Cheetah
Deity
Except race isn't just our imagination. That different groups of people are different genetically is quite obvious.I think that is by far the best definition we can have on the topic of race, that it is just a pigment of our imagination. Do you think we should stop using the term race when we are describing ourselves?
However, unlike, say, domesticated dogs or horses, there are far fewer restrictions on who humans can mate with, so we mix a lot more. That makes the "dividing lines" between different races of humans extremely difficult to point out, but anyone who is unwilling to lie to themselves are perfectly aware that there are such a thing as different human races (even though some are more comfortable using a different terminology).
That just means that people from separate races are grouped together as one ethnicity for some reason, not that races does not exist. The reason is of course that there has been so much interbreeding between the races that several individuals within that ethnicity are so mixed it is futile to easily decide which race(s) they primarily belong to. One just ends up categorising such people relative to more pure-bred individuals, or just lumping everyone together in a big ethnicity.The issue has always been that Hispanics are a mixed heritage people. I went to college with a Puerto Rican guy, his family had been there for centuries, and he was near as white as I am. But some others are near as black as Africans. And some Hispanics are near pure Native American. 3 groups that look distinctly different. So 'race' just doesn't work when applied to Hispanics or other mixed heritage groups. So of course answers are fluid.
Answers are absolutely fluid, but everyone can still point out what race "pure-breeds" belong to.
Which part? Your reply or him arguing that there is in fact such a thing as different races within the human specie?Absolutely outrageous.
It may very well be that we aren't currently able to find some genomes to effectively classify people into races or a qualified mix of races, but it seems pretty obvious that there must be some genetic markers to go with the differences that exists among the different races.Good point. If we can't find it in the genome, why poll for it census? I suppose on paper in a census it's only useful to know what people classify themselves as and what their primary reading/writing language is.
Though not only may it be hard to tell which race an individual belongs to, but even determining which races exists is quite a task. Hopefully better dna sequencing techniques and heritage studies will be able to solve that problem.