Opinion Quashing Racist Pseudoscience Is Science’s Responsibility

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Quashing Racist Pseudoscience Is Science’s Responsibility​

The recent act of racist terrorism in Buffalo has raised the stakes on how science is communicated and sold.

Like other strains of misinformation, racist pseudoscience destroys faith in science, makes the act of conducting responsible research more challenging, and causes bodily harm. In the aftermath of the massacre in Buffalo, New York, at the hands of a white supremacist terrorist, scientists can no longer justify silence in the name of objectivity or use the escape tactic of “leaving politics out of science.”

By racist pseudoscience, I am referring to a collection of obsessive, fan-fictional notions that human beings can be meaningfully separated into groups with different essential characteristics on the basis of genetics. If human races are biological groupings picked out because they differ profoundly and meaningfully, then we can rank them. And if we can rank them, we have a justification for racial discrimination.

The proliferation of these false notions requires all of us who are able—the scientists, citizen-scientists, and journalists who compose our scientific ecosystem—to formally dedicate themselves to their demise. We should do so not only out of a moral obligation but also, perhaps chiefly, in the name of protecting science.

The Buffalo terrorist’s motives were documented in a manifesto that espoused the “great replacement theory,” a racist creed that has motivated acts of terrorism in recent years (e.g., in Christchurch and El Paso). The manifesto offered pages of cartoonish misinterpretations of human population and behavioral genetics research, and especially on topics that reify racial groups and affirm the inferiority of Black people.

In the attack’s aftermath, the question has emerged regarding whether, or to what degree, we should “blame” the subfields of genetics and its constituents—for the massacre. A related question asks whether this sort of research should be censored because of how readily it is weaponized.

These conversations are driven by a subset of geneticists—many of them behavioral geneticists—who fear a backlash because work from their field was mentioned in the manifesto. Among the responses, variations of two immature arguments have appeared:

  • Genetics research doesn’t kill people, people kill people (so don’t blame the scientists).
  • Racist pseudoscience existed long before modern genetics research (so don’t blame the scientists).
Both claims distract us from a reality: Genetics research around human traits needed a reflection long before the terrorist attack. And reflection begins with being very clear about the two different kinds of study that influence public understanding of human differences.

Many modern studies conducted by reputable scientists use large data sets to identify the genetic contribution to human traits (including many genome-wide association studies). Misrepresentations appear as notions that we are “finding the genes for” certain phenotypes, or downplay the many (and important) caveats that should accompany the results of these studies.

The other sort of work involved in public misperception comes from the alt/dark “scientific” community of charlatans, who drive the existence of fringe journals (e.g., Mankind Quarterly) and routinely publish racist (and sexist) drivel. While very few respected scientists would ever claim that these alt-science spaces contribute anything useful, they persist as if they are adjacent to the mainstream, with all of its legitimacy.

Though these two classes (the mainstream and the fringe) are very different, each contributes to the public confusion that directly or indirectly feeds the racist pseudoscience machine. For example, though the Buffalo terrorist was deeply entrenched in the alt-science world, his screed featured cherry-picked, out-of-context figures and data from mainstream science—published in Nature, about genes associated with “educational attainment”—to support his worldview. This is consistent with the work of scholars who have documented that white nationalist circles consume the mainstream genetics literature at a high rate.

The question is not about what we have a right to ask, but about how we can let science do what it does best: select the useful ideas and discard the broken ones.

The mainstream research that aims to resolve relationships between genes and traits that we care about (e.g., diabetes risk) is important to the betterment of life on Earth (and maybe beyond), and has delivered critical insights that help us treat disease, improve agriculture, and even aid in conservation efforts. Learning about how genetic information crafts traits across the biosphere is also an exciting frontier of science, independent of its practical value.

Even acclaimed geneticists acknowledge, however, that studies of humans are not without their flaws, and in particular as they apply to the statistical interpretation of the findings: the design and results do not warrant the sorts of headline-worthy conclusions that they’ve sparked. For example, results of the 2018 study of educational attainment (the same one mentioned in the manifesto) were summarized by Steven Pinker as “collectively predict[ing] a big chunk of variance in educational attainment.” This is misleading.

To most, the better summary is less tantalizing: Large genome studies often identify hundreds or thousands of genetic markers (single nucleotide polymorphisms, or SNPs) associated with human traits or behaviors, all of which often “explain” (statistically) rather small percentages of the population-wide difference in a trait. These studies are important, but hardly “predict” anything in a meaningful way.

Consequently, even the honest work of well-intentioned scientists should be clearer about its messaging. Improved, more accurate communications of the results of genome-wide studies would sound less sexy, create less clickbait, and (perhaps) fame for the authors. But if the main message from honest work is distorted to dangerous ends—over and over and over and over again—then it is our scientific responsibility to participate in the course correction.

