There is the cohen i.e. jew gene, in a sense -
Y-chromosomal Aaron
Y-chromosomal Aaron is the name given to the hypothesized most recent common ancestor of the patrilineal Jewish priestly caste known as Kohanim. According to the traditional understanding of the Hebrew Bible, this ancestor was Aaron, the brother of Moses.
from wikipaedia
This page was last archived 4 years ago
Again by me now
web.archive.org won't let me save it because it says it's been saved 11,251 times already today. This is the most-recent (which is before today) that it has -
web.archive.org
and also
Extended Y chromosome haplotypes resolve multiple and unique lineages of the Jewish priesthood
2009 Nov;126(5):707-17.
doi: 10.1007/s00439-009-0727-5. Epub 2009 Aug 8.
Abstract
It has been known for over a decade that a majority of men who self report as members of the Jewish priesthood (Cohanim) carry a characteristic Y chromosome haplotype termed the Cohen Modal Haplotype (CMH). The CMH has since been used to trace putative Jewish ancestral origins of various populations. However, the limited number of binary and STR Y chromosome markers used previously did not provide the phylogenetic resolution needed to infer the number of independent paternal lineages that are encompassed within the Cohanim or their coalescence times. Accordingly, we have genotyped 75 binary markers and 12 Y-STRs in a sample of 215 Cohanim from diverse Jewish communities, 1,575 Jewish men from across the range of the Jewish Diaspora, and 2,099 non-Jewish men from the Near East, Europe, Central Asia, and India. While Cohanim from diverse backgrounds carry a total of 21 Y chromosome haplogroups, 5 haplogroups account for 79.5% of Cohanim Y chromosomes. The most frequent Cohanim lineage (46.1%) is marked by the recently reported P58 T->C mutation, which is prevalent in the Near East. Based on genotypes at 12 Y-STRs, we identify an extended CMH on the J-P58* background that predominates in both Ashkenazi and non-Ashkenazi Cohanim and is remarkably absent in non-Jews. The estimated divergence time of this lineage based on 17 STRs is 3,190 +/- 1,090 years. Notably, the second most frequent Cohanim lineage (J-M410*, 14.4%) contains an extended modal haplotype that is also limited to Ashkenazi and non-Ashkenazi Cohanim and is estimated to be 4.2 +/- 1.3 ky old. These results support the hypothesis of a common origin of the CMH in the Near East well before the dispersion of the Jewish people into separate communities, and indicate that the majority of contemporary Jewish priests descend from a limited number of paternal lineages.
from PubMed, National Library of Medicine, National Centre for Biotechnology Information
This page was last archived 5 years ago
Again by me
It has been known for over a decade that a majority of men who self report as members of the Jewish priesthood (Cohanim) carry a characteristic Y chromosome haplotype termed the Cohen Modal Haplotype (CMH). The CMH has since been used to trace putative Jewish ancestral origins of various...
web.archive.org
For a simpler understanding, I put it into ChatGPT. It has been called kosher and I know it is programmed to be unbiased and to promote niceness about all. Previously, it, or another AI chatbot, started siding with Nazi principles, until it was
shut down!, of course. Below, I won't copy and paste the same block of text above. I'll begin with ChatGPT's response.
My Conversation with an AI Chatbot
Cohen Modal Haplotype Study
Here’s a simplified breakdown of the abstract from PubMed, written in a way that’s easier to understand:
What’s the topic?
Researchers are studying Jewish men who identify as Cohanim — the traditional Jewish priesthood, said to descend from Aaron, the brother of Moses.
What did we already know?
- Most men who identify as Cohanim share a specific Y-chromosome pattern (since the Y-chromosome is passed from father to son).
- This pattern is called the Cohen Modal Haplotype (CMH).
- It’s been used to explore whether certain people or populations might have Jewish ancestral roots.
What was the problem before?
- Earlier studies didn’t use enough genetic markers to clearly understand:
- How many different male ancestors the Cohanim actually had.
- When those common ancestors lived.
What did this study do differently?
- Researchers used:
- 75 binary genetic markers (like switches: on or off).
- 12 STRs (Short Tandem Repeats) – these are like repeating patterns in DNA that can vary a lot between people.
- They studied DNA from:
- 215 Cohanim from different Jewish communities.
- 1,575 other Jewish men (not Cohanim).
- 2,099 non-Jewish men from places like the Middle East, Europe, and India.
What did they find?
- Cohanim belong to 21 different Y-chromosome groups, but 5 of those account for nearly 80% of all Cohanim.
- The most common lineage among Cohanim (46.1%) has a specific mutation called P58 T->C, which is also common in the Middle East.
- A more detailed version of the CMH (based on 12 STRs) was found mostly in Ashkenazi and non-Ashkenazi Cohanim, but not in non-Jews.
- The estimated age of this lineage is about 3,190 years old, give or take about 1,090 years.
- The second most common lineage (J-M410*, 14.4% of Cohanim) also appears only in Cohanim (Ashkenazi and non-Ashkenazi), and is about 4,200 years old.
What does it all mean?
- Most modern Cohanim trace back to a small number of male ancestors.
- These ancestors likely lived in the Middle East, before Jewish communities spread across the world.
- The CMH and these lineages support the tradition that many Cohanim descend from a common ancient origin.
