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Countering fascism

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  • "there remain only two ways the psychometric syllogism can be deemed acceptable-either: (a) one has little or no knowledge of the broad areas of scientific method, statistical reasoning, population studies, quantitative genetics, developmental physiology, neurophysiology, environmental toxicology, sociology, educational psychology, economics, and history required to adequately comprehend the issues involved; or (b) one has no desire to examine the facts of this problem objectively. For the vast majority of the American public, a combination of both approaches is most likely the case, across all levels of economic status and educational achievement. Thus, it is highly possible, as President Lawrence's error testifies, that many professional people fall into both of these categories of error concerning genes, race, and intelligence. In the case of the professional psychometricians, however, it is highly suspect that many ascribe to these views precisely because they wish to mislead the general public through the tactic of applying a "scientific" face to overt racism and political ideology."
  • "the study of intelligence within the human species has followed two traditions: the scientific and the pseudoscientific. The scientific tradition recognizes the complexity of the behavioral repertoires called "intelligence" (e.g., Khalfa, 1994; Wechsler, 1958). It further recognizes that intelligence cannot be reduced to a simple metric or number such as IQ. The pseudoscientific tradition, on the other hand, is typified by a simple-minded attempt to reduce intelligence to a single rank ordering (e.g., Burt, 1961; Herrnstein, 1971; Jensen, 1973, 1985; Terman, 1961)."
  • "Taken alone, correlational analysis can never determine causality. Science recognizes this fact and demands the implementation of experimental techniques to establish causal relationships. Pseudoscience, on the other hand, is content with the bald assertion that, given a correlation, a causal relationship must exist."
  • "Purves (1994) documents abundant data showing how neural development can be profoundly influenced by experience and stimulation in mammals, particularly humans. Moreover, Moffet, Moffet, and Schauf (1993) conclude that the early life environmentfrom the fetal to the neonatal, infant, and early childhood stages-has tremendous impact on cognitive ability, and that these periods are all extremely sensitive to negative influences. Language proficiency, for example, is controlled by the Brocca and Wernicke's areas of the brain, and it is determined by early cognitive stimulation. Moffet et al. have further shown that the lack of adequate early stimulation leads to permanent, irreversible problems in verbal reasoning. Additionally, M. C. Diamond's (1988) classic studies of environmental influences on cerebral cortex development in rats showed that rats with enriched environments developed larger neurons with greater dendritic connections, while those with poor environments had smaller cells and fewer connections. Such research undermines simplistic notions of innate ability by hinting at the exceedingly complex "gene x environment" interactions so crucial to developing intellect. Even in highly controlled fruit fly experiments, such interactions are extremely difficult to measure (Graves & Rose,1989; Scheiner,1993), but they are not measured at all in the psychometric research program, primarily because the environments of the different racial groups they study cannot be equalized in their research designs. Thus, as Bronfenbrenner (1975), Feldman and Lewontin (1974), Graves and Place (1995), Kempthorne (1978), Layzer (1974), Lewontin (1975), and Paul (1985) attest, psychometricians either ignore or fabricate the effects of gene x environment interactions. G is to the psychometricians what Huygens's "ether" was to early physicists: a nonentity taken as an article of faith instead of one in need of verification by real data (Casper & Noer, 1972)."
  • "The psychometricians argue that these results represent the fundamental genetic inferiority of African Americans in innate cognitive ability (Graves, 1993, 1994; Graves & Place, 1995). More correctly, however, these performance differences represent the only expected outcome of the twisted environmental, social, and political circumstances African Americans have been forced to endure in the United States."
  • "To modern population geneticists the idea that races differ consistently for any trait is nonsense. For example, there is more genetic variation among the people of the African continent than there is among all the rest of the human species combined (J. Diamond, 1994), and there is absolutely no reason to suppose that this variation excludes alleles that impact intelligence. Moreover, as Dobzhansky and Montagu (1975) so eloquently point out, natural selection for mental ability is overwhelmingly uniform throughout the world."


How true

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[1]

British/English ethnicity/nationality

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Asian recruits boost England fan army

Go out and celebrate Shakespeare and St George by Anthony Browne Sunday April 21, 2002 Guardian.

Devolution pressures bear on Westminster] by Robert Hazell Wednesday January 3, 2001 Guardian.

