Showing posts with label white race attacks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label white race attacks. Show all posts

Thursday, 23 April 2009

Race is Reality

First they said that race did not exist - then they said that immigration was a good thing.

Both of these statements by the liberals were bollocks and here is a liberal demolishing the liberal shibboleths.



http://www.prospect-magazine.co.uk/article_details.php?id=10187


The claim that there is no such thing as race is understandable but wrong. We should recognise both the genetic reality of race and the uniquely human ability to transcend it

Mark Pagel

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Mark Pagel is professor of evolutionary biology at Reading University
Discuss this article at First Drafts, Prospect's blog

Strange Fruit: Why Both Sides are Wrong in the Race Debate
by Kenan Malik (Oneworld, £18.99)

Trust: Self-interest and the Common Good
by Marek Kohn (OUP, £10.99)

The Great Hall at the University of Reading is a lively piece of Victoriana: a broad neo-Romanesque structure suggestive of a nave, with a concave arched ceiling of gilt-edged rectangular sections painted a pastel green and decorated with rosettes.

The uniformity of its architectural style contrasts with the people I can see under its roof. Perhaps 200 students are at work here, and my guess, from their faces, is that between them they could trace their ancestry to Europe, sub-Saharan Africa, the far east and perhaps the Indian subcontinent.

These observations collide with Kenan Malik's insistence in his new book, Strange Fruit, that there is no such thing as race: that it is nothing more than a social construct, having little to do with biology. It is true that the history of racial thinking is mostly an odious embarrassment. And using the idea of race as an assertion of abrupt or clear genetic boundaries between peoples is wrong. All of humanity shares the same genes, and we can all happily and successfully interbreed. And, contrary to the pronouncements of some well-known public figures, there is no evidence that human groups differ in the genetic factors that cause intelligence or even cognitive abilities in general. But we mustn't take this to mean that there are no differences among us. Variants of our shared genes do differ among human groups. If my ancestors were from the far east, I would have the epicanthal fold of skin above my eyes so distinctive of peoples from that region. Were I able to trace my ancestry to the Ethiopian highlands, it is likely that I would have a wiry frame and sinewy muscles. And were my ancestors from the Tibetan plateau, it is likely that my body shape would be good at conserving heat. I could go on; and the list could contain far more than morphological characters—just think, for example, of who carries genes to protect against malaria or to digest milk proteins as adults.

These are all genetic differences. In fact, if we measure large numbers of genetic markers from populations around the world and then use them to form clusters, we get back groupings that bear a striking resemblance to what have conventionally been recognised as the major racial groups on the planet: Europeans and western Asians, Africans, people from the Americas, eastern Asians, and Australasians.

Biologists confronted with this kind of clustered genetic variability in other species routinely refer to the groupings as variants, types, gentes, races and even sub-species. These are imprecise terms, but they capture the sense that suites of genetic characters or markers vary or cluster in similar ways among populations. Put another way, give me the suites of characters and I can predict at a better than chance level what group or region the sample comes from. There is no reason to exclude humans from this. It is what I was doing with the faces in the tranquil setting of the Great Hall.

Malik knows these facts about our genetics, but wants to insist that, unless "race" corresponds to absolute boundaries, it is a useless and damaging concept. But to deny what everybody knows and to swap the word race for something less politically charged like "group" is just an act of self-denial and certainly no more accurate than the dreaded "r" word. It is also patronising—I would like to think we are all grown up enough to accept the facts and ready ourselves for the deluge to come. I say deluge because the more we measure, the more genetic differences we find among populations; and no kinds of difference can be absolutely ruled out (to be clear, there is no reason to expect Caucasians will do well out of this). We may in future need a language, and maybe even a new ethics, to discuss the new genetics. But that is another story.

Why go on about these differences? Because they tell us something startling about our species, with an important bearing on the predicament we find ourselves in and which Malik writes about—how to live in a multicultural world.

We are a very young species. At about 100,000 to 150,000 years old, maybe less, we have just flickered into an existence that could go on—if we are an average species—for 8-10m years. We are not yet out of our nappies. Without going into the details, there are only two ways we could have amassed the genetic differences we have while still in this toddlerhood. One is that different races have been good at keeping to themselves since we spread around the world after walking out of Africa 70,000 years ago. Physical separation would have allowed many random differences to accumulate between groups. But this could only have occurred if inter-group migration were very low. It could also reflect active avoidance, something suggested by the growing sense among anthropologists that human history can best be understood as constant attempts by different group to annihilate each other.

The second way humanity could have achieved its genetic variation would be if natural selection has acted strongly on human populations, promoting different traits in different groups. I say "strongly" because the differences have been produced in a short time, and natural selection has had to work against the homogenising influences of migration and interbreeding. This is why we can be sure that when we see so-called "adaptive" differences, they tell us we are staring at people who have been selected to be very good at some challenge their environment throws at them, be it conserving heat, protecting the eyes from wind-blown sand, fighting off malaria or being able to digest milk proteins. These are not accidental differences.

