NY Times, July 11, 2003 OP-ED COLUMNIST Is Race Real? By NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF OXFORD, England I had my DNA examined by a prominent genetic specialist here, and what do you know! It turns out I'm African-American. The mitochondria in my cells show that I'm descended from a matriarch who lived in Africa, possibly in present-day Ethiopia or Kenya. O.K., this was 70,000 years ago, and she seems to be a common ancestor of all Asians as well as all Caucasians. Still, these kinds of DNA analyses illuminate the raging scientific debate about whether there is anything real to the notion of race. "There's no genetic basis for any kind of rigid ethnic or racial classification at all," said Bryan Sykes, the Oxford geneticist and author of "The Seven Daughters of Eve." "I'm always asked is there Greek DNA or an Italian gene, but, of course, there isn't. . . . We're very closely related." Likewise, The New England Journal of Medicine once editorialized bluntly that "race is biologically meaningless." Take me. Dr. Sykes looked at a sequence of my mitochondrial DNA to place me on a kind of global family tree. It would have been nice to learn that my ancestors hailed from a village on Loch Ness, but ancestry can almost never be pegged that precisely, and I appear to be a mongrel. One of my variants, for example, is scattered among people in Finland, Poland, Armenia, the Netherlands, Scotland, Israel, Germany and Norway. full: http://www.nytimes.com/2003/07/11/opinion/11KRIS.html -- The Marxism list: www.marxmail.org