Edit: this question has been answered now. Thank you to everyone who took the time to help me understand.

the premise that race is not a natural, biologically grounded feature of physically distinct subgroups of human beings but a socially constructed (culturally invented) category that is used to oppress and exploit people of colour.

Okay… But we can take a DNA test and get our ancestry, telling us what percentage of what races make up our overall ethnicity. So how is race a social construct and not a biological feature, when we have a scientific method to determine our race? This part of the philosophy has been bothering me ever since I read it, and I’ve been hesitant to ask because of how offensive people get when you question this system.

  • NOT_RICK@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    Everyone has different DNA and nobody refutes that, but the lines at which race are defined are completly arbitrary. Are you considered black if you have 50% sub Saharan African DNA? Most would say yes. Are you black at 25%? How about at 5 or 10%? The slew of different answers is a clue that race is just a social construct borne of perception rather than hard fact.

    Similarly, a lot of groups that are considered “white” today would not have been in the slightest if you were to go back 100+ years. The Irish, Italians, Greeks, among others were not considered white until more recently than you might believe.

    Thats the crux of it, race is only truly defined by these arbitrary lines in the sand that people draw, and these lines are different for different groups and individuals. Race is only real because people perceive it to be. We could divide up society based on hair color or if your ear lobes hang or are directly connected to your head and it would make just as much sense, which is to say not much.

    Edit: I might add that there’s more genetic diversity in sub Saharan Africa than anywhere else in the world but they all get lumped together as black because “skin dark”. It’s stupid when you examine it.

    • voidMainVoid@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      Add to that somebody could be genetically “black” and pass as “white”. It isn’t based on DNA; it’s based on perception.

    • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      My go-to examples are Melanesians and Indigenous Australians. They sometimes have darker skin than people we in the West call black, and if we saw one of them walking down the street in a Western country, we would think they were black. But they are quite genetically distant from Sub-Saharan Africans. They just also have very dark skin pigmentation.

      So are they both the same race? If not, what are we calling race here? Because I’ve only ever heard it described in terms of skin color.

      • Zagorath@aussie.zone
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        7 months ago

        I could be wrong, but I believe that I’ve heard there’s more genetic diversity in sub-saharan Africa than pretty much anywhere else. Which kinda makes sense when you think about how that’s where Homo sapiens first evolved.

    • Zagorath@aussie.zone
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      7 months ago

      I’ve heard it said that the average Englishman and the average Indian are more genetically similar than two random Englishmen, too.

      In other words, if that’s true, there are some general trends in genetic differences between “races”, those trends are, overall, far smaller and less significant than the random differences that pop up by chance within a single race.

    • AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet@lemmy.worldOP
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      7 months ago

      Ah, so it’s the race, like what you would put on a government form that they’re disputing, not the fact that we all have ethnicities which make up our person. I guess that makes sense, although it seems like splitting hairs to me. Nationality and ethnicity are already two different concepts. I suppose “race” in this context would be like you said, saying someone is “white” as opposed to saying they’re of English ethnicity. Is that right?

      • NOT_RICK@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        CRT focuses on how this arbitrary idea of race shapes how people are treated, especially on a societal scale. We divide people by wealth, by where they’re born, what gender they are, etc. All of these things affect how people are treated. I find most of the pushback is because some white people feel attacked when someone points to the fact that whiteness is a status.

        • AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet@lemmy.worldOP
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          7 months ago

          I’ve seen push back by people of various backgrounds, not just “white” people, which we shouldn’t actually say, since it’s a construct in direct contradiction with the assertions of CRT. Right? To be clear, my post isn’t meant to be a criticism of the CRT statement. I asked so that I could more clearly understand, which I do now, thanks to you and some other people here. Thank you.

