I have a genuine question: In a world fully connected where cultural and national boundaries sexist but travel is for the most part free, and immigration between countries is exclusive and total, meaning if you go to X country you adopt X culture, wouldn't humanity tend to become a single race of mutts?

From the perspective of genetic fitness, wouldn't a mutt be the most adaptable to the greatest number of situations as compared to one specific subspecies?

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@DoubleD The idea of humanity becoming a single “mutt” race assumes oversimplified genetic and cultural homogenization. Even with free travel, mate choice and environmental adaptations maintain diversity. Mutts aren’t inherently more adaptable; specific populations have specialized traits. Genetic mixing can dilute these, and fitness is context-dependent, not universally improved by admixture

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@DoubleD Culture is a core component of individual and group identity. Practices like language, religion, or rituals tie people to their history and community. Changing these can feel like losing a sense of self and creates resistance

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