How do you know what names I would or wouldn't recognize?
Just a educated guess, I suppose. Do the names M. Russell Ballard, L. Tom Perry and Dallin H. Oaks mean anything to you? (I meant without googling them, Jose.)
What if it was someone the LDS Church considered to be a prophet?
What if it was? You seem to think we consider our prophets to be infallible if not omnipotent. That isn't the case and it never has been, not even in Joseph Smith's day.
I know those topics quite well.
I see. Well then why don't you talk like you do? I haven't seen you discuss them. If they aren't pertinent to our discussion, perhaps you could at least explain why, because I see them as very significant factors.
If they have female descendants who survive today, then their mtDNA would be easily detectable.
Okay, well this tells me you clearly don't understand after all.
It's not about the female descendants who survive today at all. If you think it is, we need to go back to square one and start over.
I'll try one more time to explain this. Let's say we have a man of Jewish descent who marries a woman of Asian descent. Not one of that man's descendents, whether we're talking the first generation or the hundredth generation, would have his mtDTA. His children would have their mother's mtDNA. Period. There are no exceptions to this rule.
It's not about the female descendents who survive today.
And as the Mormon god said through Joseph Smith and Brigham Young also stated, the Native Americans living just a couple of generations ago were Lamanites. Thus, one would absolutely expect to easily be able to identify their unique genetic markers.
Neither Joseph nor Brigham were alive a couple of generations ago. That aside, why don't you explain to me just
how one would be able to so easily identify their unique genetic markers. You tell me this is all a part of your field and yet everything you say contradicts that.
???????? Seriously? So you're saying that if entire races of people, most of whom still exist to this day were of a specific ancestry a handful of generations ago, you wouldn't expect to find any traces of that ancestry in their genetics? Huh?
Seriously, yes! If Lehi's group had been the only people to be living on the American continent, or had even grown to be a fairly large group before intermarrying, we could undoubtedly expect to see some genetic traces of their lineage, but they weren't, and so we don't.
Except we know that the Mormon god stated very clearly through Joseph Smith that the Native Americans in the western US at that time were Lamanites. Was that wrong?
No, it wasn't "wrong," but it may be misleading, at least the way you're interpreting it. If you were to go to Germany today, you would call the people you came into contact with there "Germans." Well, maybe they wouldn't be Germans at all. Maybe they'd be Austrians or Swiss. It's true that even today, we LDS use the term "Lamanite" in a very general sense to mean "Native Americans." Technically, we're wrong in doing so, but we're doing nothing different than you'd be doing by referring to a person whose grandparents were Austrian but whose family had migrated to Germany a couple of generations ago as "German."
There are a handful of nuclear DNA analyses from skeletal remains and extant individuals (EDIT: A little checking turns up more than I was aware of, and none of them indicate anything like a middle eastern ancestry for any Native American group).
I'm not the slightest bit surprised. I'd be surprised, on the other hand, if they did.
It's called statistical sampling. As long as proper procedures are followed, you can be reasonably sure you're getting a representative sample of the population.
You need to do a bit more research before you make a statement you cannot substantiate.
Supporting data? Woo hoo! We were right!!
Why do I feel like I'm debating with an eight year old?