can proclaim any two points on it as "opposite" is an improper conflation of mathematical descriptions. --JereKrischel 16:35, 14 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Regarding Cavalli-Sforza, you'll note on his page, the quote, "The classification into races has proved to be a futile exercise." You can see an article regarding his conclusion, completely opposite of those such as Rushton, here. Misrepresenting research, and using it to support poorly executed science, with the most fringe POV, has no place on this article, or anywhere in Wikipedia. --JereKrischel 16:41, 14 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Well if classification of races is futile thet why is there is an article on Blasians in the first place? Just because a theory is politically incorrect does not invalidate it scientifically. You are free to quote alternative theories, but Rushton's work is uniquely well suited to an article on Blasians since his entire career is focused on studying the 3 main races and concludes that Blacks and North East Asians fall at opposite extremes in virtually every important trait. The notion that Blacks and North East Asians are a mix of the two most opposite extremes is what makes Blasians such a fascinating hybrid so without such discussion the article is absurdly incomplete.

The category is a social one, not a scientific one. Rushton's work is sophmoric and indefensible. When others have repeated his experiements and studies, they have universally found his conclusions to be incorrect. The notion that any two groups of people are "opposites", on any scale, due to genetic differences is thoroughly discredited by scientific study (see Cavalli-Sforza). The notion that this fringe, tin-foil hat POV should be given undue weight is clearly against Wikipedia policy. --JereKrischel 21:19, 14 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Please provide a quote (with reference) by Cavalli-Sforza claiming the concept of genetic opposite is thoroughly discredited. Do you even understand what the word "opposite" means? All it means is that there is a continuum of variation and on every continuum, there are those at both extremes. The only reason J. Phillipe Rushton's work is even controversial is because it's politically incorrect. Wikipedia is not the place to put ideology ahead of science.

You're right,, as per WP:NPOV#Undue weight, Wikipedia is not a place to put Rushton's ideology over the clearly accepted science regarding genetics. Arbitrary declarations of three major racial groups, and a complete denial of the integrated nature of human populations and genetics, much less the well documented variability between individuals outweighing heavily that between groups, is clearly both politically incorrect, and ideological, not scientific. --JereKrischel 00:59, 15 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Requested quote from Cavalli-Sforza
In fact, genetic scientists appearing at an annual conference in Atlanta last week, including Cavalli-Sforza, are now saying that what we think of as racial differences are mainly superficial and aren't found to any great degree in genetic research.
"There is a surface difference, of skin color, but what we miss is the story of how the difference came about," Cavalli-Sforza said. Skin color, for instance, reflects how people have adapted to different environments over many, many generations.
"These are spontaneous changes, mutations, that can change the appearance of individuals," he said. "That's the theory of natural selection. There have to be spontaneous changes."
The debate over genetics and intelligence, Cavalli-Sforza thinks, overplays the importance of genetics.
On many measures, the difference between racial groups is what he calls minor or statistical. These differences become even more minor when compared to the wide range of intelligence within any one racial group.
The problem with "The Bell Curve" and its adherents, Cavalli-Sforza said, is that for some people, too much importance is assigned to genetics. The authors of "The Bell Curve," he said, simply ignored evidence contrary to what they were presenting.

The quote you cite in no way disputes the fact that blacks and North East Asians are genetic opposites.