Nationalists hail Straw's English awakening by Peter Hetherington, Regional Affairs Correspondent Tuesday January 11, 2000 The Guardian.

Obscure campaigners for an English parliament unnerved by Conservative drum beating by Peter Hetherington Regional Affairs Correspondent Friday July 16, 1999 The Guardian.

Heritage Studies as Applied History Britishness and Nationalism. University of York Symposium.

The New Britishness

Quebec

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ADIEU, QUEBEC … AND GOOD RIDDANCE Robert Sauvé
Welcome to RSAUVE.COM ...

DNA

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The complimentary structure of deoxyribonucleic acid. Crick and Watson, August 1953.

Genetic analysis of human populations

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Understanding Human DNA Sequence Variation

The place of the Basques in the European Y-chromosome diversity landscape

Mitochondrial DNA haplogroup diversity in Basques: A reassessment based on HVI and HVII polymorphisms

In search of the Pre- and Post-Neolithic Genetic Substrates in Iberia: Evidence from Y-Chromosome in Pyrenean Populations

New genetic evidence supports isolation and drift in the Ladin communities of the South Tyrolean Alps but not an ancient origin in the Middle East

Boundaries and clines in the West Eurasian Y-chromosome landscape: insights from the European part of Russia.

Haplotype Trees and Modern Human Origins

No evidence of a Neanderthal contribution to modern human diversity.

A pointillist view of human evolution and variation.


Capelli data

The effect of the Neolithic expansion on European molecular diversity

Worldwide Human Relationships Inferred from Genome-Wide Patterns of Variation

The human Y chromosome: an evolutionary marker comes of age

Y-Chromosomal Diversity in Europe Is Clinal and Influenced Primarily by Geography, Rather than by Language

Phylogeography of Y-Chromosome Haplogroup I Reveals Distinct Domains of Prehistoric Gene Flow in Europe

Observed R1b Y-DNA Allele Frequencies of Iberian and Non-Iberian Origins

The Molecular Dissection of mtDNA Haplogroup H Confirms That the Franco-Cantabrian Glacial Refuge Was a Major Source for the European Gene Pool

High-Resolution Phylogenetic Analysis of Southeastern Europe Traces Major Episodes of Paternal Gene Flow Among Slavic Populations

The Levant versus the Horn of Africa: Evidence for Bidirectional Corridors of Human Migrations


Tracing European Founder Lineages in the Near Eastern mtDNA Pool

A Y Chromosome Census of the British Isles [2]

Y Chromosome Evidence for Anglo-Saxon Mass Migration

Evidence for an apartheid-like social structure in early Anglo-Saxon England]

Estimating the Impact of Prehistoric Admixture on the Genome of Europeans

mtDNA Analysis Reveals a Major Late Paleolithic Population Expansion from Southwestern to Northeastern Europe

European Population Substructure: Clustering of Northern and Southern Populations: PDF

Y-chromosome variation and Irish origins

The Genetic Legacy of Paleolithic Homo sapiens sapiens in Extant Europeans: A Y Chromosome Perspective

Finnish genes

Where do Finns come from?

Origins of Modern Humans: Multiregional or Out of Africa?

Study Finds Evidence for Recent African Origin for All Humans

The Origin of the Europeans; Combining Genetics and Archaeology, Scientists Rough Out Continent's 50,000-Year-Old Story

Ancient DNA from the first European farmers in 7500-year-old Neolithic sites.

A genome-wide approach to identify genetic loci with a signature of natural selection in the Irish population.

Sequence variations in the public human genome data reflect a bottlenecked population history

The Allele Frequency Spectrum in Genome-Wide Human Variation Data Reveals Signals of Differential Demographic History in Three Large World Populations

A map of human genome sequence variation containing 1.42 million single nucleotide polymorphisms

mtDNA and the Islands of the North Atlantic: Estimating the Proportions of Norse and Gaelic Ancestry

Tracing European Founder Lineages in the Near Eastern mtDNA Pool

Paleolithic and neolithic lineages in the European mitochondrial gene pool.

