Wow, that post was so awesome I drew out a lurker.But yet at the same time, huge numbers of people in TSB will make the "only stupid people are breeding" arguments for the United States. We had a full motion picture for thisAll this gets nothing but cheers and right-ons from the American public. But somehow the "only rapists are breeding" just doesn't go over as well.Str8Foolish, for one, I'm not racist - skin color is nearly a direct function of latitude, and that's all it means to me. It looks like it means something more to you. I call bullshit right back on you.[Edited on August 2, 2008 at 2:28 PM. Reason : ]
8/2/2008 2:27:54 PM
haha "lurker"...lol
8/2/2008 3:37:00 PM
^^ Go back and read Grumpy's post because damn do you need an education.
8/2/2008 11:20:01 PM
I'm sorry, I don't have time to pretend that the strawmans you're itching to create are what I was saying.
8/3/2008 1:18:05 PM
^ Genetic variation and natural selection in Africa has little to do with any of their woes. Even suggesting that lack of progress in their society (to any degree) has been hampered by their genetics is fucking ridiculous, and your attempt to analyze their situation through the lens of natural selection either betrays a lack of education or a racial superiority complex. Human society and how individuals, much less individuals' genetic makeups impact that society is a ridiculously difficult question, given the number of other variables that much more obviously and weightily impact things. To engage in this sort of baseless speculation where you analyze Africa like an animal hive is a bunch of racist horseshit.
8/3/2008 1:53:31 PM
Sure, I'll write more stuff for you to misinterpret.One can speculate about how the original place of origin of a species that recently drastically expanded has certain characteristics without going into impossibly complicated ideas far beyond our comprehension. In particular, that's where the extra genetic diversity of Africa comes from (omg, here come your racism allegations). If certain historical events had transpired differently, Asia would have also had a decent chance to be the first at the industrialization/colonization cocktail. But there was something different about Africa where it didn't have that societal momentum, ultimately having to do with (going back to the original premise) that more than any other place it can be said to be the origin of modern humans (maybe the Sahara desert contributed). Nonetheless, this gives a correlation, having nothing to do with causation saying something about the place of origin of a species. And if anything, Africa should now have even more inherent potential due to the diversity within it. Yes, any effect from that or from genetic drifts here on out is powerless against the rapid pace of industrialized society itself. Like many faucets of human history, if we were to meet an advanced alien race, it is likely that they would have some odd replay of this story.Is this analyzing Africa's situation through the lens of natural selection? No, it's analyzing it objectively.Did I say Africa's progress has been hampered by their genetics? No. I don't think I even got close when I was trying to bait people with that one post. Trying your damnedest to make someone who isn't a racist into one is the trademark of a witch hunt, and seriously despicable. Your hair-trigger blowups are exactly what's wrong with how we talk about world affairs.
8/3/2008 5:38:16 PM
8/3/2008 7:06:18 PM
It's been a pleasure to read the Grumpster's posts in the thread. Good going, dude. I haven't time (or knowledge) to contribute in similar fashion. I'll only note how unbelievably horrible King Leopold's Congo Free State was. Of course, it reminds of what the Spanish did here in the Americas. Europeans are trouble.
8/3/2008 10:43:25 PM
Indeed. The roll European powers played is clear (as in negative). But the future is uncertain. DeBeers is an interesting, nightmare-ish example. China can play the exploit Africa game too.http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/08/world/asia/08darfur.html?ref=todayspaperWith various resource production peaking, and many new countries developing, it could possibly make foreign pressures essentially more competitive. An odd statement, but I see the value of Africa's resources increasing and not decreasing. And yet somehow, that won't be good for the people. I understand that much. It won't be the same players, but ya think it'll be the same game or a different one?
8/3/2008 11:23:13 PM
8/4/2008 12:47:15 AM
I was taking that to mean that the 'deflated' costs are obtained on a contractual basis. The world's price for a resource is... well the price determined by supply and demand and you can't really change that, even if those prices are too low. Just buy futures, and go long.On the other hand, the details of any particular mining or extraction operation are very negotiable. Basically, somehow the company must pay the government for permission to take said resources. I don't know all that much about how this is done, but there is plenty of room for corruption and exploitation - particularly if the leaders don't have the interests of the citizens in mind.
