Racism is baseless

http://physanth.org/about/position-statements/biological-aspects-race/

Time to move on from the Victorian world view and language ..it remains a very damaging meme and belongs in the trash heap along with phrenology et al.

Reading your link, it looks like they want to end racism by abandoning the colloquial meaning of "race" and instead having people say something like "obvious physical differences between collections of people caused by historic genetic isolation of their ancestors".
 
Evidence?
I mean no insult, but I'm honestly puzzled that I need to provide any since I thought this was commonly known and evidence is easy to find via Google. Picking a mental health disorder at random, here is an article from Nature on the genetic basis of schizophrenia:

http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v511/n7510/full/nature13645.html

Doubtless there are environmental causes a well, but if the above is anything like true, it is presumably theoretically possible to have different predispositions for the condition in different populations.

This particular condition isn't really the point though. Is anybody honestly going to argue that there can be in principle no genetic basis that could cause different rates of particular mental and behavioural issues in different populations?
 
Last edited:
I agree that there's no objection from first principles, but in general I would expect whatever mechanisms have led mental illnesses to fail to be selected out of the gene pool in one population to be at play in other populations as well. I don't think there's any evidence of differences in the rates of genetically caused mental illness from one population to another.

I don't remember all the details (I'll have to look it up) but I read a textbook* a while ago that talked about the various mechanisms that lead to traits that are not selected for persisting in the population. The most obvious being just that the mutation arises again and again. A common example is that a negative trait might be linked to a positive trait that is selected for (like sickle cell anaemia). The latter could potentially be the sort of think that you are looking for if a mental illness was linked to a local environmental condition. But again I don't know that there's any evidence of such a condition actually existing.

*E O Wilson's original "sociobiology", it's pretty interesting.
 
Chimps aren't humans but they are our closest relatives and share many traits in common.

Genetic similarity is not the same as social similarity. What social traits do you think they have in common with early hunter-gatherers?

Citation needed.

Resource Unpredictability, Mistrust, and War: A Cross-Cultural Study

Ember & Ember said:
In the cross-cultural study described here, our main focus is on the possibility that ecological conditions may at least partially explain variation in the frequency of war. In addition, we also tested a number of other (social and psychological) theories. Multivariate analysis suggests that one kind of ecological problem - a history of unpredictable natural disasters - strongly predicts higher frequencies of war. By unpredictable natural disasters we mean events that destroy food resources, such as droughts, floods, storms, killing forsts, and locust infestations. Multivariate analysis also suggests another independent, but weaker, predictor of higher warfare frequencies, namely socialization for mistrust. We suggest that both of these factos create fear - fear of nature and fear of others - which may lead people (particularly in nonstate societies) to try to protect themselves against future unpredictable disasters by going to war to take resources from enemies. We conclude by discussing implications of the results for state-level and industrialized societies.
 
I agree that there's no objection from first principles, but in general I would expect whatever mechanisms have led mental illnesses to fail to be selected out of the gene pool in one population to be at play in other populations as well. I don't think there's any evidence of differences in the rates of genetically caused mental illness from one population to another.

I don't remember all the details (I'll have to look it up) but I read a textbook* a while ago that talked about the various mechanisms that lead to traits that are not selected for persisting in the population. The most obvious being just that the mutation arises again and again. A common example is that a negative trait might be linked to a positive trait that is selected for (like sickle cell anaemia). The latter could potentially be the sort of think that you are looking for if a mental illness was linked to a local environmental condition. But again I don't know that there's any evidence of such a condition actually existing.

*E O Wilson's original "sociobiology", it's pretty interesting.
All I'm trying to show here is that if one is going to positively assert that there is no genetic component to particular population issue, then one has to at least make an argument. Look at another population isolated in another sense, there are some well known genetic disorders in Ashkenazi populations at far higher rates than elsewhere. Clearly such things do happen. If I am understanding the OP correctly, then this is the viewpoint being proposed for the racist, though I am not clear what grounds the OP has for attributing this viewpoint. Nothing in the OPs story implies a claim of a genetic cause on the part of the racist, so it's kind of hard to get a handle on.
 
