Not speechless enough to keep it to yerself. Care to elaborate?
I just found your statement to be the best thing I've read all day.
Either way, it's worth adding, the particular sort of racial narrative that tends to come into play with Alexander is historicist rather than naturalist, race as "culture" rather than as biology alone. In that framework, what distinguishes Alexander from his opponents isn't physiology, but the fact he participates in vital, dynamic "European civilisation", while the Persians are trapped in a sluggish "Eastern civilisation". Hence, although Alexander was not only physiology but in every meaningful respect much closer to the Persian emperor than he was to a contemporary Northern European, let alone a modern day one, Europeans have felt comfortably claiming him as "theirs", as a sort of collective ancestor-spirit, and as opposed to a nebulous Oriental "them".
I would think being obsessed (yes, I think that term is appropriate for me and plenty of people on here) with a history game that colors entire areas differently depending on which "civilization" owns them might facilitate that impression.