Egyptus:To clear some things up. Egyptians are not black nor were they ever.
Nubians were black and they were at war with Egypt for most of it's history.
How do I know this? I am an Egyptian and before one of you Atlanta Black Star morons comes in to say something like "you're an Arab Egyptian and not a real Egyptian", know that you're mental.
Egyptians today simply speak Arabic, but are still Egyptians with Egyptian blood as they always were.
In fact the DNA of ancient Egyptians compared to modern ones was actually closer to Europeans. Does that mean we're Europeans?
No, just also means we're not black.
Here are a few arguments I hear allot so I'll answer them for time's sake.
Egypt is in Africa and so it's black: Egypt is in northern Africa and like other northern Africans had little contact with sub-Saharan Africans.
They are 2 different cultural regions of the earth, much like how Europeans, Indians, and Asians all live in the continent of Eurasia.
Egyptians are not black for simply existing in the same huge lang mass.
Ancient Egyptians had dreds: We both have shitty hair and shitty hair makes dreds.. thankfully shampoo has saved us.
There are drawing of Ancient Egyptians being black: The sun shows no mercy to Egypt and since most Egyptians were farmers who spent all day outside we got serious tans.
Those tans thanks to our skin normally being a sort of yellow can make us look brown or even dark brown but never black. If you see a pitch black person in a drawing then he was a Nubian.
Ancient Egypt was called Kemet which means "black land":
Yes, because the soil around the Nile was rich and fertile to the point it was pitch black.
People name their nations after their land not their own skin colors.
Much like how some people call Scotland the highlands and not the pale lands.
Here's a link for the ancient Egyptian DNA thingy:
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/science/archaeology/ancient-egyptians-europeans-related-claims-a7763866.htmlHope this educated some of you, but who am I kidding.
We Wuz Kangz 'n' sheeit right?