That's again a pointless discussion. You're clutching at straws, the battle of ten kings is not IVC vs Aryan war. It is simply an Aryan conflict that resulted in Bharata victory. By all means Bharata tribe also had mtDNA U2B2 from Rakhigarhi DNA, given the DNA study you quote did not come from Harappa, but Rakhigarhi in Haryana. Anyway you cut it, this doesn't prove your theory.
Not a pointless discussion at all. The DNA from Rakhigiri was representative of the IVC at the time, highly probable to be similar to the composition in Harappa itself (you're obfuscating AGAIN BTW by trying to now dissociate different parts of the IVC from one another). The point being made is simple - prior to the arrival of the Aryans as a mass migration (+/- aggressive invasion) into the subcontinent, their DNA was simply non-existent among IVC samples that we know of. Aryans were not somehow "representative" of the IVC - they usurped it. Every single way the genetic data is "cut", it proves
externality of Aryans. I would argue it also proves their invasiveness, like a cancer - but you may well differ.
??? Self contradictory to the point above
Well duh! The tribe living in Harappa was Vedic tribe mentioned in Rig Veda. Your entire argument is trying to prove they were IVC remnants. They could be, and proves my point that Rig Vedic tribes are native to the region. The more you try, you're unknowingly proving my point lol!
Not really "self contradictory" at all. There was an intermediary population living on the ruins of Harappa, regarded to be more agrarian than the city builders of the antecedent intact IVC. This itself likely constituted a combination of migrants from multiple origin points and also some of the original Iranics of the IVC itself.
In fact, the Rakhigiri data in Shinde's paper CONFIRMS this, rather than refuting it. The Rakhigiri specimen is from 2500-2000 BCE, the mature phase of the IVC. Collapse of the IVC began in 1900 BCE. Just when exactly are you postulating that "Aryan DNA" sneaked into the genome of the IVC if it WAS NOT THERE 100 years before the collapse of the IVC? If you bother to read the paper, it is even speculated that the female specimen may have been fleeing from other IVC sites due to climate effects.
It is your own researcher Shinde who actually REFUTES "Out of India" theory comprehensively, the more you read the works in question! It is duly confirmed, to anyone reading the data without Saffronised spectacles on, that (a) the Aryans (and whatever they brought with them) were foreign, and (b) the IVC itself was Iranic origin, and (c) NO substantive Aryan genomic influence existed in populations inhabiting Harappa until after the collapse of the IVC.
Modern genetic compositions for reference:
Let me elaborate further on the IVC itself. The IVC is self-evidently similar to the civilisations of the westerly located fertile crescent, not some sudden transformation of the local subcontinental elephant riders of the time or even more bizarrely still (as south Indian heritage hunters have suddenly added their worthy opinion to the calculus), some dravidian offshoot from the southerly located tree swinging community.
You can honestly look me in the eye and tell me that by some stroke of magic, the AASI hordes who had been eating bananas and building straw huts suddenly built a city 5000 years ago and morphed into this advanced urban society? Give me a break. The IVC was clearly built by migrants from the west.
Yes, the AASI marvelled upon the brilliance of these Iranic folk, and they mingled with them to create a new IVC stock lineage, but to suggest this magical transformation occurred within native tree swingers is a self serving delusion that is only marketable to sanghees and/or southies of similarly confused disposition.
You're trying so hard (and failing) to prove Sanskrit is some foreign language.
we have discussed the genomics, religion, culture, and language - all of which have demonstrable non-subcontinental derivation. Of all of these, THE MOST EVIDENCE of foreign derivation lies with the language of Sanskrit. It is wholly classified as an "Indo-European" language, different from "Dravidian" languages that are preserved in South India. There is more commonality between Sanskrit and Gallic and Polish than between Sanskrit and Tamil. It is a longstanding joke in linguistic circles that a billion strong horde in the year 2026 actually believe Sanskrit evolved from local languages. Invaders from Eurasian Steppe brought its precursors with them and then moulded a locally applied derivative of this foreign precursor tongue - that derivative being what you know as Sanskrit.
Open a new thread specifically regarding the linguistic derivation of Sanskrit if desired and I will join you there to spam more on this topic.
Most of the Pakistanis? In this very forum I could find Pakistanis who oppose this idea of glorifying ancient Pakistan. Even you argued with them. This whole ancient Pakistan kang is an elite fad. Why is most Buddhist stupas out there without nose, why do you break these historical things. So I don't know man, your own people don't really care but keep fighting tho.
I agree wholeheartedly that many uneducated and uncouth individuals have done plenty of harm to our pre-islamic history in Pakistan - that is mercifully changing now. But if you understood what I was trying to say, I was actually alluding to ANY foreign ideology to the subcontinent, which includes Islam by default. My point was that an overwhelming majority of Pakistanis must, by definition, be amenable and adaptable to a foreign ideology, i.e. rejection of an ideology is not automatic due to its foreign-ness. Rather, adoption of ideology is
merit based, which holds true for any country i can think of, with one obvious exception.
Your last point is expanding on the Iranian perspective - I know Iranians who have studied this field and they are fully cognisant of the Aryan contribution to their national composition. But I don't wish to derail the thread further so we will simply have to differ on that, subjectively, unless an Iranian member himself wishes to comment further.