No, that's not what I said.
You said Jews are a nation/people, I said Jews share similar DNA. Jews are varied in about 3 groups and that's about it. Ashkenazi, Sefardic and Mizrahi are all considered Jewish. You can only be classifed into these categories if you have a Jewish parent, aka share a similar DNA.
In other words, if the mother is Jewish (even if the father is not), the person is Jewish. If the mother is NOT Jewish (even if the father is) the person is not Jewish.
So G-d said that a Jew can only go by the mother? why would someone whom invented DNA make such a rule?
Perhaps because it's not based on DNA. You made that up
Ha, I wish. I would be quite the celebrated scientist had I discovered that race is genetic.
You admit that traditionally the Jewish people define themselves as a nation through the mother.
Traditionally Jewish people also practice Hasidisim, but it's got nothing to do with the actual religion nor classification of race.
So who are you or me or anyone else to change that or to say that they are going to be a Jew anyway even not through the mother.
Many liberal Jews and denominations are now ageeing that the father also counts. I don't understand how in the eyes of traditional Jews a convert counts more than someone with a Jewish father, grandmother and grandfather.
That's like telling MENSA you're a member even though they repeatedly tell you you don't meet their criteria and have to be selected in order to join (not to imply anything about you personally)....
Race is not MENSA and not something you control or ask to join. I will repeat, tradition does not refine DNA, it defines it. Human definitions, in my eyes, are worthless.
A gentile with a Jewish father is
only a non-Jew in the eyes of other Jews, which is pretty sad.
Think about this also, how does having a Jewish mother devalue the gentile father? in science, a child can take the DNA of both parents depending on which one has stronger genes. How does mere tradition change that?
This tradition dates back to a time before DNA tests, when you couldn't always know who the real father was. I assume this is also observed by the lineage tree in the bible, which doesn't really change much.