Talking Dating, Children & Marriage with Gift, Banele & Katz

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ความคิดเห็น • 17

  • @Syamthembu5
    @Syamthembu5 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Nyc 1 Penuel 💯🙌🙏 please man allow more guys to come share knowledge I like this platform 🙏💯

  • @victorvelaningongoma8705
    @victorvelaningongoma8705 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I have the same story.Muslim revert and have 8 kids from different moms. Interesting story - you can almost relate (am 42)

  • @sibusisokhumalo3013
    @sibusisokhumalo3013 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Kanti u gift unangaki he sounds 15,ungashadi my brother..the institution of marriage is at the detriment of men,we lose every time

  • @amahlebana5952
    @amahlebana5952 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    31:25 the guy is right, most of people in prison were raised by single moms, yet it's the men that get the blame, maybe if some of men were allowed to raise their children this wouldn't be a problem

  • @fionasmith6686
    @fionasmith6686 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    22:49 Penuel. Is that primarily the reason why you don't want to get married ?
    What about the fact that you don't believe in the institution of marriage?
    Regarding gene question, it sounds off, it makes more sense that the mother passes more of her genes to the child. The child inherits 50% of genes from mother and father on chromosomal level and then the child inherits the mother's mitochondrial genes. The mitochondrial genes are a separate set or organelle that you find outside of the nucleus [which is where our chromosomes (DNA) reside]. The father doesn't pass on mitochondrial genes, only the mother. This information you can find in pretty much any genetics textbook that explains the process of meiosis. I haven't read actual scientific papers on this but this is just knowledge that have gleened from from my basic knowledge I've learned in school about genetics.
    When you zoom in from chromosomal level to an allele level, either side (mother or father) can have dominant genes where a certain characteristic you've inherited manifests itself more on a phenotypical level. But it still remains that you've inherited both sets of genes.

  • @thisiscolbert3007
    @thisiscolbert3007 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    My head is spinning, I don't understand his explanation of double-barrel surname.
    Link ye podcast ya Katz please 🫡

    • @manny8042
      @manny8042 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Same bro. I don't get it

  • @justanobody8470
    @justanobody8470 ปีที่แล้ว

    an argument as to why the mans surname is the one in use could be that the issue of lobola

  • @Lynnh_trades
    @Lynnh_trades ปีที่แล้ว +3

    My guy still no pants 😅…. Let me just subscribe …..make u earn money and buy 1 pair 😅

    • @giftnduma
      @giftnduma ปีที่แล้ว +1

      🤣🤣🤣why u doing me like this mara

  • @kairo2523
    @kairo2523 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I can't find a source which states or somehow disagrees that we genetically inherent 70% make up from our father. I do thou find a 2018 study which says"While women do inherit 50% of their DNA from each parent, men inherit about 51% from their mother and only 49% from their father." but it's outdated info so we can't really judge from that.
    Anyone with any information to this. It sounds really interesting.

    • @fionasmith6686
      @fionasmith6686 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      It's true it makes sense. I don't think it's outdated information. That information is fundamental, it's like a rule almost, it's an order which takes place in meiosis in mammals (and many other organisms on earth with an exception of some plants). We inherit 50% of each chromosomal set from the mother and father. If you inherit anything significantly more or less than that set, you'll have very serious genetic disorders. The 49 % in a boy comes from the fact that a boy's sex chromosomes are not the same size (XY) as the girls chromosomes (XX). So your father ends up passing on only a fraction of a whole chromosome when it comes to determining the sex of the child. So the 70% from the father is completely inaccurate information. If anything, the father passes on less genes, and I'm not even taking into account the mitochondrial genes that only the mother exclusively passes on.
      I think what he was referring to in the video, he was probably talking about a situation😅 where he thinks that the father possesses more dominant genes than the mother. But it isn't necessarily true because it can go both ways. The mother and father can have dominant genes.

    • @katlegokatzngwenyakwamthim7835
      @katlegokatzngwenyakwamthim7835 ปีที่แล้ว

      ​@@fionasmith6686 I've been researching and the information keeps changing,but I'll forward the information😅😅😅

    • @fionasmith6686
      @fionasmith6686 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@katlegokatzngwenyakwamthim7835 what aspect of that information do you feel is different or changes ? I think when it comes to this it's context dependant and so it can be very confusing for a person who doesn't have a background in biology or genetics.