The work of the alt-genetics fringe science community requires a different intervention: an aggressive effort to extirpate any force which legitimizes the rot of racist pseudoscience. This would include actively holding the actors who author, platform, or propagate this misinformation accountable. In my view, helping to promote racist pseudoscience is akin to scientific malfeasance. Consequently, mass retraction, public shaming, termination, and defrocking should be on the table as reactions, just as with other large and consequential violations of the scientific process. For example, the work of Jean-Phillipe Rushton (and associates), whose professional existence has been built around a biological race fantasy, cannot be ignored. It should be treated with the same unforgiving hand used to address different destructive acts of impropriety (e.g., the Jonathan Pruitt scandal).

In the cases of either mainstream or fringe science, censorship is not a relevant issue–the question is not about what we have a right to ask, but about how we can let science do what it does best: select the useful ideas and discard the broken ones. Demanding the best of the work is not censorship. It is science.

What would a formal effort to correct misinterpretations look like? If the modern era of “big science” is good at anything, it is organizing institutions around ambitious goals. From Bell Labs to the Manhattan Project, Nixon’s “War on Cancer” and the Human Genome Project—science knows how to mobilize resources around topics that we believe to be important. While these large efforts can have mixed results, they at least draw attention to issues that we care about.

A unified effort is necessary, and it should be holistic and inclusive, involving funding agencies, school teachers, ethicists, physicians and everyday citizen-scientists. But it starts with geneticists, who should not view participation in these efforts as community service, but as protecting the science that keeps their lights on, and is the greatest knowledge-creating instrument in the universe.

The stakes are higher than ever. Anything else qualifies as complicity or cowardice.
 
By racist pseudoscience, I am referring to a collection of obsessive, fan-fictional notions that human beings can be meaningfully separated into groups with different essential characteristics on the basis of genetics.
But they can be. That’s factual.
If human races are biological groupings picked out because they differ profoundly and meaningfully, then we can rank them.
Ok, now her racism is showing. Why would we rank them? Peoples are different in multiple ways and that’s never purely positive or negative. Sherpas for example have mutations that let them handle lower oxygen conditions. They have a selective advantage at higher altitude. Some East African groups have mutations that favour long distance endurance athleticism. Some arctic populations have mutations that create a flush reflex in the extremities to reduce the risk of frostbite. They’re adaptive and give a selective advantage in a specific situation. There is no single population that has total advantage in all environments. So why rank them? This is the usual leftist fear that others will do what THEY would do. She would fear to be ranked so others would rank. On what basis does she think this ranking would occur? It’s nonsensical. Intelligence? Some groups are less intelligent on average but ranking on intelligence is nonsensical as there’s plenty of thickos of all races.
And if we can rank them, we have a justification for racial discrimination.
The mask slips.
 
oyvey.jpg

It's okay when jews do it, but remember everyone else is exactly the same.
 
Dont belive your two racist lying eyes goy it is impossible for normies to tell from what part of globe person / his ancestors came from. Oh wait...
 
By racist pseudoscience, I am referring to a collection of obsessive, fan-fictional notions that human beings can be meaningfully separated into groups with different essential characteristics on the basis of genetics.
Yes, it's racist to observe broad, defining characteristics that occur in different ethnic groups.
Except White men, of course.
 
By racist pseudoscience, I am referring to a collection of obsessive, fan-fictional notions that human beings can be meaningfully separated into groups with different essential characteristics on the basis of genetics.
But they can be. That’s factual.
If human races are biological groupings picked out because they differ profoundly and meaningfully, then we can rank them.
Ok, now her racism is showing. Why would we rank them? Peoples are different in multiple ways and that’s never purely positive or negative. Sherpas for example have mutations that let them handle lower oxygen conditions. They have a selective advantage at higher altitude. Some East African groups have mutations that favour long distance endurance athleticism. Some arctic populations have mutations that create a flush reflex in the extremities to reduce the risk of frostbite. They’re adaptive and give a selective advantage in a specific situation. There is no single population that has total advantage in all environments. So why rank them? This is the usual leftist fear that others will do what THEY would do. She would fear to be ranked so others would rank. On what basis does she think this ranking would occur? It’s nonsensical. Intelligence? Some groups are less intelligent on average but ranking on intelligence is nonsensical as there’s plenty of thickos of all races.
And if we can rank them, we have a justification for racial discrimination.
The mask slips.
It's important to point out they'll change their opinion quickly depending on the subject. They'll deny race exists as a means to silence whites desire for self preservation and self determination, but quickly admit it exists to funnel government resources into programs for blacks that are also exclusive to other races. Which becomes funny as they inadvertently prove racists right when latinos and asians not having those same black government/private backings out compete blacks in the workforce. There are people who say white replacement is a conspiracy theory and then immediately say the future is brown. They'll deny it exists and then admit it exists in the same breath. There's a word for what they're doing, but I can't think of it right now.
 
By racist pseudoscience, I am referring to a collection of obsessive, fan-fictional notions that human beings can be meaningfully separated into groups with different essential characteristics on the basis of genetics. If human races are biological groupings picked out because they differ profoundly and meaningfully
This sounds like white fragility trying to claim that white supremacist terrorist violence isn't an inherent part of whiteness. Is this person really trying to excuse white people for their crimes with some "not all white people" horseshit? Or give pass to race traitors like Uncle Clarence Thomas? Do better.
 
