Sorry, but you're wrong yet again, and using articles that don't understand Torah doesn't help either.
[While it is true that kingship must be by bloodline, not adoption, this assumes that Jesus was adopted by Joseph. There is no reason to believe he was, Scriptural or otherwise. In fact, Jesus was counted as legally Joseph’s son and, therefore, available to inherit everything from Joseph. This is because Joseph did not put Mary aside—“divorcing” her within the betrothal period—thereby acknowledging that the baby was legally to be his son. The issue of DNA is irrelevant. DNA might be useful in today’s society for proof of blood lineage, but it has no place in the legal system of first-century Jewish thinking.
Within Jewish law, a child fathered outside of the legal marriage, even during the bethrothal period which is still legal marriage, Deut 22:23-24, which in this case would be Joseph and Mary, would render the child a mamzer, Deut 23:2. So, regardless of whether Joseph stayed in the marriage or not, the child would not be his and his stained lineage would carry on with him forever.
However, contrary to the opinion of your correspondent, it is, in fact, possible for women to inherit tribal affiliation under certain conditions. The key passage in the Old Testament proving this point is Numbers 27:1–11.
Wrong. What is discussed in the passages of Numbers 27:1-11 is what to do with the land inheritance. Legally, it belongs to the daughters. The follow-up to the story is Numbers 36:1-13. It is shown that if the daughter's of Zelophehad married outside their tribe, they would lose their ancestral land. The only way to keep it would be to marry within their tribe so that the children could inherit their father's lineage and land as well.
So, the red herring of mtDNA and Y-DNA is irrelevant. Old Testament law accepts that both Mary and Jesus are of the tribe Judah.]
Wrong again.
A reader asks us to help clear up the matter of Jesus’s lineage. Could he truly be the heir to David’s throne? Paul Taylor, AiG–UK, examines the evidence.
answersingenesis.org
BTW, the article references DNA. This has no bearing on tribal lineage.