Male colorblindness more wide spread.

NomadicSky

Banned
What if the genes for red green colorblindness were far more common, something like 99% of the male population and 23% of the female population?

What would be the cultural impacts on such a change? And I believe this is possible you just need the genes to be far more widespread.
 
What if the genes for red green colorblindness were far more common, something like 99% of the male population and 23% of the female population?

What would be the cultural impacts on such a change? And I believe this is possible you just need the genes to be far more widespread.

I'm red-green colorblind and the only way it has ever effected my life was when I entered the Army and had a very short list of jobs to choose.
 

NomadicSky

Banned
I don't think it would really effect peoples individual life. What it will change is color and the meaning and representation there of.
 
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