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blood Type and Autism

I have one brother a positive another b positive and the rest of us ab positive. As you would expect with mendel's model. Crazy theories are just that crazy.
 
Are you saying that to be RH negative you need both parents of Rh- negative blood? Because my dad was O-negative and my mom A-positive. I am A-negative and my brother A-positive. My Ex was A-positive and I A-negative. 3 of my kids are A-Negative and 2 are A-positive. I may be mis-understanding your point?
My father was A+ and my mother is AB+. I am AB-
 
Are you saying that to be RH negative you need both parents of Rh- negative blood? Because my dad was O-negative and my mom A-positive. I am A-negative and my brother A-positive. My Ex was A-positive and I A-negative. 3 of my kids are A-Negative and 2 are A-positive. I may be mis-understanding your point?
The O is recessive, which means you need a copy from each parent to have group O blood. (Humans have 23 matched pairs of chromosomes (other than X&Y), and in most cases, two versions of each gene. 'Dominant' genes can mask 'recessive' versions of the same gene if you have one of each.) In human blood groups, A and B are codominant, and O is recessive. People with group A blood can have A+A or A+O genes, group B can have B+B or B+O, but people with group O must be O+O. (People with A+B are AB blood group.) You can easily have an O child where one or both parents are carrying but not showing the O gene (A+O or B+O), as long as the child inherits an 'O' from each parent.
It's the same inheritance pattern with the Rhesus factor (which is a totally separate set of genes to A B and O) - you can be Rhesus positive with one or two copies of the positive gene, but to be Rhesus negative needs two 'negative' genes.
 

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