Whenever there is an interesting question that I have knowledge about that I happen to see and I happen to have time to respond to in detail lol.
I appreciate it. I studied human sciences but as you know everything is taught through a Marxist lense so you don't get to explore concepts like that. I've heard of those groups before but never presented so succinctly. A++
The awesome thing to understand once you know this type of information is that people are just people. Niggers aren't bad, they are just different. Not all white people are puzzle solving geniuses there's a shitload of retards out there. Not all Asians are hive minds. Our genetics give us our baseline ranges of advantages and disadvantages. Our cultural, ethnic, and homelike environments provide a great deal of individualized pressure on what we do within those ranges.
The problem we have as a society isn't hate and xenophobia, it's not allowing people to understand that not everyone can be a rocket scientist or a basketball player or a writer. That we should work towards understanding our limits, pushing ourselves to maximize our strengths and minimize our weaknesses, and allow us to acknowledge that genetic subspecies have always and will always work better in their own environments than in forced inclusive social structures. Day geckos and leopard geckos are both geckos, but they have evolved to be great at very different things. We need to stop trying to think any of us are simply better or worse, and realize we are better or worse at certain things because our evolution has given us those advantages and we should be celebrating and promoting them. I think we get wrapped up in their "emotional control" scheme on both sides. We don't have to hate to understand, and we don't need to wipe reality away to protect people's feelings.
That's a whole other angle on this and I couldn't agree more.
Shoving every differently-shaped piece into the same round hole isn't doing us any favors. For as much as the progressives like to "celebrate differences", they can't admit that different cultures have different strengths, weaknesses and needs. These distinctions are evident among people of somewhat similar genetics, much less the races.
In Germany, they have different education tracks for students depending on their aptitude and interest. If someone wants to go into a trade, they will start that path in a middle/high school geared towards them. Similar for college-minded.
How much more effective could we be if we recognized that we are not all the same and worked constructively within that mindset? Maybe if little black kids had a school that was structured for their aptitudes, they would not be so frustrated trying to fit within a system that's not designed for them.
Aww thanks. There are lots of intertwining and cultural pressures and sub species isolation as well, but those are more recent and less overall impact full as the big picture movements and breeding.
The single common ancestor theory is all that you hear now. Did these groups (minus homosapiens) appear around the same time? Or do they follow the pattern of increased complexity over time? Were there ever advanced societies within those groups before intermingling, as described in myths/stories like Lemuria or Hyperborea?
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