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Comments 132

brennans October 18 2020, 02:49:30 UTC
ok elizabeth warren

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disgruntledyawn October 18 2020, 03:05:39 UTC
hdu she is 1/64 to 1/1024 cherokee

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wee_em_cee October 18 2020, 02:51:29 UTC
what is this word vomit

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ljtryout October 18 2020, 05:07:33 UTC
Seriously my dog eats a letter noodle soup and poops more coherent stuff.

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holyfrijoles_2 October 18 2020, 02:52:18 UTC
...why admit to this like it’s a cute fun story

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neuers October 18 2020, 02:54:08 UTC
........

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piratesswoop October 18 2020, 02:57:28 UTC
the thing about ancestry tests is that while they can tell you a lot about your own personal genetic makeup, there's a lot about your family history that they can't. so while his story sounds pretty typical of spicy white people, it's possible for you to have a great-grandparent from a certain region, but it doesn't reflect at all in your ancestry/23andme report, meanwhile your full sibling takes the same test and can read as 34% of something you have nothing of.

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anna_drenxavier October 18 2020, 03:19:55 UTC
OMG that is so confusing. What is even the point of taking those tests if they can't actually tell you everything?! (I'm cheap.)

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djbbgoose October 18 2020, 03:34:31 UTC
it's testing gene expression, so simpified, that sibling can have the cherokee genes while you have more scottish genes
but it can be helpful for getting a general picture if you don't know anything about your family background

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piratesswoop October 18 2020, 04:04:01 UTC
i think it has value if you're interested in finding out about your potential heritage, but it's more helpful if you have a lot of family members who also take it, so you can track your actual ancestry. my cousins and i were able to figure out who our great-grandfather's father was, and we discovered our grandmother had a half-sister she (probably) never knew existed. it's been really eye-opening!

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