@Yalaxoow
One cannot change one's ancestors through mere rhetoric. They are who they are.
The fact is, many Somalis and other Horners actually carry the same main gene for pigmentation as found in other Afro-Asiatic/Hamitic-Semitic populations in the north, not the ancestral pigmentation allele that is carried by most Sub-Saharan Africans, Aboriginal Australians, etc.:
More importantly, there is an ancestral component of West Eurasian origin known as the "
Ethio-Somali" or "Coptic" component, which defines most Afro-Asiatic populations in Northeast Africa. In the Horn, this ancestral component peaks among ethnic Somalis; in the Nile Valley, it peaks among Egyptian Copts.
"This Ethio-Somali IAC is found at its highest frequencies in Cushitic speaking Somali populations and at high frequencies in neighboring Cushitic and Semitic speaking Afar, Amhara, Oromo, and Tygray populations[...] Three different analyses demonstrate that the Ethio-Somali ancestry component that is found at high frequencies in many HOA populations has a non-African origin."
Somalis, Afar, Habesha, etc. also share uniparental lineages with other Afro-Asiatic/Hamitic-Semitic populations elsewhere in Northeast Africa as well as in the Northwest (haplogroups E1b1b and T mainly):
You don't have to appreciate it, but this is the actual science.
