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    Modern Assyrians (split from "Were the Aryan who ruled the Mitanni"...)

    I'm not degrading, I just think it's absurd how this person complains so much yet he comes up with these outrageous claims that have no basis behind them besides an agenda, I'm actually surprised he lasted this long here and people still discuss with him, for crying out loud, he does not even...
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    Modern Assyrians (split from "Were the Aryan who ruled the Mitanni"...)

    This is the most idiotic thing I have ever heard, even a donkey is smarter than this, that's like me saying there are no such thing as Kurds, just a bunch of Pesians, Turks, and Arabs mixed together, yea, I guess we speak a language that neither Kurds, Arabs, or Armenians speak, yet we're made...
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    Modern Assyrians (split from "Were the Aryan who ruled the Mitanni"...)

    Not only do you need to learn about genetics, you need to learn history too, the Assyrians existed before the Mitanni, look up the old Assyrian period which existed in North Mesopotamia, this was the first Assyrian state which was a mix of natives and Akkadian Semites, the name Assyria itself...
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    Modern Assyrians (split from "Were the Aryan who ruled the Mitanni"...)

    The older analysis used to put them further east, now it's fixed.
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    Modern Assyrians (split from "Were the Aryan who ruled the Mitanni"...)

    Read the post again, he did not draw the map wrong, this was actually a map made by me and it was still based on Dr. McDonald's analysis, not Humanist, basically the placement of the Assyrian samples at the time (Older analysis) was placed in Northwest Iran and the Kurds were a little further...
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    Modern Assyrians (split from "Were the Aryan who ruled the Mitanni"...)

    For the record, Humanist did not do such thing, his information consisted data analysis from Dr. McDonald (Who is very respected and well known by the genetic communities online), it was not Humanist who placed Kurds in Northwest Iran, it was Dr. McDonlad, if anyone is not happy with that, they...
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    Modern Assyrians (split from "Were the Aryan who ruled the Mitanni"...)

    I won't go into detail but I will say that these haplogroups are not only connected with Indo-European languages, mind you, I2a is absent in Asia, meaning it had no connection with the major Iranian umbrella.
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    Modern Assyrians (split from "Were the Aryan who ruled the Mitanni"...)

    There's no room for personal passion when it comes to DNA facts, the dude needs to calm down and stop being paranoid, if he reads something he does not agree with he starts accusing people of being anti-Iranic or whatever, it's a personal issue, not a Kurdish issue, because we generally (Myself...
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    Modern Assyrians (split from "Were the Aryan who ruled the Mitanni"...)

    Sparkey and Humanist, I don't even know why you guys bother with this Goga dude, he's some paranoid person with an agenda to talk shit about Assyrians, Turks, and any other group that happens to be native in lands where Kurds live in, with all the crap he wrote, I'm actually baffled that you...
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    K12 Autosomal map : Southwest Asian admixture (from Dodecad)

    It is more African as a whole, but there are Caucasian words found in some of these Afro-Asiatic languages.
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    K12 Autosomal map : Southwest Asian admixture (from Dodecad)

    My point is it seems like the J1* that's sitting in Eastern Africa did not really play a role in the expansion of the Semitic languages like say, J1c3d, so it must have been a clan of J1* folks that migrated from the North (Possibly Anatolia) and all the way down to East Africa before there was...
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    K12 Autosomal map : Southwest Asian admixture (from Dodecad)

    In your original post you said "Assyrians", not "Assyrians in Iraq", look at the chart again, adding Assyrians all together (From Iraq, Iran, Turkey, and Syria) gives you 6.1% J1c3 and and 10.5% J1*. The Afro-Asiatic might have an actual African root rather than Caucasian, the Semitic on the...
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    Were the Aryan who ruled the Mitanni the same as those of India ?

    I would answer you back but it's not worth my time since: a) You don't listen and have a hard head, discussing such topics is not about who has the hardest head. b) You always throw stupid accusations that make no sense and start fights. c) You don't even know much about genetics to begin...
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    Were the Aryan who ruled the Mitanni the same as those of India ?

    I agree mostly with what you said (How haplogroups J2 and G being Neolithic markers that traveled east from West Asia), I also agree that the Indo-Iranians were likely a product of Indo-European folks from the Andronovo culture (Who carried a heavy amount of R1a1a) who mixed with the BMAC folks...
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    Scythian/Sarmatian DNA, your thoughts.

    If you look at the K=15, Dienekes divided the ANI to South-Central Asian and ASI to South Indian, but at that time there was no Kurdish samples.
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    Scythian/Sarmatian DNA, your thoughts.

    Yea, there's a very small number of Assyrians that lived in Kazakhstan too (Where this Kurdish sample was from), they too migrated during the USSR days.
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    Scythian/Sarmatian DNA, your thoughts.

    Yea, these are Kurds from West Asia, look at the results with the other Kurdish samples who tested with 23andMe, they have almost exactly the same values, maybe these are Kurds that migrated to this region during the USSR days which is not uncommon. Check out my post again, I posted the Tajiks...
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    Scythian/Sarmatian DNA, your thoughts.

    Finally, we have Ossetian autosomal samples: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/ccc?authkey=COCa89AJ&key=0ArAJcY18g2GadDUyeEtjNnBmY09EbnowN3M3UWRyNnc&hl=en_US&authkey=COCa89AJ#gid=0 The results for the Ossetians, Kurds, and Iranians are the following (The Kurds and Iranians have two values...
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    Scythian/Sarmatian DNA, your thoughts.

    If you're talking about the one from the Harrappa project, then yea, that's the one I guess, so far, here's the Y-DNA frequency for those who tested with 23andMe: J1c3 R1a1a R2a G2a I2a1 E1b1b1c1a T
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    Scythian/Sarmatian DNA, your thoughts.

    I did not say that those samples were the fathers, I meant to say that I2a1 is the father of I2a1b in general, and it was found in the western parts, meaning for all we know, the I2a1 folks might have expanded from west to east rather than the other way around.
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