Some argue that the genetic research Rushton cites[1] has shown no biological basis for race and that his identifications of genetic groups are arbitrary - specifically, the genetic diversity found between members of a group is higher than differences between groups. "This is true, however, only if one is comparing the range of individual differences on a given characteristic (or on a number of characteristics) within each population with the range of the differences that exist between the means of each of the seperate populations on the given characteristic" clarifies Arthur Jensen on page 516 of "the g factor. "In fact, if the differences between the means of various populations were not larger than the mean difference between individuals within each population, it would be impossible to distinguish different populations statistically." Further the genetic linkage trees Cavalli-Sforza provides clearly show distinct branches for all the three main races Rushton describes. Further, when Cavalli-Sforza applied the wholly objective mathematical procedure of principal component analysis to his genetic data, the major racial groupings Rushton descibes formed very clear and unambiguous clusters. Further, Rushton's focus on race is consistent with the work of forensic experts, research in bio-medicine, and biologists studying geographic variation in other species. Emminent Harvard biologist E.O. Wilson told journalist Peter Knudson. "The basic reasoning by Rushton is solid evolutionary reasoning; that is it's logically sound. If he had seen some apparent geographic variation for a non-human species-a species of sparrow or sparrow hawk, for example-no one would have batted an eye."


Of course it refutes the idea of blacks (which have incredible genetic diversity, and more "opposite" characteristics between people within that group than between other groups), and north east asians being genetic opposites - Rushton specifically ignores evidence contrary to his ridiculously simplistic assertions. Although Rushton's basic reasoning applies when talking about geographic variations between species of birds, the genetic variation he's focusing on is an order of magnitude less than that within his arbitrary groups.
Third, how much genetic variation exists? Overall, humans share about 99.8% of their genes in common. The other .2% accounts for all human variation. This happens because 67% of all human genetic loci are invariant. The remaining 33% are polymorphic, that is capable of genetic variation and this is where the discussion of genetic variation within and between groups must begin. For forty years, we have known that 85% of polymorphic human genetic variation occurs at the individual level. What that means is that any two people in this room, without regard to the geographic origin of their ancestors, by chance alone shares 85% of their different genes in common. Nei and Roychoudhury in 82 showed that this could be as high as 93-97% of the genetic variation within groups and only 3-7% between them. Mitochondrial DNA shows the same picture. There is about 5-7% genetic variation between populations on the same continent but only about 10% between different continents.
Simply put, Ruston's science is anecdotal, sloppy, and does not withstand scrutiny. Although certainly by casual inspection by even "eminent" biologists it seems reasonable, the data simply do not back him up. --JereKrischel 19:59, 16 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Above is a very specific quote provided from Arthur Jensen refuting your arguments about within group variation exceeding between group variation. And the fact that humans share 99.8 of their total genetic codes means nothing. Humans and chimps share 98% of their genetic code yet are still quite different.

You've ignored the data again - they are not asserting that differences in invariant be used (99.8%), they are specifically speaking of the fraction of the .2% that does differ. You are taking a comparison of total genomic similarity and conflating it with research based solely on the observed genetic differences. Jensen's fallacy is conflating the idea that any discovered distribution pattern is THE distribution pattern. --JereKrischel 21:40, 16 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I strongly encourage you to study Cavalli-Sforza's principal component analysis of a global smaple of 42 different ethnic groups in "The history and geography of human genes". While you are correct in asserting that massive amount of genetic diversity exist in black populations (i.e. San Bushmen and Mbuti Pygmy are quite different from the Bantu, Nilotic, West African, and Ethiopain) all six black ethnic groups are still FAR more similar to each other than they are to any Caucasoid or Mongoloid populations. This can be clearly seen by the fact that all the black ethnic groups cluster in the bottom right quadrent of the PC analysis. Caucasoids cluster in the top right, and North East Asian cluster in top left quadrent (directly opposite from the black quadrent). Even geneticists who think Rushton is completely wrong in his conclusions, still agree with the fundamental genetic fact that blacks and North East Asians are genetic opposites. This fascinating fact needs to find its way into the Blasian article. If you don't like Rushton, find another way to make the point.