Last edited:
Chimps are tribal and territorial. Hierarchal. Share food resources in their group, cooperate in hunts, have "cultures" that differ depending on food resources a long list.
They will chase or even kill another group or individual not of their group in their territory.

Here you go
About Chimpanzees
So Like Us
Chimpanzees and humans differ by just over one percent of DNA. In fact biologically, chimpanzees are more closely related to humans than they are to gorillas. Some have proposed including chimpanzees (genus Pan) in the same genus as human beings (genus Homo) to recognise these similarities, calling them Homo troglodytes. Though this is controversial, it emphasizes how similar we really are.
more
http://www.janegoodall.ca/about-chimp-so-like-us.php

I am 100% behind the effort to establish personhood and human rights akin to what we provide children and guardianship to those responsible for their welfareetc

Should apes have human rights?


By Tom Geoghegan
BBC News Magazine

Apes and humans have common ancestors but should they have the same rights? An international movement to give them "personhood" is gathering pace.
What would Aristotle make of it? More than 2,000 years after the Greek philosopher declared Mother Nature had made all animals for the sake of man, there are moves to put the relationship on a more equal footing.

Judges in Austria are considering whether a British woman, Paula Stibbe, should become legal guardian of a chimpanzee called Hiasl which was abducted from its family tribe in West Africa 25 years ago.

The animal sanctuary where he has lived is about to close and to stop him being sold to a zoo, Ms Stibbe hopes that she can persuade the court he deserves the same protection as a child.

[
B]APES AND US[/B]
Gorillas, bonobos, orang-utans and chimps are great apes
Chimpanzees and bonobos differ from humans by only 1% of DNA and could accept a blood transfusion or a kidney
All great apes recognise themselves in a mirror
Elephants and dolphins show similar self-awareness
Great apes can learn and use human languages through signs or symbols but lack the vocal anatomy to master speech
Great apes have displayed love, fear, anxiety and jealousy
In 1997 the UK government banned experiments on great apes but not on primates such as marmosets and macaques
Sources: Ian Redmond, Charlotte Uhlenbroek

Chimps genetically close to humans
Spanish MPs are also being urged to back a similar principle, one already endorsed by the Balearic parliament and held dear by the international organisation The Great Ape Project - that apes be granted the right to life, freedom and protection from torture.

more
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/magazine/6505691.stm

( Shutit ....you are complete blinkered on this and should perhaps wander elsewhere as I'm beginning to think you have an agenda here :mad: )
Racism is a construct with no basis in science as there are no "races" of humans. The concept belongs in the same "human misconception"category as phrenology....thoroughly discredited.
No one disputes the genetic variations of human subpopulations.
 
Last edited:
I mean no insult, but I'm honestly puzzled that I need to provide any since I thought this was commonly known and evidence is easy to find via Google. Picking a mental health disorder at random, here is an article from Nature on the genetic basis of schizophrenia:

http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v511/n7510/full/nature13645.html
Ok, that could support a genetic relationship to certain kinds of mental illness, but hardly makes a statement about the character traits of the population as a whole. You said
"There appears to be a genetic basis for many types of mental illness, alcohol dependence, and a host of other things."
Care to support the alcohol comment? Because I have 'googled' quite the opposite. And what host of other things are you speaking of?
This is important as that is exactly the kind of "data" that gives some folks justification to treat other races as inferior.
Showing that certain populations are at higher risk for schizophrenia says nothing about a particular individuals character trait in that population.
And frankly that is what lies at the heart of racism. Assigning character traits to an individual BASED ON HIS PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS. A broad brush painting.

Doubtless there are environmental causes a well, but if the above is anything like true, it is presumably theoretically possible to have different predispositions for the condition in different populations.
Yes, it is not a terribly unreasonable hypothesis that there could be differences, but is there evidence for "negative" traits.
We're talking about an explicit and exclusive genetic component that leads to negative behavior.

