Yes...you're right...we should all endorse turning earth into "planet of the apes". If that doesn't work out...we can try putting dogs in charge.
Black people...Negroids...are up to 5% genetically DIFFERENT from EVERY other race. That is 1/20th of a difference. That's more of a difference than a chimpanzee. We can use some PIG parts in "humans" but we can't cross between black and the other races in many cases.
"What animal has the most similar DNA to humans?
Apes, Monkeys, And Humans. Humans are most closely related to the great apes of the family Hominidae. This family includes orangutans, chimpanzees, gorillas, and bonobos. Of the great apes, humans share 98.8 percent of their DNA with bonobos and chimpanzees."
"Neanderthal-derived DNA accounts for an estimated 1–4% of the Eurasian genome, but it is significantly absent or uncommon in the genome of most groups in Sub-Saharan Africa."
EVERY race is as different from blacks as we are to Neanderthals. As different as we are to Chimpanzees.
Go see for yourself...the organ donation centers clamor for minorities to donate organs for their own people who aren't compatible. Even the Red Cross wants minorities to donate so their own can use the blood. Donated blood is often broken down into its component parts where it is recombined to be compatible with the recipient.
"On average, patients from the Black, Asian and minority ethnic communities will wait a year longer for a kidney transplant than a white patient, due to the lack of suitable organs. Blood and tissue types need to match for a successful transplant and organs from people from the same ethnic background are more likely to be a close match."
Organ donation and ethnicity | Organ Donation - English
"Although organ transplants can occur between races, matches are more difficult to achieve for blacks. Transplant recipients must have similar genes in their immune systems to those of the donor. Otherwise, the body will reject the organ.
"The genetic makeup is so broad-based in African-Americans," said Dr. Marquetta Faulkner, chief of nephrology at Meharry Medical College. "African-Americans have a big mix of Caucasian, African — it just depends on your genetic makeup.""
Blacks face tougher time finding kidney for transplant