>>633419
I did, it's a small biological anomaly, not enough to say women, or even black women are God beings that can reproduce asexually 0.5% of the time. The same goes for the other small pieces of science propping up his deification of black women, like gender development starting with female sex organs, or male chromosomes being smaller. Regarding that Bartholin Gland, there are also the biology in humans for pheromones except it's missing the driving piece, but that doesn't mean that we can be attracted just by smells, even if women can smell the attractive symmetry of men's faces through their sweat https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/are-human-pheromones-real/ . This " maybe we could have used to have God women because of this gland that we don't use anymore" is not reliable, and his insistence that because be believes we live in a patriarchy isn't either. He also erroneously hints at Jesus and Mary as being a copy of Horus an Isis, as well as quoting Anita Sarkeesian.
Here are the two studies that he refrences.
British medical journal: Like a virgin (mother): analysis of data from a longitudinal, US population representative sample survey
https://www.bmj.com/content/347/bmj.f7102
>Participants 7870 women enrolled at wave I (1995) and completing the most recent wave of data collection (wave IV; 2008-09).
>Results 45 women (0.5%) reported at least one virgin pregnancy unrelated to the use of assisted reproductive technology. Although it was rare for dates of sexual initiation and pregnancy consistent with virgin pregnancy to be reported, it was more common among women who signed chastity pledges or whose parents indicated lower levels of communication with their children about sex and birth control.
>Conclusions Around 0.5% of women consistently affirmed their status as virgins and did not use assisted reproductive technology, yet reported virgin births. Even with numerous enhancements and safeguards to optimize reporting accuracy, researchers may still face challenges in the collection and analysis of self reported data on potentially sensitive topics.
National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health
https://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb/DSDR/studies/21600