Make no mistake, I hear too often, "Indians are drunks", not poor people are drunks, or country people are all drunks. Or in case of the gentleman in the opening post, we need to thin those indians out. Not we need to thin those poor people out, or we need to thin those protestant people out.
This is an erroneous implication that genetically there is something wrong, inferior, or generally caustic about "indians", and they all stereotypically have these traits.

This particular condition isn't really the point though. Is anybody honestly going to argue that there can be in principle no genetic basis that could cause different rates of particular mental and behavioural issues in different populations?
In general terms, sure it is possible, why would genetics limit itself to determining hair colour or the height of cheekbones. We're talking about and overall set of negative traits. First Nations folks lived for thousands of years in North America without needing Europeans to "fix" them. I struggle to see how, if they were genetically predisposed to negative traits, they survived so long and have such a rich history.
Hell, culturally they have a much better religion that treats the earth with much more respect than the European Christian mentality has.
 
Chimps are tribal and territorial. Hierarchal. Share food resources in their group, cooperate in hunts, have "cultures" that differ depending on food resources a long list.
They will chase or even kill another group or individual not of their group in their territory.

So pretty much the opposite of early human hunter-gatherers then.

Here you go
About Chimpanzees
So Like Us
Chimpanzees and humans differ by just over one percent of DNA. In fact biologically, chimpanzees are more closely related to humans than they are to gorillas. Some have proposed including chimpanzees (genus Pan) in the same genus as human beings (genus Homo) to recognise these similarities, calling them Homo troglodytes. Though this is controversial, it emphasizes how similar we really are.
more
http://www.janegoodall.ca/about-chimp-so-like-us.php

Do you understand the difference between genetic similarity and social similarity?
 
It just occurred to me that much of this has gone to the incidence of "war" among different peoples... but the OP was about racism.
Although this "fear of the other" that I mentioned as existing among very primitive humans might have become a contributing factor for conflict.... It might also simply manifest as fear and distrust... The elements of racism.

We see this a great deal even to the present day, reinforced as I said earlier by differences in culture. Disparate peoples may live together in apparent harmony, but there is often a simmering undercurrent of distrust that can manifest very quickly and with little cause.
 
It just occurred to me that much of this has gone to the incidence of "war" among different peoples... but the OP was about racism.
Although this "fear of the other" that I mentioned as existing among very primitive humans might have become a contributing factor for conflict.... It might also simply manifest as fear and distrust... The elements of racism.

The study I referenced earlier found "fear of the other" indeed a predictor for war-like behaviour among hunter-gatherers, however it's a pretty weak predictor compared to resource shortages.
 
So pretty much the opposite of early human hunter-gatherers then.

Pretty much the same actually ....perhaps you should read a little further instead of trying to assert your view into the article.

The writer of your article has an agenda that might coincide with the bonobos but certainly does not coincide with chimps or hunter gatherers where warfare was endemic...both symbolic and real violence.

10,000-year-old massacre suggests hunter-gatherers went to war

By Lizzie WadeJan. 20, 2016 , 1:00 PM
In 2012, archaeologists stumbled across something disturbing in Nataruk, near Lake Turkana in Kenya: the remains of at least 27 people, unburied and exposed to the elements. Twelve were relatively complete skeletons, whereas the others were a jumble of bones. Out of those best preserved, the archaeologists could tell 10 had died violent deaths—five from blunt-force trauma to the head (pictured), and five from sharper wounds to the head and neck, likely from arrows. The hand position of a couple of the bodies suggested they had been bound when they died. The archaeologists determined that they were likely looking at evidence of warfare, in which one group of people systematically killed members of another. A massacre like this one wouldn’t be that unusual, except for one thing: The Nataruk site is really old. Based on radiocarbon dates from shells near the skeletons as well as an examination of tools from Nataruk and nearby sites—including some obsidian blades still embedded in the skeletons—the massacre occurred about 10,000 years ago, the team reports online today in Nature.

http://www.sciencemag.org/news/2016/01/10000-year-old-massacre-suggests-hunter-gatherers-went-war

The New Guinea highland tribes practiced cannibalism well into modern times.