Your assertion as to the utility of Cavalli-Sforza is specifically rejected by him. Your read of the data is again, ignoring the evidence presented in the study. Rushton may have his basic genetic reasoning intact, but he's taking a simplistic, laymen's view of applying things selectively.
The fact of the matter is that it is tin-foil hat to assert that there is some sort of linear genetic continuum upon which we can do simplistic averaging. Even if you buy into the biogeographic isolation of the three major "races", selective pressures do not stop acting upon those isolated groups - that is to say, just as one isolated group is reacting to changing environmental pressures, so are others that have remained in place, but been subject to environmental changes. To think that you can assert that a "Mongoloid" mating with a "Negroid" produces a "genetic Caucasoid" is a complete misunderstanding of genetic inheritance - this would be like saying you could take a human (last on the primate tree), mate it with a gorilla (several steps ago), and come up with a chimpanzee (in between human and gorilla). Another way to think of "genetic averaging" is like asserting one of your cousins, mating with cousins from the other side of your family, would produce a genetic copy of your siblings. It simply does not work in the simplistic way Rushton describes. --JereKrischel 22:03, 17 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Actually if you crossed a human with a gorilla, you would almost certainly get a creature that biologists would classify in the same genus as a Chimpanzee. Similarly, if you crossed a human with a monkey, you would probably get something that would be classified as an ape.
That assertion is completely unsupportable. Remember, Gorillas, Chimpanzees, and other primates are not our direct ancestors in any genetic sense of the word - they are our cousins, and have been under the influence of environmental factors and genetic change ever since we "split" off of our common ancestor. Not only that, but Gorillas have 48 chromosomes, and humans only have 46 - a "cross" between the two would in no way represent a viable chimp, even if genetically engineered. I think you're completely miunderstanding the model of genetic inheritance. --JereKrischel 20:27, 18 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Gorillas and chimps are not specifically our ancestors, but the general category they belong to is ancestral to the general category we belong to. Why do you think people say we evolved from apes? No one says apes evolved from humans. And I never said a gorilla-human hybrid would be a chimp, I said it would arguabley be classified the same genus that chimps belongs to. Similarly, a black and North East Asian hybrid, would not be a European, an arab, or an East Indian, however it would arguabley be classified in the same Caucasoid category that Europeans, arabs, and North East Asians all belong to.
Again, you've shown a complete misunderstanding of genetic inheritance. If your cousins from your mothers side mated with your cousins from your father's side, you would not have offspring essentially like you. Secondly, the arbitrary social classifications of race do not create genetic "hybrids", any more than you can claim your cousins who mate create a hybrid that is in your direct line.
The fallacy you are falling victim to is the assertion that there is a step-wise progression between one "race" and another, and that taking a more "advanced" race combined with a less "advanced" race would somehow "average" out. This is not how genetic heritability works. Taken more literally as per your hypothesis, if you have sex with your grandmother, you won't end up with a genetic equivalent to your mother - the particular bits of your dna, and your grandmother's dna, which would be given to your offspring are not deterministic - that is to say, the genes your grandmother gave to your mother will certainly not be the same genes they would give to your incestuous offspring with your grand-mother. --JereKrischel 22:23, 18 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Two points

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  • The article itself asserts "Some studies have suggested that a perceived "shortage" of same-race partners lead Asian men and Black women in particular to embrace miscegenation as a positive phenomenon." So if that's true...
  • Where are these studies?
  • Why do Black men and Asian women partnerships still outnumber Asian men and Black women partnerships? See this table.

Pictures

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Honestly, I really don't care, the pictures on this page about the interracial couples don't make sense to me. This page should be about Blasians, not about their potential parents. I can understand why some people have an aversion to celebrity pictures too. Anyway I'll leave it to the Blasians to decide how they want to represent themselves. Bethereds 16:58, 16 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I think it's better to leave celebrity photos to a celebrity page. Not all people have the glamorized look that celebrities have; by listing them on a page that represents ones identity, it could be misleading. Regardless, I found this page very interesting. Blasians were people I've seen before but never really took notice of until I heard people mentioning them more and more. In North Dakota we don't have to much diversity in a lot of our areas. I encountered two ladies that were blasian and to add to the stereotype, yes, they were drop dead beautiful. I was interested in learning more about the term blasian especially since I've began to hear the term referred to people in the media. It is not about how blasians represent themselves, it's about how they are represented period. As more people hear about blasians, the more people are interested in this particular mix, therefore it is essential that the information is geared towards everyone who reads it, not just the blasian community.--lilnessaslove 01:56 17, July 2006 (UTC)