By racist pseudoscience, I am referring to a collection of obsessive, fan-fictional notions that human beings can be meaningfully separated into groups with different essential characteristics on the basis of genetics.
I look forward to Wired...lol fucking Wired...doing an exposé on Affinity Groups and Critical Race Theory.
 
There are cat and dog breeds that have existed for 500 years or less which reliably share an expected temperament.

The idea that human groups which have existed in thousands of years of isolated breeding wouldn't develop stereotypical behavioral traits is peak lib.
 
By racist pseudoscience, I am referring to a collection of obsessive, fan-fictional notions that human beings can be meaningfully separated into groups with different essential characteristics on the basis of genetics

fine, then let's get rid of any race-based legislation: affirmativa action, minority quotas, and other gibs for non-whites, since it's obviously based on fanfictional bullshit
 
1653844539872.png
Remember, this graph doesn't exist. You can't decompose human genetics into even just two principal components and see separation between groups. It just can't be done and the above graph doesn't exist.

Edit: While we're at it, the next time some faggot parrots the line that "between group differences are smaller than within group differences" they mean this graph disproves the relationship between genetics and race. Notice how the spread of people labeled as middle east is larger than the distance between the closest members of Europe and the middle east (or if we're being generous the average points of the two groups)? That totally means the distinction is artificial guys and the clear distinct overall clusters are irrelevant.
 
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By racist pseudoscience, I am referring to a collection of obsessive, fan-fictional notions that human beings can be meaningfully separated into groups with different essential characteristics on the basis of genetics. If human races are biological groupings picked out because they differ profoundly and meaningfully, then we can rank them. And if we can rank them, we have a justification for racial discrimination.
The problem is science can't do that, because it's not actually pseudoscience. Evolution doesn't stop at the brainstem. Skin color and skull shape can be racial indicators passed down through generations, but somehow this doesn't apply to behavioural genetics? We can rank the aggressiveness of polar bears, black bears and grizzly bears, but not humans? Yes, race exists as a spectrum, but so does light... and you would rightfully view with suspicion anyone trying to tell you that "blue is just another version of red and there is absolutely no difference in their applications, energy capacity, wavelength, perception, etc".

Science can't disprove this "racist pseudoscience" because every biologist worth his salt nervously knows it isn't pseudoscience. So, they've done the next best thing and just stopped doing research on the topic... can't confirm what people know implicitly if you just don't look into the matter!
It's important to point out they'll change their opinion quickly depending on the subject. They'll deny race exists as a means to silence whites desire for self preservation and self determination, but quickly admit it exists to funnel government resources into programs for blacks that are also exclusive to other races.
They actually sort of settle into this weird middle ground where "race isn't real, but because people (who aren't us) think it's real, it creates a disparate impact because those people are all extremely racist".

To be clear, I never wanted to be racist. Our collective Christian faith said we all had equal value to God, and even though I never really asked or wanted to be around blacks (not that the government gives you a choice these days), I was never particularly opposed to them wanting to participate so long as they acted like civilized human beings, and that was a pretty good compromise... but, then "the experts" started saying things that I just flat-out knew to be untrue, and I really started questioning what else I had been lied to about. Turns out it was a whole fucking lot of things.

Who knows how much of our history is actually just "history written by the victor"? We're watching reality itself being overwritten by a bunch of zealous jewish communists, and no one really seems brave enough to stop them.
 
What is the graph purporting to show?
Principal component analysis (PCA) takes data in some dimension and embeds it into a lower dimension while trying to maintain the overall structure of the original.

The graph shows when you take the data of human genes (massively high dimensional) and embed it into two dimensions the embedding shows clusters of human groups which look to correspond roughly to pre-existing racial groups. Notably, PCA has no concept of these groups and no reason split people in this way outside of the data indicating it.

You also get interesting facts like groups which seemingly should have some overlap do due to close geographic location do have overlap. Like Europe and the middle east having some overlap and central south Asia and east Asia overlapping.

It also looks like you have a whole dimension (the vertical axis) dedicated to separating Africa from the rest of the groups. If you removed that group, you would likely see some more interesting separation in the other groups rather than just having to smear them all along a line.
 
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It's not that I don't think black people can't be intelligent and good: it's that they make it really fucking hard for me.
 

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Principal component analysis (PCA) takes data in some dimension and embeds it into a lower dimension while trying to maintain the overall structure of the original.

The graph shows when you take the data of human genes (massively high dimensional) and embed it into two dimensions the embedding shows clusters of human groups which look to correspond roughly to pre-existing racial groups. Notably, PCA has no concept of these groups and no reason split people in this way outside of the data indicating it.

You also get interesting facts like groups which seemingly should have some overlap do due to close geographic location. Like Europe and the middle east having some overlap and central south Asia and east Asia overlapping.
How interesting!

I assume that the two clumps for "Oceanea" are for Abos/Melanesians and Polynesians?

And I wonder if the one little outlier for the Americas isn't Inuit/Eskimos, who seem much more closely related to Russian and Greenland Indigenous Arctic people than they seem to be related to Lower 48 Natives.
 
The only pseudoscience I'm seeing nowadays is "trans women are women", how about you quash that?
 
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