  • Lumun@lemmy.zip
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    7 months ago

    Not_Rick has a great answer but I will add something. Your question about the quote you posted is based on a disagreement about what race is, between you and social scientists. The phrase “we can take a DNA test and get our ancestry, telling us what percentage of what races make up our overall ethnicity” already assumes that genetics = race, end of story. But this is an unfounded assumption. All the test can tell is our genetics. Not_Rick offered some good examples for the counterpoint, that genetics ≠ race. If you disagree with that basic premise then you will always be bothered by modern theories on the subject such as CRT.

    Once you see that race clearly is not just genetics, you can start asking what it truly is and what things do determine one’s race. These are much more interesting questions. For example, a new question might be ‘what has been the historical relationship between ethnicity and “being white” in the US’? And let’s not even start on the ridiculousness that is the census form.

  • Rhynoplaz@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    Not Rick had a great answer, but I wanted to try to contribute simple examples:

    True, skin color is a trait that can be traced by DNA, but so is eye color, or hair color. We could easily create “races” based on “Brown hair vs blonde hair”, “brown eyes vs green eyes”, “people who need glasses vs people that don’t”, “shorties and tall-os”, “those who can roll their tongue, and the inferior swine that were never blessed by the Great tongue father.”

    All traceable in the same way as skin color, but we consider them “features”, and not race defining traits.

    Who decided that? And why?

    • AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet@lemmy.worldOP
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      7 months ago

      Yeah that’s clear. As to the why, I suppose it’s because our brains are wired to categorize things and find patterns everywhere. It is useful to have labels for groups with common traits, although I do recognize the issues with that when it comes to systemic discrimination.

      Edit: thanks for the answer!

  • Hello_there@kbin.social
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    7 months ago

    The DNA test is just testing for genes which tend to be in certain groups - but that’s not necessarily the case - and the lines they draw between groups are arbitrary.

  • joeyv120@ttrpg.network
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    7 months ago

    You’re conflating a few different concepts, and misunderstanding how DNA tests work. …And the only thing any of this has to do with CRT is that these questions are a symptom of it.

    Race, ancestry, and ethnicity are not synonyms.

    Race is “A group of people identified as distinct from other groups because of supposed physical or genetic traits shared by the group. Most biologists and anthropologists do not recognize race as a biologically valid classification, in part because there is more genetic variation within groups than between them.” (American Heritage)

    Ethnicity refers to “people sharing a common cultural or national heritage and often sharing a common language or religion.” (American Heritage)

    Ancestry is biological lineage.

    DNA tests approximate the location on the globe (overlaid with national borders) where your ancestors lived at some point in time. They do this by taking DNA samples of people from all around the world, mapping that with human migration patterns, and comparing your DNA to that data pool to determine the statistical likelihood that you’re ancestors lived in a certain place within a certain time period in human history.

    DNA tests do not determine race (social classification) or ethnicity (cultural classification). DNA tests can determine some physical traits, but not everyone with the same traits belong to what we might consider the same race. And not everyone who considers themselves to be of the same race have the same DNA.

    There is no biological definition for the word “race”.

    • BloodSlut@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      Just nitpicking, but there is a biological definition of race (albeit informal), which you quote the definition of. it’s just that it cant be applied to humans because (as your quote mentions) there tends to be greater variation from within human “races” than there is between some “races”.

      There’s also the issue that there’s no “boundary” or distinction between the human “races”, and an actual race would need to be distinct from the rest of the specie population in order to be recognized as an actual race.

  • commie@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    7 months ago

    we impose meaning on the world. even the idea that each of us is an individual instead of one unit is a construct. so while we can distinguish between different biological markers, the meaning we impart to that distinction is a construct. we can draw the lines arbitrarily (and we do). the distinction of race is no more natural or meaningful than a distinction based on country of origin.

    • AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet@lemmy.worldOP
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      7 months ago

      I’m not sure I follow. Our genetic markers determine how we will look, what types of diseases we’re predisposed to, and that sort of stuff. That is a very real and established reality. How is that not our race? It is more meaningful than our nationality, since it is literally our genetic makeup. I’m not more likely to have lactose intolerance if I’m born in Japan, but am a different ethnicity, but I am more likely if I’m born in the USA and have Japanese ancestry. Is it the historical oppression associated the word “race” that is the issue?

      • commie@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        7 months ago

        disease and lactose intolerance are also constructs. all meaning is constructed. without an observer, there cannot be meaning. you get to decide which constructs you uphold.

  • Shambling Shapes@lemmy.one
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    7 months ago

    Weird. My DNA test didn’t tell me I am X% white, Y% black, Z% Native American. It told me my DNA was a majority match for people that hailed from regions A, B, and C.

    Are you sure you know how ancestry DNA tests work?

  • FishFace@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    The social construct of race is which features we consider important enough by which to categorise people. So in the USA, this is white, black, asian or hispanic. Maybe native. Those categorisations are based on real observable traits, but we could choose other categorisations. It notably groups together traits which we can easily distinguish and pull out as subdivisions, such as south-east Asians.

    We could redraw these groupings: we could for example together north Africans, middle-easterners and Indians, separating out those from southern and central Africa. We could separate Europeans so that Scandinavians, Finns and Slavs are together, separately from western and southern Europeans.

  • MxM111@kbin.social
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    7 months ago

    Your question has nothing to do with CRT, but with science (I am very critical to CRT if you want to know).

    There is a scientific method to classify human beings by genetics. You can group by closeness of genetic code. When you do this you will arrive something similar to ethnicity NOT to race. Race classification is akin classification by eye color, while has some relationship to genetics - it has very little relationship and the genetic code similarities between two of ethnic groups, one has white skin, another have black skin, may be significantly larger than genetics similarity between two groups with black skin. This is why it is unscientific classification.

  • DeweyOxberger@kbin.social
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    7 months ago

    These concepts confuse me. There is clearly a range of variation in physical form of humans. Over time we’ve assigned meaning to some of those variations. Sure you can DNA test and try to correlate those variations to DNA but the underlying idea that assigns meaning to it all is purely made up. Historically, I can’t see anything positive to come out of these constructs and I see nothing useful about them. Ultimately, what does that have to do with CRT (seriously, after all these years I can’t even tell you what CRT is, it seems like an idea for judging bias in legal settings, not something 3rd graders will ever learn).

  • dustyData@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    If you start from false premises, it’s only logical you’ll end with the confused incomprehensible racist rant that is this post.

    • AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet@lemmy.worldOP
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      7 months ago

      What is the false premise in your eyes? How is asking how race is a man made concept when there’s scientific methods to determine our race, racist?

      • dustyData@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        Because there are, categorically, no biological evidence or basis to races in human genetics. Your premise is false and your post is racist bait. The scientific method does not support your racism.

        • AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet@lemmy.worldOP
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          7 months ago

          Your accusations and refusal to actually explain anything in a meaningful way is an example of why people who don’t fully understand a new concept outright reject it, instead of discussing it more until they reach an understanding. But I have other meaningful responses that are actually helpful. Good day.

  • roguetrick@kbin.social
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    7 months ago

    I want you to understand something: what you’re asking about is much more basic than critical theory. You’re talking about the sociological theory of race. I’d avoid trying to understand critical theory without some more basic sociology building blocks because you frankly won’t understand what they’re talking about otherwise.

      • roguetrick@kbin.social
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        7 months ago

        I could only recommend an introductory college course since that’s where I picked up the basics. Hopefully someone else has better resources. An important thing about sociology is understanding the different approaches there are to things and the language those approaches use.

  • half_built_pyramids@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    What color are your eyes?

    Edit: Too scared to answer? I knew you had one of the idiot coward eye colors. That’s why you can’t understand race is a social construct and not genetic. I bet if we measured the crown of your head you’d also fit into the categories that shouldn’t be allowed to reproduce. It’s just genetics.