Why are you wasting our time with so much BS?
The banana is only found in a small part of the world. Humans have not been eating bananas forever! Our genome is not mostly banana. And we’ve been eating beef, pork, wheat, etc. without ending up with pork or wheat-based genomes!
Danny Vendramini’s theories are based on faulty anatomy, etc.
Svante Paabo was awarded a Nobel Prize for his work on the Neanderthal genome and the evidence for recombination between sapiens and Neanderthal. Many other excellent researchers have been building on his work.
https://www.nobelprize.org/prizes/medicine/2022/paabo/facts/
If you’re really interested in this subject, you should read Svante Paabo’s work, and stop wasting our time with pseudoscientific nonsense!
There is a claim that, because some humans have a certain small number of genes in common with Neanderthals, that humans and Neanderthals must have interbred. That amounts to thinking that a Neanderthal male could/would rape a woman and, rather than cooking and eating her afterwards as usual, somehow or other keep her alive long enough to bear a cross-species child, raise that child to reproductive age, and have him/her breed back into human populations without anybody catching on, i.e. the claim is ridiculous.
In real life:
• Neanderthal females would kill that woman the first time her new owner left her alone for ten minutes.
• The woman wouldn't fare any better than the subjects of the soviet attempts to breed humans and apes into super workers in the 1930s.
• Humans would notice the child was different (really different...)
• And humans would kill that child and everybody else like him as part of the same program which killed out the Neanderthal. They would not need DNA tests to determine who to kill for that sort of reason, it would be exceedingly obvious.
In other words, it would be a miracle for something like that to ever have happened once while the claims from Paabo et. al. require it to have been going on all the time. That is, for human/hominid cross-breeding to have left detectable traces in the DNA of modern humans, it would have to have been entirely common.
There will be some rational reason for any common genes between humans and Neanderthals. Claims of interbreeding however are not rational. A reasonable person might entertain a theory requiring one probabilistic miracle or zero probability event in the history of the universe, but not something that stands everything we know about probability theory on its head.