What I have said about the human genome project and the history of Homo sapiens is scientifically non-controversial. I can't help it if you find it offensive. Some people find Darwinism offensive, and that's not my problem either.nexus wrote:+1 to what Andy said
I have read what UE, Ludwig and Beria have written and it has no basis in science (and is properly offensive to boot).
The above is a negative claim, not a positive claim. I did NOT say "there is scientific evidence to support the claim that the problems associated with black populations are significantly caused by genetic factors." I said "there is no scientific reason to believe that genetic factors are not involved" and I have offered circumstantial scientific evidence do support that view.For example UE wrote:
UE - show us some peer reviewed science for this ridiculous assertion.It is also not safe to leap to the conclusion that the problems which are endemic not only in sub-saharan Africa but wherever there is a significant population of "black" people have nothing to do with genetic dispositions. Maybe genetics does matter, even though this will make many of us feel uncomfortable. All things considered, I think the problems we are talking about are at least partly caused by a genetic disposition to be less able to adapt to the modern world. It's nurture and nature.
The available science does not support either the conclusion that genetics is significant or the conclusion that it is not. There is no direct scientific evidence. The circumstantial evidence can only tell us about how the different races are related to each other, and how genetically diverse certain populations are relative to the others.