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I've seen the photo. So your claim is that anthropologists, like yesteryou, once believed that 100% of 'black' people had darker skin than 100% of 'white' people, with zero overlap? This seems very implausible.
That's no coincidence. American authorities typically group most Middle Easterners with Europeans as 'Caucasians.'
But being of Swedish descent does have biological meaning and significance, albeit to a lesser degree than being of African descent. So what can be meant by the claim that race is 'merely' like being Swedish? Is it merely a fuzzy quantitative shift, not a categorical disagreement about what 'race' is or how it fits into the natural world?
Allow me to attempt to rationally reconstruct what the younger you and the straw-anthropologist believed. Based on the evidence that changed your mind, I gather that your old view was not that racial distinctions were nonexistent, but that they were biologically superficial. The obvious phenotypic variations very nearly exhausted the distinctness of each racial group. So when you advocate racialism, what you're really trying to draw attention to is that race is more than skin deep, that there are many many genetic traits, some very significant, that break down along racial lines of various sorts. And this is indeed an important point, though framing it as a dispute over whether 'races' are 'real' is, to put it mildly, misleading.
I don't know about anthropologists. I thought I explained that my yesterme saw the opposite of what you just said: saw that some people labelled 'black' had skins as light (or almost as light) as 'white' people. So I saw the dividing line between 'black' and 'white' to be utterly arbitrary, a line arbitrarily drawn in some continuum, and which best seemed to identify cultural not biological diff... (read more)