Re: virus: Races

sodom (Sodom@ma.ultranet.com)
Mon, 15 Jun 1998 14:40:19 -0400


Good question, i have the same one. Perhaps they meant that 15% or so can be a few
different options (hair color, eye color etc..)
Also, we are about 95% the same as a Chimp, and almost as close to the Gorilla.
Those are our 2 closest relatives. An excellent book on paleo-anthropology is called
"Demonic Males" by Richard Wrangham and Dale Peterson. not only will this book help
to visualize mankind's genetic relation to the other apes, it will also demonstrate
similar behaviour in all male apes (us included). Here is the bonus, it is VERY good
reading.

Sodom
Bill Roh

Paul Prestopnik wrote:

> Joe E. Dees wrote:
>
> > > Date: Sun, 14 Jun 1998 18:24:47 -0400
> > > From: Eric Boyd <6ceb3@qlink.queensu.ca>
> > > Organization: Religious Engineers Inc.
> > > To: virus@lucifer.com
> > > Subject: virus: Races
> > > Reply-to: virus@lucifer.com
> >
> > > Hi,
> > >
> > > "Michal Kulczycki" <88802@dawid.uni.wroc.pl> wrote:
> > > > Don't quit follow. Do you mean that there are no genetical
> > > > differences between Japanese and Pole? It is not a _false_
> > > > concept. I really don't know why is this matter so emotional.
> > >
> > > There are differences. This no one denies. However, I think that moving
> > > from this to concluding that "races" may be more or less intelligent than
> > > other races is a huge leap... we all possess roughly the same brain, after
> > > all. In evolutionary terms, races just are not separated enough from each
> > > other to have made a significant difference. And to finally settle the
> > > issue, I will quote Deborah Blum:
> > >
> > > "There's about a 15 percent genetic variation between any two
> > > individuals," according to science writer Deborah Blum. "Less than
> > > half of that, about 6 percent, is accounted for by known racial
> > > groupings... A randomly selected white person, therefore, can easily
> > > be genetically closer to an African than another white."
> > > -- "Race: many biologists argue for discarding the whole concept,"
> > > Deborah Blum, The Sacramento Bee, October 18, 1995, p. A12.
>
> Correct me if I am misinformed, but I thought that we shared 98% of our DNA with
> other primates, how can there be 15% genetic variation between two humans?-Paul
> Prestopnik