Message from @BabygottBach
Discord ID: 638934763566006273
white man bad
leaf are you zoom zoom
@fuguer fuguer do you have that principal component chart with Africans, Europeans, Chinese, so we can illustrate that the Africans are very different to the Europeans/Chinese who are similar by comparison?
otherwise it sounds like we're all just idle victims of capricious fate
@BabygottBach History is a social construct. Everything is historical.
@BabygottBach For me, it's the McChicken. The best fast food sandwich. I even ask for extra McChicken sauce packets and the staff is so friendly and more than willing to oblige.
One time I asked for McChicken sauce packets and they gave me three. I said, "Wow, three for free!" and the nice friendly McDonald's worker laughed and said, "I'm going to call you 3-for-free!".
Now the staff greets me with "hey it's 3-for-free!" and ALWAYS give me three packets. It's such a fun and cool atmosphere at my local McDonald's restaurant, I go there at least 3 times a week for lunch and a large iced coffee with milk instead of cream, 1-2 times for breakfast on the weekend, and maybe once for dinner when I'm in a rush but want a great meal that is affordable, fast, and can match my daily nutritional needs.
I even dip my fries in McChicken sauce, it's delicious! What a great restaurant.
It is yeah, the history of wild cat species' is pretty distinct from the history of men I'd assume @BabygottBach
<:smugooze:398100987866251265>
someone else already posted a PCA chart earlier
@fuguer my view is that there is no genetic environment scheme. It’s that genes react to the environment to make a trait.
you can't make informed decision without correct data
@Leaf, are wildcats of the same species as men?
No, and?
why do you place such weight on the species classification, its quite arbitrary
if you cancel white man the exponential population growth will collapse back to reasonable numbers. If you want to be one of the chosen prep yourself or your progeny
There are never genetic variations within species which impact behaviour?
So why bring them into a discussion about human history?
if we treated "humans" like other forms of life there would be lots of different sub species, at least three
Are individuals with, for example, hereditary disease, indistinct in ability and behaviour from other individuals free of such disease? @BabygottBach
we are not created equal
objective scientific data
<:JFGOD:439598359628611604>
With your cheap, copout nuance, @Nerthulas
species classification really is a minor issue because some have higher reproductive rates and other are lower it doesn't change the philosophy that drove the population growth to unsustainable levels
Genes when it serves us, culture and environment when it doesn't
Equal by what metric?
@BabygottBach do you understand that there is a continuum of life, and that 'species' is a relatively arbitrary designation?
Are individuals with, for example, hereditary disease, indistinct in ability and behaviour from other individuals free of such disease? @BabygottBach
culture and environment are genes
@Nerthulas you mean like race?
Son of a gun the tag didn't work
until you understand that genes make culture and environment, you will never get anywhere
to really understand this chart you need to know how PCA works..... geneetic differences can be considered as an extremely high dimensional vector space. no way to visualize. principal component analysis breaks this down and projects it into 2 dimensions like a shadow. PCA1 is the most significant variation. PCA2 is the 2nd most significant variation that's orthogonal to the first. you cant compare scale between X and Y theyre different units. WE see here that african genetics are on a completely different level compared to all other human races on PC1, the most significant axis.
yes, race is a relatively arbitrary designation, you can draw races wide or small, specific or broad
@Str3tch, what makes genes?
hey, where did GENES come from?
East Asians have higher intelligence, Africans have higher height. Neither is superior to, or equal to the other.
I guess genes created the big bang.