Well, seeing as how I am not blasian, I really don't have the right to decide if something is true or not, or if blasian celebrity A is a good representation and blasian celebrity B is not. Sure, gear it to whoever anyone wants to gear it to. That's fine, but it still should be the blasians themselves doing the gearing. One thing that I want to stop is the posting of pictures of interracial couples. The people in interracial relationships are not blasians.Bethereds 12:22, 17 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]

As Wikipedia is open to ALL individuals, regardless of race, I would think anyone who has the article's bests interest in hand to do the gearing. Moreover, if the consensus agrees or disagrees that there should be pictures of celebrities who are Blasian, [or if it is mandated that there should be] then those pictures should be added as need be.--Joel Lindley 23:12, 20 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Statistics

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A message board is not considered a reliable source. I'm not sure the colorq article is reliable either, since colorq does not review its submissions for accuracy. I have taken the statements out. ColourBurst 23:16, 20 September 2006 (UTC)[reply]

There are a lot message boards posted on the Eurasian page for mixed ancestry including a Yahoo group. Maybe those should be removed as well?--Joel Lindley 23:16, 17 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Maybe I say this a lot (does that put the content in question?), but doesn't this whole article seem really off-color to use the term Blasian so much? why not use the term "Wexican" (white-mexican) or Blackodian (Black-Cambodian) in other articles? Its assnine (spelling intentional) to continue to use such a charged, potentially disparaging term. we wouldn't call a white-asian a "waysian" or a black-white a "whack", so why do we continue to use this term "Blasian?" if any thing, it sounds like who ever started using the term on this article posted a couple uncreditable sources (angelfire.com, for one) and decided it would be funny to see how many go along with the term. Stevo D 01:31, 13 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Replace unreferenced template?

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I would like to replace the {{Unreferenced}} with {{noncompliant}}. The problems with this page extend beyond just not attributing reliable sources.--ZayZayEM 01:04, 23 March 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Over 24 hours. No response. For or against. I'm doing it.

Quality of page compromised by Wikipedia

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This page can't really even be considered informative, let alone an article. When I saw this page before, it at least had a few pieces of valid and cited information that were of value. But I've come to notice those were always quickly attacked or knocked down for some bogus excuse that could never be proven. Furthermore, it now has no substantial foundings or information and now it stands free with no disruption. It's almost as if some of the editors WANT this article to be a fluke...hmmm.. not the first time for wiki so I wouldn't put it past them. Anyways, what happened to the histroical data that used to be on this site? Americanbeauty415 13:18, 27 March 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Could you please link to this previous version with "a few pieces of valid and cited information". You will find it here[2] somewhere.--ZayZayEM 01:20, 28 March 2007 (UTC)[reply]
This article is just horrible. I've had a stab at establishing some sort of lead - adding a bit about Chinese and Indian immigration to the Americas which I know to be true but is as yet unsourced - but I did it whilst grimacing at the thing the whole time.-- Zleitzen(talk) 04:55, 20 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Blasian

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Blasian shouldn't be in bold. It is an informal colloquial description that has no widespread international usage. Redirect or not, it is a neologism and not an alternative article title. We don't bold these terms and give them equal footing with formal terms.-- Zleitzen(talk) 10:29, 26 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Please do not bold Blasian again and give it equal status as Afro-Asian. Blaisian is not the same as Filipino American, which is a formal term that has universal usage, even appearing on the U.S. census. We don't bold Blatino on Afro-Latin American articles, in fact we don't normally put these terms in the lead at all, for reasons that are obvious to anyway with any background of writing about the African diaspora. I'm really not happy about this and it'll need to be resolved. The redirect from the informal term is enough, thank you.-- Zleitzen(talk) 02:04, 27 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]

