But the point is, how common is the odd stocky child? And what are it's odds to be born with a birth defect, compared to a different race?Not any more than she'd have with the odd stocky Asian child, no.
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But the point is, how common is the odd stocky child? And what are it's odds to be born with a birth defect, compared to a different race?Not any more than she'd have with the odd stocky Asian child, no.
I read it in a book, I don't have the book anymore as it was in an old Scandinavian library. But I remember the vagina (for all races) was not fit to give birth to a race of a different cranial size, and this raised the risk for both mother and infant mortality, and also for the infant, brain damage and mental retardation percentages were extremely higher than average.Birth defects have nothing to do with it. I still see nothing to suggest that the natural shape of a child's skull, if that child is of mixed origin, conflicts with the natural shape of a woman's vagina to such a degree as to cause birthing difficulties due to those factors alone.
No offense, but what makes your opinion (or point of view) so different? I can assure you that I am an expert in this field.Cancer is as old as man:
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/2016/07/oldest-human-cancer-disease-origins-tumor-fossil-science/
Most cancers occur after age 60. In large measure it's a disease of aging. What percentage of people used to live to 60? In previous eras they also didn't know what caused certain symptoms. Yes, ancient physicians could see a mass in the abdomen or breast, but what about masses in the lungs, or bone cancer, or liver cancer, or primary brain tumors, or blood cancers, and on and on. The "bloody flux" could be caused by a lot of things, and one of them is bowel cancer.
If some posters aren't aware of the genetic component to cancer, I don't know where they've been. Not only certain forms of breast cancer run in families. So do certain forms of bowel cancer, as in my mother's family, or liver cancer as in former President Carter's family, where practically everyone of his generation in his family have gotten it except him.
That isn't to say that certain environmental factors don't impact it. If you have a "risk" allele, your odds are higher, and environmental factors may increase it. If you have multiple "risk" alleles you'll probably get it no matter what you do. If you have all "good" alleles, you can probably do and be exposed to pretty much everything. That's why I had a great-uncle who smoked, drank a little too much, and ate the fattiest and most carbohydrate high diet imaginable until he finally kicked the bucket at 93.
I also think it's romanticizing the past to think that people living then were not exposed to harmful agents, and that goes for hunter-gatherers too. When scientists examine their lungs, they're covered in soot from all the fires in enclosed places. I would think smiths would have been exposed to lots of toxic agents. Plus, as has been mentioned, animals carry disease. Look at the bovine disease that's been found in one of the Caucasus herders.
As to autism, I definitely think there is a genetic component. I'm not going to bother getting the cites to papers; everyone should know this by now. There are families with a very high incidence, sometimes more than one child in a family. In addition to the genetics factor, the age of the father at conception may also be a factor. Another one that I think should be studied is drug use in both the mother and the father. I don't know if it's just coincidence, but the people I know who were heavy into drugs seem to have children with more "issues", whether it's autism, developmental delay, ADHD, and other types of disorders as well.
The Amish have their own unique genetic profile, as Maciamo pointed out, because of the inbreeding since the founding of their religion in German speaking Switzerland and surrounding areas. Certain diseases are more frequent than in the average population, and certain ones less frequent. They also have certain recessive genetic diseases, and are studied for them, because of that inbreeding.
For the record, nobody goes through public education in the U.S. or into the army or gets hired for certain jobs unless they present their vaccination certificate, so it's beyond me how someone could say they've never been vaccinated.
But that isn't the issue. The issue is that you have to be responsible, am I correct?I never claimed to have children, either...
What voodoo science? If Maciamo is an anthropologist, he should know these things. I posted the replicas of the skulls...? I have never been vaccinated before, and I thank my mom and dad for that. I have had chicken pox at 2 years old, so the only thing I have to worry about is shingles later in life. And it is true that it is difficult for the mother of a different race to give birth to a mixed-race child. People of different races do not have the same average sizes in their bodies. It's not racism, it's a fact of life. There can be births among mixed-raced individuals, and they can come out healthy. But would someone really want to risk that?The Amish have their own unique genetic profile, as Maciamo pointed out, because of the inbreeding since the founding of their religion in German speaking Switzerland and surrounding areas. Certain diseases are more frequent than in the average population, and certain ones less frequent. They also have certain recessive genetic diseases, and are studied for them, because of that inbreeding.
For the record, nobody goes through public education in the U.S. or into the army or gets hired for certain jobs unless they present their vaccination certificate, so it's beyond me how someone could say they've never been vaccinated.
And here we go with the racist angle again. Some people only see through that lens, apparently. Do you know how much variation there is in Europe, even within one country? In my father's family they all have huge heads, a trait which both my brother and I inherited. My mother said that birthing us was a nightmare, and we were average weight, but it wasn't impossible, and we were both natural childbirth babies: no interventions. Head size is also to some extent dependent on over all weight. How easy do you think it is to give birth to a baby eight pounds and bigger? You guys do also realize that the head of the baby is pretty malleable at birth right? That's for a reason. If you've seen a lot of newborns, the head can be pretty misshapen for a lot of them.
If you can't provide the scientific proof for this then don't raise it as an issue. This isn't the place for voodoo science.
No offense, but what makes your opinion (or point of view) so different? I can assure you that I am an expert in this field.
Oh, and here we are...
1 - http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencet...s-finding-trace-disease-Egyptian-mummies.html
Even if cancer has existed in ancient times, it does not make it genetic. It could be man-made or made from environmental sources. (ancient human beings traveling in the wrong environment and getting some bad chemicals in the air. Maybe smog or some waste.)
Think back in tribal days. There were very little reports of cancer until the European industrial revolution. As I said before..
Most viruses transmitted by animals are only passed when eating the raw or undercooked meat from these animals. That's why humans get avian flu from eating chicken and swine flu from pork, but we never get viruses from cats and dogs who live in much closer proximity. There has been cases of deadly bacteria between passed from animals to humans, as with the plague (yersinia pestis bacteria), but even in that case it usually evolves another vector (rate fleas in the case of the plague) that typically only develops in condition of very poor hygiene.
What voodoo science? If Maciamo is an anthropologist, he should know these things. I posted the replicas of the skulls...? I have never been vaccinated before, and I thank my mom and dad for that. I have had chicken pox at 2 years old, so the only thing I have to worry about is shingles later in life.
And what does that mean?So you were not vaccinated against bacterial meningitis? Explains a lot.
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