Let me know if you'd like a version even more broken-down (e.g. for a teen audience or no science background), or a diagram to go with it.
So... it is saying there is a "jew gene" which obviously is present only in jews and not present in non-jews?
Good question — and an important one, because this kind of genetics language can easily be misunderstood.
First, what it does not say:
It is not saying that there is a single "Jew gene" that all Jewish people have and non-Jewish people do not. There is no such thing as a "Jew gene" in the way you might say there's a gene that codes for eye colour or blood type.
What it is saying:
- Among Cohanim (the priestly caste in Jewish tradition, believed to descend from Aaron), a large number share the same Y-chromosome pattern (called the Cohen Modal Haplotype or CMH).
- This CMH shows up almost only in Cohanim — whether Ashkenazi (European) or non-Ashkenazi (Middle Eastern, North African, etc.).
- That Y-chromosome pattern is very rare or absent in non-Jewish populations.
- This suggests that many Cohanim may trace back to a small number of male ancestors, from about 3,000–4,000 years ago, in the Near East (roughly where biblical Israel was).
Why this matters:
The Y-chromosome is passed down from father to son mostly unchanged. So if many Cohanim around the world today share the same Y-pattern, it suggests they may have inherited it from the same ancient male ancestor — which matches the traditional claim of descent from Aaron.
What about other Jewish people?
- Not all Jewish men carry the CMH — only a subset, especially those who identify as Cohanim.
- Jewish identity isn't just genetic; it's also religious, cultural, and historical.
- Other Jewish groups (Leviim, Israelites, etc.) have more diverse Y-chromosome lineages, often reflecting centuries of migrations and intermarriage.
So, in short:
- There's no single "Jew gene."
- But some Jewish men who identify as Cohanim have a distinct Y-chromosome pattern that supports the idea of shared ancient ancestry.
- That pattern is rare in non-Jews, which helps researchers trace ancient population movements and test historical claims.
If you’d like a simple analogy or visual explanation, I can help with that too.
[END]
It says there's no such thing as a jew-only gene, but if you saw it, can you remember what I copied from another chat recently? This -
You said you use a large corpus of general literary and conceptual writing. Does that mean if there was something excluded in that corpus, then without user input and without searching the Internet, you'd not generate that missing thing since you don't have any access to it? Such as if I created a word, you wouldn't be able to use that yourself, unless you were prompted to create a word, which I presume you would refer to prefix and suffix and meaning to form a new word?
Yes—your understanding is entirely accurate.
Here’s how it breaks down:
1. My Outputs Are Constrained by My Training Data
I was trained on a broad and diverse dataset made up of books, websites, articles, and other written text, but not everything is included. If something was excluded from that training data—whether due to copyright restrictions, rarity, recency, or simple omission—then:
- I will not have direct knowledge of it.
- I cannot reproduce it unless you introduce it into our conversation.
- I cannot invent that exact missing item unless I am asked to create something like it (e.g. “make up a new word that means X”).
The jew is not going to share things. If things are discovered, then tough. Gutted. Poor, little jew. It lies about what's in its "holy" books when asked by Goyim, which is what its holy books instruct it to do, as well; it has jew doctors working in certain areas to avoid and prevent things from happening. Of course, ChatGPT would not be given information about such things, so when it says "jew gene does not exist", it is basing that on what its training database contains. Also if you notice a mistake or a contradiction that ChatGPT makes and then question it about that, it would reply with something similar to, "You're absolutely right to highlight that. Thanks for catching it. Here's the corrected version", or similar. It says there's no such thing as a "jew gene" but then says the jew chromosomes are prevalent in cohanim (jew "priesthood") mostly, and not in non-jews, so... it does seem a bit like a basic contradiction, but I didn't tell it to clarify. A remarkable absense of the cohanim/jew "priest" chromosomal information in non-jews doesn't need a calculator that is powered by a nuclear rod to reply and tell me the same. I enabled "think longer/consider" and I did tell it to verify or refute and correct what it said above, and it said it's all correct.
This "Aaron", brother of "Moses", of course doesn't exist - neither of them did. The jew pretends that it came from a faerie tale character. Remember everyone, except for Moses and its family, were drowned by "god", so that means they all had incest to "repopulate Earth". That's biological suicide; therefore, fake. Not real. Aaron also is fake, not real. The jew lies and pretends it came from a fake, not real character in a faerie tale.
The "Primordial Eve", where all Humans are supposed to come from, sharing a common ancestor, does not prove "Eve", nor "Adam", existed. "Adam" comes from the Sumerian "Adamu" which means "Man". This Primordial Eve was just named after the faeire tale character Eve, just like the Goldilocks Zone (which is actually the Baby Bear Zone, being
just right) is named after a faerie tale character. Just as Humans did not come from highly-incestuous Adam and Eve and family, then later, highly-incestuous Moses and family - because incest is suicide - likewise, the jew did not come from the farie tale character Aaron.
Remember that this jew chromosomal information is characteristic of the jew "priesthood". Remember also that it is remarkably absent in non-jews. "12 STRs (Short Tandem Repeats) – these are like repeating patterns in DNA that can vary a lot between people" but don't exist in non-jews. The SRTs vary a lot between people, but exist only in the jew. It has also been said on JoS (before the migration to ToZ) that the highest top/most-pure jews don't mix racially with Humans...