My comment wasn't about Blasian = Filipino American. The term "Fil-Am" is bolded and a redirect to Filipino American. It is an equivalent to Blasian. It is clearly labelled as a neologism, bolding doesn't really give it any validity. The term blatino isn't even found in the article you refer to.--ZayZayEM 14:51, 28 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Fil-Am isn't the same as Blasian. It is a shortening of a formal term Filipino American and refers to specifically to usage in one nation. Afro-Asians exist throughout the world. The term Blasian, which I have never heard before is seemingly merely slang in one part of the world. Also, the term black is not the same as Afro.-- Zleitzen(talk) 15:13, 28 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]

I never said Black = Afro. It does seem that Afro- when referring to ethnicity does tend to refer to black Africa as opposed to Caucasian africa. The point I am making by suggesting bolding of teh term Blasian is that it appears to be a term quite a few English speakers will search in wikipedia in the context of being synomous with the actual term Afro-Asian - teh term certainly doesn't deserve its own article and it bolding here will serve to reinforce that any wikipedia article on the topic would be about the appropriate anthropological term and not crude portmanteau.--ZayZayEM 03:51, 29 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]


Afro?

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How come the given term is Afro instead of African? How come Asian is untouched yet African is relegated to "Afro"? Health library 21:12, 30 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Started Some Cleanup

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I started a cleanup on the article and would love some feedback on it just so we know it's heading in the right direction. So far I covered the general areas of South and West Asia; I'm unsure as to whether or not more information should be added about it's development or if we should leave it general. Hopefully this will get the ball rolling so Afro-Asians have the chance to better understand their history. 70.170.28.57 17:22, 7 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Other inclusions

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Would certain long existing populations in Asia, Polynesia, Micronesia and Oceania not qualify as Afro-Asian since traces of the the sub-Saharan (Congoid/Capoid) genetic DNA existed, sporadically, among populations there for thousands of years? For example, it's existed in varying frequencies among populations in places like Hawaii, Fiji, Vanuatu, India (mainly the Siddi, but otherwise as well) and the Philippines prior to global expansion and European colonial rule.

To clarify, I'm not implying that the entire indigenous populations of these places are of African descent, I'm just noting that people from sub-Saharan African migrated there eons ago, and those genetic traits are still evident among varying percentages of those populations. Th phenotype of some populations show more evidence of this than others, but the genetic implications are there regardless. Relir 11:20, 16 June 2007 (UTC)[reply]

It could definitely be included in the article if you can provide the citations needed to accomodate your information.71.177.30.75 09:31, 28 June 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Native Americans part of asiatic history?

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There seems to be so many levels to the asiatic lineage. Those from India are considerably asian, and after reading a wikipedia article on Native Americans as "Amerindians", is it safe to say that African-Americans with Native American lineage are Afro-Asian like someone who is Indo-Trinidadian? 71.177.30.75 23:13, 5 August 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Naming question

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Afro-Asian is an apparant racial/ethnic designation. Are there any groups who identify based on a related national-designation? For example, Afro-Japanese? CJ 04:01, 7 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]

African-American and Vietnamese

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What is the "status" of the offspring of black American soldiers and Vietnamese women from the Vietnam War era - both in the US and Vietnam? Roger 20:18, 4 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]


PATHEITC! Compare eurasian and blasian on wikipedia. This page is in need of a major revamp. why is eurasian page perfect, yet blasian page looks unfinished??? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 70.233.85.163 (talk) 21:34, 22 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Probably because of systematic bias. You are welcome to help with this article and make it better. Besides, the Eurasian (mixed ancestry) article is far from perfect, as the tag at the top of the page says, it has multiple issues (neutrality, original research, clean up).
And for some general advice:
Thank you for your interest, and welcome to Wikipedia! Puchiko (Talk-email) 16:34, 23 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]