Can you elaborate on this please, Jim?JimC wrote:Our races are not unimportant
Is There A Sound Basis For Racial Profiling?
Re: Is There A Sound Basis For Racial Profiling?
no fences
-
- Posts: 17
- Joined: Thu Sep 16, 2010 1:28 am
- Contact:
Re: Is There A Sound Basis For Racial Profiling?
Some one said " That's what applies to humans. There is constant gene flow. There are no seperate groups. They "fade into each other".
If it was that simple, then it should apply to dog breeds as well. But I can tell a dachsund from a boston terrier as easily as I can tell an east asian from an african. And so can everyone reading this.
If it was that simple, then it should apply to dog breeds as well. But I can tell a dachsund from a boston terrier as easily as I can tell an east asian from an african. And so can everyone reading this.
Re: Is There A Sound Basis For Racial Profiling?
Yes. That's it exactly. The same goes for many domesticated species and a whole lot more undomesticated ones.
- Gawdzilla Sama
- Stabsobermaschinist
- Posts: 151265
- Joined: Thu Feb 26, 2009 12:24 am
- About me: My posts are related to the thread in the same way Gliese 651b is related to your mother's underwear drawer.
- Location: Sitting next to Ayaan in Domus Draconis, and communicating via PMs.
- Contact:
Re: Is There A Sound Basis For Racial Profiling?
Yeah, you don't have NASCAR!RiverF wrote:Can you elaborate on this please, Jim?JimC wrote:Our races are not unimportant
Re: Is There A Sound Basis For Racial Profiling?
There isn't a list to post because the issue of whether we can conduct that line of study is still under debate. It's a social debate between egalitarians and racists, but it's effectively barring that line of research for the time being, although if you care to spend some time with google scholar you can find many medical science articles about population level susceptibility to certain diseases and particular treatments for other populations.RiverF wrote:Please post a comprehensive list of current human subspecies. TIA.Făkünamę wrote:There is no genetic reproductive barrier. If there was we'd have separate species instead of subspecies. Why do I have to keep saying this?
@Nineberry That's nice, but hardly qualifies as significant on the scale of the populations.
Re: Is There A Sound Basis For Racial Profiling?
You're talking about controlled (by humans) breeding of dog types. What happens when dogs are allowed to interbreed?pinkharrier wrote:Some one said " That's what applies to humans. There is constant gene flow. There are no seperate groups. They "fade into each other".
If it was that simple, then it should apply to dog breeds as well. But I can tell a dachsund from a boston terrier as easily as I can tell an east asian from an african. And so can everyone reading this.
Oh, that's right, they're known as the subspecies mongrels and bitzas.
no fences
Re: Is There A Sound Basis For Racial Profiling?
The genetic susceptibility to certain disease you mention can also be applied to having brown hair or pale skin or heterochromia iridis, and all sorts of other variations.Făkünamę wrote:There isn't a list to post because the issue of whether we can conduct that line of study is still under debate. It's a social debate between egalitarians and racists, but it's effectively barring that line of research for the time being, although if you care to spend some time with google scholar you can find many medical science articles about population level susceptibility to certain diseases and particular treatments for other populations.RiverF wrote:Please post a comprehensive list of current human subspecies. TIA.Făkünamę wrote:There is no genetic reproductive barrier. If there was we'd have separate species instead of subspecies. Why do I have to keep saying this?
@Nineberry That's nice, but hardly qualifies as significant on the scale of the populations.
How does broader genetic dilution affect these things?
no fences
Re: Is There A Sound Basis For Racial Profiling?
We had the Olympics in 2000!Gawdzilla Sama wrote:Yeah, you don't have NASCAR!RiverF wrote:Can you elaborate on this please, Jim?JimC wrote:Our races are not unimportant
no fences
Re: Is There A Sound Basis For Racial Profiling?
RiverF wrote:You're talking about controlled (by humans) breeding of dog types. What happens when dogs are allowed to interbreed?pinkharrier wrote:Some one said " That's what applies to humans. There is constant gene flow. There are no seperate groups. They "fade into each other".
If it was that simple, then it should apply to dog breeds as well. But I can tell a dachsund from a boston terrier as easily as I can tell an east asian from an african. And so can everyone reading this.
Oh, that's right, they're known as the subspecies mongrels and bitzas.
Făkünamę wrote:The same goes for many domesticated species and a whole lot more undomesticated ones.pinkharrier wrote:Some one said " That's what applies to humans. There is constant gene flow. There are no seperate groups. They "fade into each other".
If it was that simple, then it should apply to dog breeds as well. But I can tell a dachsund from a boston terrier as easily as I can tell an east asian from an african. And so can everyone reading this.
Re: Is There A Sound Basis For Racial Profiling?
You're looking at the question in black and white. It's much more complicated than that and we would have a lot more answers if this whole racist debate would just fuck off.RiverF wrote:The genetic susceptibility to certain disease you mention can also be applied to having brown hair or pale skin or heterochromia iridis, and all sorts of other variations.Făkünamę wrote:There isn't a list to post because the issue of whether we can conduct that line of study is still under debate. It's a social debate between egalitarians and racists, but it's effectively barring that line of research for the time being, although if you care to spend some time with google scholar you can find many medical science articles about population level susceptibility to certain diseases and particular treatments for other populations.RiverF wrote:Please post a comprehensive list of current human subspecies. TIA.Făkünamę wrote:There is no genetic reproductive barrier. If there was we'd have separate species instead of subspecies. Why do I have to keep saying this?
@Nineberry That's nice, but hardly qualifies as significant on the scale of the populations.
How does broader genetic dilution affect these things?
Re: Is There A Sound Basis For Racial Profiling?
So where do subspecies fit in?
It's easy to point at a group of people who have evolved in isolation for some time and thus share common traits and call them a subspecies .. and perhaps understandable when people in their ignorance used to do so .. but to continue to think that way when migration and varietal mix is widely apparent is .. I dunno, naive .. to put it kindly.
What's also intriguing to think about is the possibility that, given enough time and social freedom, this intermixing of genetic variety if might bring about an almost homogenous human species ..
It's easy to point at a group of people who have evolved in isolation for some time and thus share common traits and call them a subspecies .. and perhaps understandable when people in their ignorance used to do so .. but to continue to think that way when migration and varietal mix is widely apparent is .. I dunno, naive .. to put it kindly.
What's also intriguing to think about is the possibility that, given enough time and social freedom, this intermixing of genetic variety if might bring about an almost homogenous human species ..
no fences
Re: Is There A Sound Basis For Racial Profiling?
crosspost
Quite the contrary, far from looking at this in black and white, I'm acknowledging the many indistinct shades of grey.
While the debate exists I'll contribute my two cents.
Quite the contrary, far from looking at this in black and white, I'm acknowledging the many indistinct shades of grey.
While the debate exists I'll contribute my two cents.
no fences
Re: Is There A Sound Basis For Racial Profiling?
I don't feel like going over the 'genetic transfer' argument again just now. I did respond to two other variations on it already though.