We are closer to chimps in many ways than bonobos ( more is the pity ) as we are murderous and violent as opposed to bonobos who settle disputes sexually.

This is a good over view.
http://hraf.yale.edu/ehc/summaries/hunter-gatherers

Bonobos are not genetically pre-disposed to violence, humans and chimps are.

And men far more than women

Published online 30 January 2008 | Nature 451, 512-515 (2008) | doi:10.1038/451512a
News Feature
Human behaviour: Killer instincts
What can evolution say about why humans kill - and about why we do so less than we used to? Dan Jones reports.
http://www.nature.com/news/2008/080130/full/451512a.html

and some subpopulations with a specific gene distribution more so yet.

Two genes linked with violent crime - BBC News - BBC.com
www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-29760212
Oct 28, 2014 - A genetic analysis of almost 900 offenders in Finland has revealed two genes associated with violent crime. Those with the genes were 13 ...
 
Last edited:
Pretty much the same actually ....perhaps you should read a little further instead of trying to assert your view into the article.

Feel free to show where the article states that hunter-gatherers were hierarchical.

ETA: you failed to answer my question though. If you do understand the difference between genetic and social similarity, then why do you think you can make claims about social arrangements of early humans based on DNA similarity with certain other species?
 
Last edited:
It just occurred to me that much of this has gone to the incidence of "war" among different peoples... but the OP was about racism.
Although this "fear of the other" that I mentioned as existing among very primitive humans might have become a contributing factor for conflict.... It might also simply manifest as fear and distrust... The elements of racism.

We see this a great deal even to the present day, reinforced as I said earlier by differences in culture. Disparate peoples may live together in apparent harmony, but there is often a simmering undercurrent of distrust that can manifest very quickly and with little cause.

I don't trust your summary, we must go to war.;)
 
We are also genetically similar (>50% equal DNA) to bananas, maybe we should draw social conclusions from that as well.
 
The study I referenced earlier found "fear of the other" indeed a predictor for war-like behaviour among hunter-gatherers, however it's a pretty weak predictor compared to resource shortages.

Fear of the other is intensified by resource ahortages the Klingon Empire ran out of blood wine, so they attacked the Romulan Star Empire to steal Romulin Ale.
Or did the Romulan's attack the Klingons for the blood wine?
 
We are also genetically similar (>50% equal DNA) to bananas, maybe we should draw social conclusions from that as well.

We are at war with bananas, eat one and their allies the mosquitoes will attack you.

Every living thing fights for life, the whole of nature is warfare.
 

There seem to be differences in how alcohol is metabolized.

"The findings suggest that it is unlikely that Native Americans carry a genetic variant that predisposes them to alcoholism. Certain variants of ADH and ADLH do have a protective affect against alcoholism in some Native American people; however, these findings do not explain the high incidence of alcoholism in the tribes that were studied."

https://pubs.niaaa.nih.gov/publications/arh301/3-4.htm
 
Last edited:
Ok, that could support a genetic relationship to certain kinds of mental illness, but hardly makes a statement about the character traits of the population as a whole. You said
"There appears to be a genetic basis for many types of mental illness, alcohol dependence, and a host of other things."
Care to support the alcohol comment? Because I have 'googled' quite the opposite. And what host of other things are you speaking of?

OK, I Googled "genetic basis of addiction" and got this as the top hit:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3506170/

"For example, peer influences and family environment are most important for exposure and initial pattern of use, whereas genetic factors and psychopathology play a more salient role in the transition to problematic use.2"

"Evidence from family, adoption, and twin studies converges on the relevance of genetic factors in the development of addictions including SUDs and gambling.7–13 Weighted mean heritabilities for addictions computed from several studies of large cohorts of twins are shown in Fig. 1.14 Heritability is lowest for hallucinogens (0.39) and highest for cocaine (0.72)."

and it goes on and on in a lot of boring detail. So that's addiction in general.

Here's the first link I came to doing a similar search on alcohol addiction:
http://www.medicaldaily.com/genetic-basis-alcohol-dependence-240850

Again, I'm not arguing that every single one of these genetic links will pan out, but it seems to me that you have yourself in a position where you must argue that none of them can possibly pan out. From the perspective of the argument you were seeking in the OP, I don't think that that is a winning debate strategy.