8/4/2008 10:24:23 AM
In response to mrfrogs earlier posts: I don't think it's too hard to believe that there exist some substantial differences between races. Obviously, there's skin color. Doesn't it make sense that, perhaps, people that evolved in different parts of the world may have evolved differently? I'm not saying that any race is inherently superior, but we're not all the same, either. Unfortunately, you can't so much as bring up a subject like "genetic diversity" without being shouted at and called a racist. Hopefully, a time will come when this subject can be openly discussed.
8/4/2008 11:13:07 AM
I think we're almost to the point where we can openly talk about this. After all, in 20 years, medicine and gene therapy could render this all a mute discussion anyway. Trying to add freakeconomics into the discussion creates problems and revolution, of course. No one liked it when it was proposed that legalizing abortions decreased crime 18 years later.I see there as being 3 factors determining a person- genetics- hormonal- environmentIn the thread about abortion gays I was already expounding on this. Not only are there many changes that can be made in a person without changing their genes, there is endless untapped potential remaining. Some of my favorite futurist blogs are claiming that we'll invent a drug that makes everyone on Earth 5 IQ points higher. So much for those genes mattering... but at the same time, they contain value that we will never ever be able to replace. As genetic information as a commodity, go long a few million years, as that's when the gains and losses will matter.
8/4/2008 11:35:03 AM
8/4/2008 3:54:15 PM
8/4/2008 6:42:19 PM
I agree with Shark that the difference is not minimum wage by any means. But I agree with Grumpy that these are completely different beasts. An Australian mining operation operates under many regulations that are benefit to the environment and people. You have the ability to find another $24/hr job, but none of those jobs available subject you to a health hazard. They can't. Environmental stewardship probably isn't much of a bother either when the government officials are in your pocket.But you also must distinguish between what has happened and what is happening. In the past, slave labor helped colonialist ventures. A lot. But now, suffice it to say the local populous and political situation is more damaging than helpful to most operations.http://www.theoildrum.com/node/2692Slave labor used to be good for a lot more before machines. Now, I just don't see where uneducated masses are going to help you drill for oil. Labor is still exploited in different ways, but I this discussion applies mostly to past operations. I think.
8/4/2008 9:11:26 PM
8/5/2008 3:47:57 AM
8/5/2008 9:26:41 AM
8/5/2008 5:32:44 PM
No. there are no mechanisms of material progress beyond resources, technology, and organized humans. Markets, money, and private property do not exist in the real world, they are concepts conjured up by humans to aid in the organization of humans.[Edited on August 5, 2008 at 6:02 PM. Reason : .,.]
8/5/2008 6:02:22 PM
The countless mechanisms come in the organization. We humans can be motivated by nearly anything.
8/5/2008 6:13:39 PM
it's all the naggers
8/5/2008 6:26:58 PM
8/5/2008 6:33:39 PM
8/5/2008 7:07:40 PM
Most smart Africans do not go back to Africa after getting an education in a westernized country (not many opportunities to get an decent education in Africa). They stay in that westernized country and work instead of going back to help fix their home country. If that westernized country forced them to go back home, so they can fix it with their talents, then everyone would be screaming about racism, Nazis, fascism, etc.
8/5/2008 7:14:56 PM
8/5/2008 7:49:54 PM
8/5/2008 10:20:22 PM
8/5/2008 10:51:09 PM
8/5/2008 11:57:51 PM
8/6/2008 10:52:53 AM
well the latino countries are a lot different. unlike england; spain and portugal made no considerable effort to colonize their colonies with their people from back home. Mostly the people over here were just out for money/work/glory. In the process they ended up mating with many of the local women. So there never was the "whites versus indian" conflicts as they existed in the US. Instead it was just revolution to kick out their european sovereigns or ethnic conflicts between groups.