I don't blame you. Everyone is doing it.RiverF wrote:While the debate exists I'll contribute my two cents.

- Tyrannical
- Posts: 6468
- Joined: Thu Dec 30, 2010 4:59 am
- Contact:
Re: Is There A Sound Basis For Racial Profiling?
Race originally was a taxonomic synonym for subspecies. The fact that subspecies can intermix does not deny the existence of subspecies. Homogeneity of human groupings through natural selection would require both time and a homogenous environment.RiverF wrote:So where do subspecies fit in?
It's easy to point at a group of people who have evolved in isolation for some time and thus share common traits and call them a subspecies .. and perhaps understandable when people in their ignorance used to do so .. but to continue to think that way when migration and varietal mix is widely apparent is .. I dunno, naive .. to put it kindly.
What's also intriguing to think about is the possibility that, given enough time and social freedom, this intermixing of genetic variety if might bring about an almost homogenous human species ..
A rational skeptic should be able to discuss and debate anything, no matter how much they may personally disagree with that point of view. Discussing a subject is not agreeing with it, but understanding it.
- rainbow
- Posts: 13761
- Joined: Fri Jun 08, 2012 8:10 am
- About me: Egal wie dicht du bist, Goethe war Dichter
Where ever you are, Goethe was a Poet. - Location: Africa
- Contact:
Re: Is There A Sound Basis For Racial Profiling?
I can for instance, tell just by looking at my neighbour's children that they are not my children.RiverF wrote:You're talking about controlled (by humans) breeding of dog types. What happens when dogs are allowed to interbreed?pinkharrier wrote:Some one said " That's what applies to humans. There is constant gene flow. There are no seperate groups. They "fade into each other".
If it was that simple, then it should apply to dog breeds as well. But I can tell a dachsund from a boston terrier as easily as I can tell an east asian from an african. And so can everyone reading this.
Oh, that's right, they're known as the subspecies mongrels and bitzas.

So are they a different subspecies?
I call bullshit - Alfred E Einstein
BArF−4
BArF−4
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 3 guests