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100% English



100% English was a Channel 4 television programme shown in November 2006 in the United Kingdom. It looked at the genetic makeup of English people who considered themselves to be ethnically English and found that while all had an ethnic makeup similar to people of European descent, a minority discovered genetic markers from North Africa and the Middle East from several generations before they were born. The presenter was Andrew Graham-DixonThe test results were interpreted by DNAPrint Genomics, based in Sarasota, Florida[1].

The concept of the show was to:

Take eight people - all of whom are convinced they are 100% English. Then submit a sample of their DNA to a series of state-of-the-art tests... Lord Tebbit, Garry Bushell and Carol Thatcher are among the participants who have agreed to place their genetic make-up under the microscope.. [2]

Gary Bushell, who appeared on the show in good-faith, later criticised the slant of the programme and the portrayal of English people. On his website he stated: "Only Nazis, and it appears C4, think of national identity in terms of racial purity... Besides, you could apply the same tests to the French or Italians and get similar results, but no-one questions their right to nationhood."

Bushell also criticised DNAPrint Genomics stating their tests had a 28% error margin for European DNA and that the same DNA sample often produced radically different results. He also stated that most anthropologists disagreed with DNAPrint Genomic's racial classifications and questioned the reliability of the markers that they had used to designate African DNA.[3]

References

  1. ^ http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2087-2426968_2,00.html Article in the Times, readable online
  2. ^ The Herald (David Belcher) A rare breed – and pure annoying with it 14 November 2006
  3. ^ Bushell On The Box

See also

 
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "100%_English". A list of authors is available in Wikipedia.
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