8/6/2008 12:18:54 PM
Eh, that's not really true. While Iberian model absolutely involved more mixing, the elites still attempted elevate European culture above indigenous culture. There were and are explicit conflicts between the Amerindians and colonists. Consider Tupac Amaru II's rebellion, for example.
8/6/2008 1:14:20 PM
The "whites versus indians" thing wasn't really an issue for Latin America early on, due to the depopulation of natives. Disease killed somewhere between 85-95% of the native population. Europeans having to ship in African slaves to do the work that Native Americans could no longer do led to more conflict, really. In the end, the elites looked down on even the people that were pure European as far as blood, but were born in the settlements (creoles).
8/6/2008 1:25:14 PM
There are still millions of Amerindians in Latin America. Despite the disease and violence, they didn't disappear as a racial and social category. You can add to this that some mestizos identify as Amerindian first and foremost. I'd say the conflict between whites and Amerindians began Latin American history and continues to play an important role.
8/6/2008 1:33:32 PM
8/7/2008 3:36:58 PM
8/7/2008 4:09:46 PM
If you're talking about the Sengoku and not Tokugawa period then well yeah, it just didn't make any sense that you were referring to Sengoku. If we're talking about the Nanban trade contacts, then how are you using this as an example of incorporation of European practices and philosophies for a country's benefit? They adopted a few things, notably used the more advanced European design guns in some battles, and after that they banned guns altogether (for the more civilized lightsabers swords) and levied the death penalty on any foreigner who set foot on a main island. By this example, if colonialism isn't a requisite for advancement, then neither is foreign contact altogether.The end of Tokugawa was when the foreign contact mattered as it completely changed the country, which is why I would assume that's what you were talking about. If you argue that contact made a difference, sure. The more advanced guns were used through the Battle of Sekigahara, which ushered in the end of the Sengoku period. But, it did not change them from a barbaric or primitive existence into something better. One, they were not a primitive country to start out with, two, they didn't exactly change into something better, and three, the ideas that foreigners brought didn't exactly bring about the change. And by no means did it change them into a pacific powerhouse, that happened through the Meiji period. The 'first' contacts turned them into a pacific hermit.
8/7/2008 4:56:00 PM
8/11/2008 10:43:40 AM
^ huh? the native americans practically got wiped out.
8/11/2008 10:50:39 AM
8/11/2008 2:01:00 PM
Destruction by European colonization is the SOLE REASON why Africa is the way it is today. The Aids issue doesnt help, but having trillions of dollar worth of gold, diamonds, and other rich resources stolen from a country by numerous other countries would do that to any nation. What was the point of this posting? Have you ever been on an African Safari?? If youve never been there, one loses credibility to post about it.
8/11/2008 4:39:29 PM
^ Obviously it's not the "SOLE" reason, but it's a meaningful part.I think (I can't remember the name of the theory right now), it's geography played a big role. Most of Africa is pretty detrimental for developing societies.
8/11/2008 4:42:17 PM
8/11/2008 6:23:17 PM
8/12/2008 6:15:04 PM
Yes. Foreign employers were banned from entering most African nations at least for awhile. After that foreign employers faced harassment, corruption, and confiscation of property. Even in well grounded African nations, such as South Africa, regulations mandating a relatively high minimum wage leave whole armies of the unemployable living in the countryside.
8/12/2008 6:35:03 PM
colonialism is such a half answer to this question.http://youtube.com/watch?v=RfobLjsj230Apparently they're still messed up, and guess who's fault it is?? *surprise* US!But yet, they can't advance without foreign interaction (by this point). So now we come around to the frequently seen argument that the free market would have already fixed all the problems long ago, but someone tried to tweak it and messed it all up.
8/18/2008 11:26:02 PM
The president of Zambia died today. I'm actually anxious to see what changes now. If anything. It's not a perfect country, but especially compared to some of its neighbors, it's a damn good place to live, if you're gonna live in southern Africa
8/19/2008 5:53:15 PM
bump by request
10/5/2009 6:30:16 PM
I wonder why the request? I hadn't heard that Africa has gotten remarkably more or less shitty in the past year.
10/5/2009 6:50:13 PM
AIDS
10/5/2009 6:59:52 PM