Moreover, even after the ravages brought by the waves of expanding agriculturalists beginning about 10,000 years ago, followed more recently by the great imperial conquests of the last 800 to 900 years, humans still speak about 7,000 distinct languages. You don't get that by hanging out with each other.

So we are a species with a short but intense history of living in relatively isolated groups. We are also a species that invented a new and powerful way of life—called co-operation. Or, more to the point, it is what evolutionary biologists call "indirect reciprocity": the ability to behave co-operatively towards people unrelated to you and with no expectation of immediate "repayment." We help people in distress, we return items of value, we may even put our wellbeing or lives at risk for others, and we have a sense of fairness that we and others ought to behave this way. Our co-operation allows us to have a division of labour and exchange—someone mends the fishing nets while another collects coconuts—and the specialisation this allows is almost certainly responsible for our rapid spread around the world.

No other species does anything like this. The co-operative hunting seen among male chimpanzees is largely done among bands of (genetic) brothers. Ants co-operate, and they are capable of raising sophisticated armies, and of deploying them in complex ways against other ant armies. But ants are effectively genetic clones of each other and so don't mind giving aid or even their lives to help the collective.

Co-operation among unrelated humans is a different matter. If you help someone and they don't help you back, you lose. Co-operative societies can soar to great heights, but they can cost you dearly, as when cheats take the spoils of co-operation without returning the benefits. This means that humans have evolved sensitive mechanisms to discriminate between people likely to share their co-operative values from those that do not.

Trust, the topic of Marek Kohn's book of the same name, is what arises from this discrimination—and Kohn rightly recognises that trust promotes both self-interest and the common good. As individuals, we toil to build reputations as a way of advertising our trustworthiness and of attracting like-valued people. Indeed, it is hard to overstate the importance of co-operative social systems to our psychology and social behaviour. If trust is the fuel of our co-operation, reputation is the currency with which we buy it. Apes, dolphins and ants don't feel shame or engage in honour killings.

This view of what makes humans tick also helps us to understand the awkwardness of the public debate about multiculturalism. Malik asserts that there is a tendency for what he calls the liberal left to "resurrect racial concepts" in framing their views on multiculturalism. Thus we grant authenticity, and equal but separate status, to the different desires and practices of some groups on the basis of their deep cultural heritage: consider the recent uproar over sharia law. Malik doesn't suggest these liberals are racist, just that the language they use—of ethnicity, authenticity and identity—is laden with racial baggage and reminiscent of that used by the old racists when justifying their exclusionary views.

So how is it that race and ethnicity find their way so easily, even if inadvertently, into discussions of multiculturalism? The answer has nothing to do with racism and a lot to do with statistics. Humans, as I have described, evolved to live in small isolated groups and are finely tuned to seek people of common values. Like it or not, common culture (common practices, expectations, and beliefs) correlates, even if imperfectly, with common biological ancestry. This means that markers of race and ethnicity come to be taken as markers of common values.

So does this mean that, deep down, we are all racists? No: we are too clever and self-interested for that. The very social feature that makes us unique—our ability to co-operate with unrelated others—makes us, uniquely among animals, capable of moving beyond the politics of race and ethnicity. Were we as mindless as apes and ants, this would be impossible. Their behaviour is based almost exclusively on common genetic ancestry. Ours is not.

We humans will get along with anyone who wishes to play the co-operative game with us—and that part of our nature will always trump guesswork based on markers of ethnicity or other features. The key is to provide or create stronger signs of trust and common values than are provided by the statistically useful but imprecise markers of ethnicity. Looking around the Great Hall, I couldn't help but feel that this was already happening among the good students of Reading University.

Discuss this article at First Drafts, Prospect's blog














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Friday, 21 September 2007

Diversity in Medway and North Kent - the scum invasion

Here are a selction of stories from Medway in Kent where I live ;

http://www.kentonline.co.uk/news/default.asp?article_id=34696&startrecord=-1.#IND

A WOMAN was punched in the face after she refused to buy what looked like fake gold.
Joanne Valentine was left with a swollen cheekbone and is now too frightened to go out.She had just left her house in Chalkwell Road, Sittingbourne, and was walking along London Road towards the town when two cars full of what she thinks were foreign people, pulled up beside her.
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Boy attacked by woman with metal pipe

A BOY of 10 needed hospital treatment after being hit in the face and across the back by a woman wielding a metal bar.The incident happened after community tension spilled over in Luton Road, Chatham.

