The point I wanted to make about paying for DNA testing to  understand the racial admixture in your genealogy is that at present it's mostly  useful for, say, African-American intellectuals like Harvard's Henry Louis  Gates, who discovered he was about half white. Most white Americans, on the  other hand, are over 95% white, and thus their nonwhite proportions are down in  the margin of error for the test. For example, if the test reports that you are  98% Caucasian and 2% American Indian then you can be assured of, well, not much.  You might have had a few Indian ancestors, or that might be an error caused by  Siberian genes migrating into Europe, or who knows what else. So, the reason  that racial admixture tests tend to be not very exciting for white Americans is  because, in contrast to what we're constantly being lectured, white Americans  aren't very admixed at all.
However, the tests are quite good at looking at large sample sizes of peoples.  So, if they say that white Americans are x% American Indian on the whole, then  that's pretty reliable. 
My published articles are archived at iSteve.com -- Steve Sailer
 
 
 
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