Sparky wrote on Dec 22
nd, 2013 at 6:39pm:
No we aren't. Why don't Asians have blue eyes? Because there's a gene that Caucasians have that the other races don't for coloured eyes. So we aren't all the same. Why say things that aren't true. Now if you said the races have slight genetic differences that determine some behaviours and physicality but we are basically the same animal then we'd all agree.
*SIGH*, Sparky it's obvious you know SFA about genetcs. We all have the same genes. It is what makes us human, as against say Chimpanzees or other primates or other animals which have different numbers and types of genes compared to humans. It is the combinations which produce differences such as the colours of eyes. However, to further disprove your point, I believe Ian (?) posted something in this thread which pointed out that indeed, many inhabitants of the continent of Asia (ie "Asians") do indeed have blue eyes.
Quote:"In Denmark 30 years ago, only 8% of the population had brown eyes, though through immigration; today that number is about 11%. In Germany, about 75% have blue eyes."[33] Blue eyes are also found in southern Europe, Central Asia, South Asia, and West Asia, especially among the Jewish population of Israel.[34][35][36] Many modern Israeli Jews are of European Ashkenazi origin, among whom this trait is common (A study taken in 1911 found that 53.7% of Jews in Galicia in Eastern Europe had blue eyes).[37][38]
Y-Chromosome DNA testing performed on ancient Scythian skeletons found that light eye colors were already present during the Bronze and Iron Ages in the Siberian Krasnoyarsk region.[39] 10 out of the 11 subjects carried Y-DNA R1a1, most commonly found today in Eastern Europe and South Asia.
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If blue-eyed people had different or extra genes, they would be a difference species and unable to interbreed with other humans without some difficulty.