Police said it was being treated as racially-motivated and an investigation has been launched.
There were four women in the group of people who attacked Jake Stedman. His mother said he tried to run away but his legs collapsed beneath him.Amanda Stedman said: "He's now too frightened to go out on his own and he has to sleep in my bed now because he's so traumatised."
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'Needle' attack girl's HIV fear

A YOUNG woman faces an anxious wait after being stabbed twice in the stomach with a hypodermic needle.
Katie Dawson, 19, from Strood, fears she may have been infected with hepatitis or HIV after the attack in Chatham town centre.
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Violent robber befriended train passengers

A PROLIFIC and violent robber has been jailed after kidnapping and threatening to stab three men he made friends with on trains in Kent. Ricky Randhawa, 29, of Mulberry Road, Northfleet, faced Maidstone Crown Court charged with three counts of robbery and two counts of false imprisonment following three incidents in January this year.
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Witness appeal after assault near cricket club


POLICE are investigating after a 20-year-old man was treated in hospital for a neck injury after he was assaulted near Whitstable Cricket Club in Belmont Road.The assault happened just after midnight on Sunday. The victim, from Faversham, was taken to the QEQM Hospital in Margate. Police say the offender as an Asian youth, aged between 15 and 18, and about 5ft 7ins tall. He was wearing a blue jumper with vertical white stripes.
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Convicted student nurse 'a serial fraudster'

A 44-year-old student nurse has escaped a jail term after fleecing the NHS of more than £3,000 – despite having a previous conviction for fraud.Single mother Wuraola Okenla, of Mounts Road, Greenhithe, near Dartford, began a diploma in mental health nursing in September 2006, but lied on her claim form to inflate her NHS bursary.Okenla, who has six children aged eight to 18, said her weekly childcare costs were £225. But an audit by NHS Bursaries in December 2006 discovered they were just £75 per week.
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Blind woman's bag stolen at rail station

POLICE are appealing for help to trace a man captured on CCTV who is wanted for questioning after a blind woman had her handbag stolen at a Kent railway station. The 41-year-old victim was sitting in the booking office at Deal station on May 31 at about 12.15pm when she decided to go outside and wait for her train. She accidentally left the bag on the bench.
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A man has been jailed for four-and-a-half years for killing another man with a single punch.
Nowbahar Bahar, of Harmer Street, Gravesend, Kent, was convicted at Maidstone Crown Court on Thursday of the manslaughter of David Henkel, 32.

Mr Henkel hit his head on the ground or a wall after being punched outside a kebab shop in Chatham on 23 July 2005.
Bahar, who arrived in the UK from Afghanistan in 2001, claimed he acted in self-defence.
But the court was told by two teenage witnesses that Bahar was the only person to throw a punch during the incident on a Saturday night.
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12th november 2004
Robbers break mobile phone owner’s legs

A YOUNG man has been robbed of his mobile phone and assaulted by two men as he was walking home.

The 19-year-old was walking along the lower part of Castle Road, Chatham, on Sunday just after 12.30am, when he was attacked by two men of Eastern European appearance.
They stole his mobile phone, a blue Nokia, and assaulted him, causing fractures to both legs.
One of the robbers is described as 21-years-old and 6ft 1ins tall with a moustache. He was wearing a green fleece.

The second robber was also about 21 and 5ft 9ins tall, wearing a brown fleece.

Both offenders were described as “dark European.”

Anyone who may have seen something or have information in connection with the incident is asked to contact Medway Police on 01634 884252 or Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111.
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In 2004 there were 'officially' just 74 adult asylum seekers in Medway acording to the official medway council figures above. The report above then states that of these 74 asylum seekers there were 8 crimes a month where the perpetrator was classified as an asylum seeker - thats a lot of crime for just 74 people.
7.27 The following crime figures, relating to January to July 2004, do not include verification that the person involved was actually an asylum seeker so the picture below includes cases where the perpetrator has been described as an asylum seeker. On average there are 8 crimes a month where the perpetrator is described as an asylum seeker, 3 where asylum seekers are the victim and 4 crimes where both the perpetrator and victim are described as asylum seekers. 7 out of the 100 crimes during this period (involving people described as asylum seekers) would be categorised as major incidents by the police.
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A policewoman has told councillors in Medway that the number of asylum seekers is five or six times greater than official figures.

At a meeting for asylum groups, Pc Caroline Pope said crime had risen and asylum seekers were in part to blame.
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3.4 Funding is provided from the standards fund and Medway Council. For 2004/05 the standards fund allocation is £343,320, 50 % of which is funded from Department for Education and Skills (DfES) standards fund grant. £150,000 (the maximum permitted) is retained centrally to subsidise the cost of the service to schools, in part by meeting the costs of the management of the service. The balance of £193,320 is devolved to schools. A further £375,618 is provided by Medway Council and delegated to schools. There is additional funding to support asylum seekers. This is part of the vulnerable children standards fund allocation and the distribution between the various elements is determined annually. The allocation for 2004-2005 for this purpose is £60,000.
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