Y chromosome haplotypes

UCL Centre for Genetic Anthropology

Gene Losses during Human Origins

The Distribution of Human Genetic Diversity: A Comparison of Mitochondrial, Autosomal, and Y-Chromosome Data


The Peopling of Europe from the Maternal and Paternal Perspectives

Europeans Trace Ancestry to Paleolithic People Subscript text

Criticism of Rushton

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Kin selection, genic selection, and information-dependent strategies

Racial Scientist Rushton Takes Over Pioneer Fund

Resurrecting Racism

Psych prof accused of racism

On the similarities of American blacks and whites: A reply to J.P. Rushton.

What a tangled web he weaves: Race, reproductive strategies and Rushton's life history theory

Twinning and the r/K reproductive strategy: a critique of Rushton's theory.

Human Race/evolution

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Human populations are tightly interwoven

flynn

understanding race

Genetics for the human race Nature Genetics Reviews.

On the Non-Existence of Human Races Frank B. Livingstone, Theodosius Dobzhansky. Current Anthropology, Vol. 3, No. 3 (Jun., 1962), pp. 279-281

Race as biology is fiction, racism as a social problem is real A Smedley, BD Smedley - American Psychologist, 2005

Changing the paradigm from 'race' to human genome variation Charmaine D M Royal & Georgia M Dunston, Nature Genetics 36, S5 - S7 (2004)

Deconstructing the relationship between genetics and race. Nat. Rev. Genet. 5, 598−609 (2004)

Beyond race: towards a whole-genome perspective on human populations and genetic variation

Genetic variation, classification and ‘race’

Genetics and the Origin of Human “Races” E. Ya. Tetushkin Russian Journal of Genetics, Vol. 37, No. 8, 2001, pp. 853–867.

Reconstructing human origins in the genomic era Daniel Garrigan and Michael F. Hammer Nature Reviews Genetics 7, 669-680 (September 2006)

Genomics refutes an exclusively African origin of humans Vinayak Eswaran, Henry Harpending, Alan R. Rogers. Journal of Human Evolution 2005.

Out of Ethiopia Chris Stringer. Nature VOL 423 2 JUNE 2003 692-693

Genomic Boundaries between Human Populations Guido Barbujani, Elise M.S. Belle

What is race?


Are medical and nonmedical uses of large-scale genomic markers conflating genetics and 'race'?

Intelligence, race, and genetics.

Racism and human genome diversity research: the ethical limits of "population thinking".

Understanding Human DNA Sequence Variation

The Use of Racial, Ethnic, and Ancestral Categories in Human Genetics Research


The Realities of Races

Straw Men and Their Followers: The return of biological race

Race and Reification in Science

Two Questions About Race


What We Know and What We Don’t Know: Human Genetic Variation and the Social Construction of Race


Race, genes, and health—new wine in old bottles?


Human Genetic Diversity and the Nonexistence of Biological Races


Genetic Variation Program


Conceptualizing human variation

The concept and measurement of race and their relationship to public health: a review focused on Brazil and the United States

AAPA Statement on Biological Aspects of Race

Human genetic variation and the nonexistence of human races


ROA

Anglo-Saxons

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Anglo-Saxon Origins: The Reality of the Myth by Malcolm Todd

Is it necessary to assume an apartheid like social structure in early Anglo-Saxon England?

Roman Britain

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Roman Britain
Britain and the Rhine provinces: epigraphic evidence for Roman trade

Jihad Watch Criticism

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The Jihad Against Muslims When does criticism of Islam devolve into bigotry?. by Cathy Young, is columnist for The Boston Globe.

SF hit-and-run murderer identifies self as terrorist; police say it wasn't terrorism Jihad Watch claim.

Death in the Driver's Seat an article disputing above claim by James Wolcott, VANITY FAIR contributing editor

Pigmentation

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SLC24A5, a putative cation exchanger, affects pigmentation in zebrafish and humans.

Fish Gene Sheds Light On Human Skin Color Variation

Welsh Assembly

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Welsh crown day with a song

Species

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The Listing of a of Species: Legal Definition and Biological Realities by M. Lynne Corn

Difficulty in defining biological species by Sara Oyler-McCance, Assistant Research Professor, College of Biological Sciences, University of Denver

On the Concept of Biological Race and Its Applicability to Humans

BIOL B242 - BIODIVERSITY AND SPECIES

Not In Our Genes: Biology, Ideology and Human Nature book review.