Talk:Gomer

Some of these Table of Nations related pages are really frustrating me
Saying Gomer is the ancestor of all the Celts would be inaccurate (Celts refer to many people, at 3 distinct groups in the British isles alone are all called Celts) Gomer is the ancestor not of the British isles Celts (Those are chiefly Magogite or of Javan, with some possible Phoneacean influence) but the ones on Mainland Europe, France and parts of Spain, Italy and Germany. This page's statement that Gomer had nothing to do with Europe is really absurd, I think Bill Cooper's After The Flood ought to be required reading before addressing these subjects, Cooper wasn't perfect but at least he had common sense. The Cimmerians are also undisputedly Gomerites.--MithirandirOlorin 10:07, 4 June 2011 (PDT)

It seems allot of people in charge of these Creationwiki pages are want to completely dismantle the traditional affiliation of Japheth with Indo-Europeans. His descendants are not limited to Indo-Europeans, and perhaps not quite all Indo-Europeans are of Japheth, but predominately they are. The Idea that Javan and others where ancestors of some Far Eastern peoples and not just the Greeks is very interesting to me, but that they are also ancestors to Europeans is pretty obvious. It's Japheth not Shem or Ham who the Greeks worshiped as the 1st born of the Titans.--MithirandirOlorin 10:10, 4 June 2011 (PDT)

"A case can be made that Japheth was the progenitor of yellow and brown-skinned peoples of Asia, not the light and olive-skinned people of Europe" The Ethnic features where determined by where they settle,d not who they descended from. We know the Indo-Erupeans have a common ancestry not because they look the same, no the Indo and the Eurpean branches look quite different. The reason is the clear evidence of their various languages and mythologies deriving from a common Proto-IndoErupean Language and Mythology. And part of that mythology is Japheth, pra-Japati in Sanskrit, Iapetos in Greek, Iupater in Latin ect.--MithirandirOlorin 05:51, 27 April 2013 (PDT)