G'Naakbusters
Emperor Mongoose
I would remove all reference to the idea of "genetic health", "damaged genes" etc. this is explicitly a eugenicist framework. But otherwise, sort of. The first thing is that mutation rates in mammals (and all large animals tbh) are extrewemely low, and so that's basically a non-factor here. Second, again, it really takes a very high level of isolation to produce a real population bottleneck, sigtrygg's reference to mountain people in particular, this idea was essentially fabricated by eugenicists, the virginia state eugenics program is particularly notable here, to support their agenda there. There's a number of things behind this, the main one is that these people were viewed as backwards because they were essentially subsistence farmers and this is considered a moral failure, but also there was a relatively high incidence of chronic injury because of a lack of access to medicine, with race mixing, anti-irish sentiment, and resistance to government intrusion being additional factors, always good things to declare yourself in opposition to lmao. Anyway, these places were not actually isolated enough to produce a measurable level of differentiation. Third, this type of narrative leads to the massive over estimation by lay people of the effect of population bottlenecks, often its like "X population is 3 times more likely to have Y weird disease, and we think it's because of genes!!" But the actual frequencies of these things are like 1 in 10k and 3 in 10k respectively, and the genetic link is derived from one paper where a correlational link with pretty low predictive power was found. Anyway that's all I want to respond to in detail, though I will say that that last bit really puts an ignorant colonial mindset on display, and that "genetic distinctions in populations" are mostly made up and people are right to be suspicious of people that say things like that because 99% of them are doing race science, intentionally or not.
Great post, thanks.
I supposed that was what you meant, that the popular idea of "small population equals inherent problems genetically" is incorrect.
"Genetic distinctions in populations being mostly made up" is not a statement that makes much sense to me. I'm quite aware that humans have a very low genetic diversity compared to most species, but respectfully I think this is a case of ideology creeping into the conclusion -- just because "racial blocs" don't exist genetically and are social inventions, it is still undeniably the case that you can track genetic traits and they will cluster within geographically and ethnically distinct populations. That's unavoidable. As we all know, there are diseases and vulnerabilities that are tied to particular genes and express only within certain populations, at least so long as those populations haven't yet largely intermarried (and many humans are tribal, so remain within rather closed groups).
Overall -- and if this is wrong so be it, you'd know better than I -- I tend to suspect that you're representative of a common attitude which, I would argue, is born of hypersensitivity to any perceived racism that ironically makes you more hung up on it than anyone else. Few people actually think that reference to "race" actually denotes some hard-and-fast distinction genetically, it's shorthand categorization for clusters of genetic and phenological traits, and the more isolated and/or self-engaged a given geographic population is, the more those traits will be associated with that population. Unless you're claiming that the general rule of "palest people in the northern reaches, darkest people in the tropics" is a social construct. Prior to large-scale migration, people in different parts of the world have different features and different expressed traits (different immune systems and the like too, hence the depopulation of the Americas). In the modern age, really the only people who are hung up on "race" are the ones who like to decry it, and who respond to every use of a potentially charged word with the assumption of damaging baggage.
It comes across as "I mustn't ever, *ever*, suggest any sort of relationship between concepts like health, genes, race because in the past those intersections have been used for harm and so it's all cursed ground." Which in my opinion causes more harm than good, and prevents the very sort of useful discussion that we're having now.
I'm curious, how would you discuss genetic illness if not in terms of "genetic health" or "damaged genes"? I have an autoimmune disease, so is it wrong to talk about the health of, or damage to, my immune system? Or is it okay there, but not about genes, and if so why is that if not because of sensitivity to certain ideologies that base harmful and erroneous agendas on these ideas? I keep coming up against the suspicion that it's not any real *scientific* objection but a refusal to engage with certain terms and ideas simply because they've been used for ill in the past.
Sigtrygg didn't mention "mountain people". He's talking about certain populations in the UK, probably those of particular East African descent, I might be wrong). I'm afraid I see this as more evidence that you're not relating to what others think or say but to your own hang-ups.
Governments are often the ones pushing the things you're decrying. In America, it was the state that deliberately pushed those ideologies to cripple the non-Anglo communities...resistance to government intrusion... always good things to declare yourself in opposition to