When Will Genetic Racial Identification DNA Testing Be Meaningless?

Filed under: DNA Identification — DNA Identification Researcher at 6:52 am on Sunday, April 29, 2007

Genetic racial identification DNA testing incorporates a number of different tests. The paternity of a child is determined by use of Y chromosome haplotypes. The maternity of the child becomes revealed through an examination of mitochondrial DNA. The paired procedures with the long name—genetic racial identification DNA testing—my not have a very long life. Everyday the world seems to get smaller. Everyday the world experiences more and more cases of intermarriage. Everyday the once important racial lines seem to become more blurred. Thus the world must witness a daily decline in the clarity of meaning provided by any testing procedure, including those that uncover a subject’s racial identity.Using genetic racial identification DNA testing one can determine the race of any child’s father and mother. Examination of the Y chromosome haplotype will reveal the race of the father.   Examination of the mitochondrial DNA will reveal the race of the mother. That presents a clear picture of the state of testing in this the year 2006. It does not indicate how long that mode of DNA testing will yield results that can pinpoint the racial ancestry of the test subject. .

Everyday the results of the genetic racial identification DNA testing come closer to the point where they become meaningless. That is due to the fact that the tested population, i.e. the human race, has chosen to increase its tendency to intermarry. As the rates of intermarriage increase, the clear genetic differences between the races become harder to distinguish.

The members of the human race have not been blind to the benefits of racial mixing. It is common knowledge that children of a mixed marriage tend to have unique and striking characteristics. Often they will seem to have a perpetual tan. Since so many Caucasians try to develop a tan, that feature generally earns for the affected child much respect from society.

Interestingly, that respect is a rather recent phenomenon. In the not too distant past, a man would usually hide the fact that he had racially mixed children. Back when there was no access to genetic racial identification DNA testing, few felt comfortable about mounting a challenge to a paternity claim. Before the government push for civil rights for all citizens, a child that had a hint of African-American blood would be classed as an African American.

Of course even then there were times when segregation laws failed to separate the Black and White races. There were times when the absence of racial identification DNA testing made such enforcement impossible. If, for example, an albino African-American sought entrance to a “White only” facility, then he or she would normally be allowed to pass beyond the sign-bearing door.  Society might think it had enforced the law, but in fact a mixed race child had broken those rules.

Ironically, now that science has provided a means for the easy establishment of paternity, and consequently for the race of the father, society has turned away from a desire for segregation. Now the rising number of interracial marriages has led to an acceptance of racial mixing. As a result the world has moved further and further from the existence of clear lines for the separation of Black and White races. The measurements coming from use of genetic racial identification DNA testing seem to have less and less meaning every single day.