White supremacists taking DNA tests sad to discover they’re not 100% white

Authored by globalnews.ca and submitted by hargistal
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A new study by the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) has found that white supremacists have been using genetic testing kits in an effort to prove that they have so-called “racial purity.”

But they’re often disappointed to learn that they aren’t, in fact, fully white.

According to UCLA sociologists Aaron Panofsky and Joan Donovan, white supremacists on the online forum Stormfront have been testing themselves using tools such as Ancestry.com and 23andMe. The Stormfront group was created in 1995 by Don Black, a member of the Ku Klux Klan.

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The sociologists studied more than 3,000 posts on the forum over a decade that discussed genetic testing, and found that many supremacists were shocked to learn they had African or Middle Eastern heritage. The results were revealed at an American Sociological Association meeting in Montreal this week.

The study noted that the forum’s senior moderator, John Law, defines being white as “non-Jewish people of wholly European descent. No exceptions.” Members of the group often spend time debating what being white means.

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That’s why many were on the defensive when they find that they weren’t 100 per cent European, or “white,” and disputed the findings. Panofsky added that some disregarded the results, saying they knew themselves better than a DNA test.

“My advice is to trust your own family tree geneaology research and what your grandparents have told you, before trusting a DNA test,” one user wrote on the forum after receiving what the study describes as “bad news.”

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The researchers observed “shaming and discrediting of individuals” who were deemed “non-white” following the tests.

While the study has been underway for years, it holds more resonance in the aftermath of the Charlottesville, Va. protests.

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Ancestry.com responded to the study, saying that they were “horrified by the tragic events” in Virginia.

“To be clear, we are against any use of our product in an attempt to promote divisiveness or justify twisted ideologies,” the company said in a statement to the New York Post.

“People looking to use our services to prove they are ethnically ‘pure’ are going to be deeply disappointed. We encourage them to take their business elsewhere.”

Daisy_Of_Doom on August 19th, 2017 at 07:28 UTC »

Just the other day I had the thought that Ancestry DNA/23 and Me/other DNA service should offer their services directly to white supremisists/nazis to show them their heritage for this exact reason. It's pretty safe to say that no one's 100% anything. Especially Americans I would think because of all the intermixing of natives and different immigrants during colonial times.

Sometimes I wish that these services weren't so expensive and were more accesible to everyone. Maybe it's naive but I like to think that showing mass amounts of people how mixed we truly are would help curb hate based on race.

El-Toonces on August 19th, 2017 at 05:28 UTC »

People nowadays can't even hate properly. I blame public education.

__The_wanderer__ on August 19th, 2017 at 05:27 UTC »

Isn't everyone going to come away with even a tiniest percentage of African region and middle Eastern and Asian? Nobody is really pure anything when it comes to DNA. Kind of ignorant you think anyone would be.