>>12763320
Okay. This is my dads % line.
My dad brought down % compared to my mom.
So whatever Alexander family is , scott-irish.
I think I can somehow <accessthe structure based on my bloodline.
It is not <justthere blood.
It is the <combination>
Of <virginia pure bloodwith <plymouth rock pure blood>
The Virgina family is <scott-irishbut the Plymoth group is <english>
soooo
something is odd here.
my father is more <whitethan my mother.
why does my mother have more % than me but my father's skin tone was <brighter
I don't know if the DNA is wrong or what.
My mother comes from the first families of virginia officially based on DNA
but her father, who was higher % than her, was the complexion of my father.
i had this idea that my father was <stuckserving my <mother>
my neadrathal % would explain that
but
something doesn't add up
Who is this guy? This is my fathers family. But my father was not scottish if I can tell. My mother is like 30% scottish and I am 12%.
So something does not make … good sense yet. I will figure it out.
I think you have multiple <families>, <bloodlinefamilies
There is nothing wrong with having the blood.
The issue occurs when the % controls you or you refuse to reject the <genetic power structure>
So one of them is a native and the other a ….. white dude?
obvious <hybridizationhere.
but from <whatto <what>
You all want to know about <cabal>
this is what I got.
okay. that document below and assocaiited stuff is john and vicy, the progenitors. Best documented stuff I have, there are like 8 volumes compiled and shit. This other guy does it, one of my dad's cousins.
https://books.google.com/books/about/The_Alexanders_of_Plum_Creek.html?id=mVwxAAAAMAAJ
https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Alexander-1784
https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Roebuck-20
John Alexander was born about 1758 in Virginia colony (probably in the part of Lunenburg County, that became Mecklenburg County in 1764) during the turbulent years preceding the Revolutionary War. He died 5 May 1854 in Lauderdale County, Mississippi, near Meridan where he lived with his youngest daughter, Sarah Gilcrease. According to family legend, his parents were of Scots-Irish descent. It is uncertain if John's middle name was indeed Wesley. However, his first and eldest child, Jonathan Mathew, did have a son that was named Wesley born Dec 1825.
John Alexander was born about 1758 in Virginia colony (probably in the part of Lunenburg County, that became Mecklenburg County in 1764) during the turbulent years preceding the Revolutionary War. He died 5 May 1854 in Lauderdale County, Mississippi, near Meridan where he lived with his youngest daughter, Sarah Gilcrease. According to family legend, his parents were of Scots-Irish descent. It is uncertain if John's middle name was indeed Wesley. However, his first and eldest child, Jonathan Mathew, did have a son that was named Wesley born Dec 1825.