Lol so your counter to the DNA make up of a pharaoh is “he had red hair”. Let me ask you this...when your selecting literature to read, do they come with pop up art or coloring sections? I’ll keep it simple because your clearly confused.
Where does it say there are no traces of sub Saharan DNA found in Ancient Egyptians/Pharaohs?
I’m actually well schooled on ancient humans and humanoid species. I’ve been fascinated by it since I was a child and have traveled the world visiting archeological sites and caves. You are just doing loaded google searches for confirmation bias. I’m trying to dumb this down as much as possible for your, my liege.
Race is not a social construct, but rather a series of evolutionary changes that take place when groups of people (or other flora and fauna) are separated for long periods of time.
Neanderthals and modern humans were separated for so long that they were considered different species by most scholars yet they were still able to interbreed—which is a bone of contention among some in the field who insist the ability to produce viable offspring means they are part of the same species.
All modern day humans besides subsaharan Africans have between 2-5% of Neanderthal in their DNA. Additionally, as I mentioned earlier, other groups of humans in south Asia and south have traces of Denisovan DNA. SubSaharan Africans have genetic admixture from at least one now extinct humanoid species.
SubSaharan Africans were separated from the rest of the races by as much as 130,000 years. That explains the phenotypic differences and IQ scores (I am not Asian or and Ashkenazi Jew so I don’t have a horse in the race on this topic). As a reference, Neanderthals and modern humans were separated for approximately 200,000 years before coming back in contact and eventually interbreeding. Given another 50,000-100,000 years SubSaharan Africans and other races would have evolved into completely different species incapable of producing viable offspring.
Race gets less clear when you look into the differences beteeen other groups who were in constant contact and among people with mixed genetic for obvious reasons. Isolation is what drives genetic differentiation.