This is important as that is exactly the kind of "data" that gives some folks justification to treat other races as inferior.
Showing that certain populations are at higher risk for schizophrenia says nothing about a particular individuals character trait in that population.
And frankly that is what lies at the heart of racism. Assigning character traits to an individual BASED ON HIS PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS. A broad brush painting.
In that case, you have an easy job. If the person you are arguing with believes that every single indigenous person in Manetoba is an alcoholic, then you can clearly refute them. The key thing in such an argument would be to get them to explicitly say that. If they have a negative opinion of indigenous people in general, but acknowledge that there are plenty of individuals who are different, then that strategy will not work. It wasn't clear from your original post

Yes, it is not a terribly unreasonable hypothesis that there could be differences, but is there evidence for "negative" traits.
We're talking about an explicit and exclusive genetic component that leads to negative behavior.
Why wouldn't there be traits that you regard as negative? For one thing your judgement and the judgement of natural selection are not necessarily the same. For another there are clearly negative traits that are associated with, some, populations. This only matters if you are trying to construct an argument that there can be no such negative genetic component. You have a much much easier argument if you just try to show that nobody has done the studies in this specific population, and hence the racists views are unevidenced assumptions rather than categorically wrong.

Make no mistake, I hear too often, "Indians are drunks", not poor people are drunks, or country people are all drunks. Or in case of the gentleman in the opening post, we need to thin those indians out. Not we need to thin those poor people out, or we need to thin those protestant people out.
This is an erroneous implication that genetically there is something wrong, inferior, or generally caustic about "indians", and they all stereotypically have these traits.
People talk imprecisely. Racial groups and cultural groups often map to the same people. One could say Indians are drunks and mean the racial group, or the cultural group.... probably most of the time it maps to the same people. Your poor people comment intrigues me. You seem to be saying that if there was a clearly identifiable group of poor people for whome poverty, lack of work, lack of education, alcoholism, high birth rate, low life expectency and family breakup were endemic and handed down generationally, people wouldn't view them negatively. I'm not at all sure that that is the case. In the UK at least, such people living on welfare in housing provided by the government are quite often the subject of negative attitudes.

In general terms, sure it is possible, why would genetics limit itself to determining hair colour or the height of cheekbones. We're talking about and overall set of negative traits. First Nations folks lived for thousands of years in North America without needing Europeans to "fix" them. I struggle to see how, if they were genetically predisposed to negative traits, they survived so long and have such a rich history.
Hell, culturally they have a much better religion that treats the earth with much more respect than the European Christian mentality has.
That is more like the sort of argument you should make. Having said that, the world in which they are living in now is completely different with different stresses, availability of alcohol, food, and welfare. It doesn't seem obvious to me that a culture and a cluster of genetic traits that suited one environment must necessarily suit another.
 
Last edited:
Thanks all. I think what I specifically find most objectionable is the "idea" that having a darker skin, higher cheekbones, broader torso, somehow means you are of a defective character. That being first nations means there is a genetic (and therefore irreparable) trait that makes you behave badly or at least substandardy.
And yes, I think this person, and frankly many in my city, wish there were less or ideally no first nations folks around.

Interestingly, where I live, compared to many places in the states, there are very few people of African descent around. It is changing now with immigration, but I remember growing up in elementary school where there were maybe 3 black kids, 2 from the same family. I never saw or heard anything against blacks, it was all focused on the natives. It always puzzled me growing up because I just never saw racism against blacks, except on American TV/news.
I live just east of the Man./Ont. border, so conditions here are basically the same.
The first time a black kid was in any school I was in was in High School. The only adult was the Latin teacher at the other high school in town.
I lived less than a mile from Cecelia Jaffrey Residential School and recall when one boy, Chanie Wenjack, ran away and was found dead of exposure a few days later. It was the first time I ever thought about it. I was 10 at the time.
 

Back
Top Bottom