The 1% Rules
I had what I think was a fascinating conversation with a client today, that ranged over many topics that might seem a little taboo, as it was about race. You wouldn't know it by looking at them, but based on a DNA test, my client is 1% black.
But this isn't where the conversation started.
It started when my client was talking about how beautiful Scandinavian women are, which is something I have a plausible (in my head) theory on. My hypothesis is that due to the activities of the culture, they have selectively bred for particular traits, which has led them generation after generation into having better looking people on average. What is perhaps interesting to note though, is that Scandinavians are considered about the whitest people on earth and a fine example of white purity.
But they were Vikings.
We might associate Viking raids as a European thing, but that is not actually the case, because the Vikings were raiding Northern Africa as early as the 9th century. They also went as far as Constantinople, Baghdad and the Byzantine Empire. And as you can imagine, the strongest and fittest of the raping and pillaging Vikings, also took their spoils of war, including people - most likely, the more attractive women that they would take back to Scandinavia and have children with. This happened for hundreds of years, with the children of foreigners in turn becoming Vikings that would go abroad and bring back their own prize women.
Diddy would have loved it.
So, my theory is that the reason that the Scandinavians look the way they do on average still today, is that they have had a lot of genetic selection taking place much earlier. It probably wasn't quite as inclusionary as Scandinavia tends to be today (for better and worse), but it is likely there was a lot of mixing going on.
But, pretty Scandinavians aside, on the back of the Viking discussion, the conversation led into talk of war, but not of the fighting itself, but rather the resources required. I recently listened to a hypothesis about how the shape of land has affected culture, because it affects the ease of growth, and the ability to spread. Long lands like North America have a very diverse range of conditions for growth, so what is possible in the south soon becomes impossible the more northward of the equator. However, Europe has much the same climate width ways, where the same kinds of crops can be grown all the way through from the east of China, to the western coast of Europe.
More resources, more people, more ability to build an army.
But, I think there is more to it than that, because there is also a heavy cultural shift, because once the resource production is established and reliable enough, people don't have to move. This opens up a new market of employment, that shifts away from providing for the body, to providing for secondary needs. Essentially, different kinds of jobs, means different kinds of innovations. But this has implications too.
Because once we don't have to worry too much about physical survival - food, water, sex, security - motivation moves from physical survival, to cultural survival. The secondary needs become more important, where the base needs and feelings get applied to the secondary needs for cultural protection, land ownership expansion for additional resources to keep growing, and of course, population expansion. And unlike the tribal cultures that would fight amongst themselves with relatively small populations, the stationary cultures that didn't move much but had plenty of resources, could scale up their conflicts, which in turn drives more innovation to better compete against whatever enemy is blocking the way for expansion.
Now, you might say that 1% black isn't much, but if you do some basic calculations, it is only 7-8 generations ago, which is about 200 years. That is not quite in living memory, but it really isn't that long ago and it would be interesting to see from which path it came into the genetic conversation for my client in Finland. Because of the church, Finland has very good family tree records, so maybe it could be tracked back to a likely point of entry.
There is a lot of conversation around race these days, but from my own observational experience and likely my preferences, I think that the most beautiful people tend to be a mix of something. It doesn't really matter what kind of mix, or color of skin, eyes, hair etc, but there is something softer in some way. Perhaps it is like with each generation of mix, some genetic corners are knocked off, like a square that slowly gets fashioned into a multifaceted sphere.
It is a refinement process.
But, it is also an innovative process, isn't it? Because essentially, mixing genetics will on average bring about stronger following generations, as there is more chance of the naturally selected strengths from each parent, being present in a single offspring. This creates a new version, a new iteration, and possible, can facilitate new solutions in the future.
A few search-engine highlights:
A study estimates that immigrants are responsible for around 36% of innovation in the United States, outshining their U.S.-born counterparts (August 12, 2024).
Another study finds that more than one-third of U.S. innovators are born outside the U.S. (March 17, 2016).
Additionally, foreign-born STEM workers are likely to continue playing a key role in U.S. productivity and innovation, with 44% of Fortune 500 companies founded by an immigrant or the child of an immigrant (October 08, 2024).
And something I found interesting from one of the reports:
Minorities born in the United States are significantly underrepresented:
U.S.-born minorities (including Asians, African Americans, Hispanics, Native Americans, and other ethnicities) make up just 8 percent of U.S.-born innovators. These groups constitute 32 percent of the total U.S.-born population.
So, it isn't being in a minority that makes diversity valuable for innovation, it is from being outside the US. An immigrant, or child of immigrants. There is likely a few reasons for this, with selection bias on who is able to emigrate from their country successfully to another, and a different cultural environment once in the country for what it takes to succeed.
The differences might be small if looking at individual pieces, but 1% across all of those areas compound and can make an enormous difference over long stretches of time. When a country has a little more resources than they need, they will grow to consume them. If a country has a little less, they will contract to survive. This is disrupted in many ways, so it isn't quite this black and white, but it is interesting to consider what the actual value of diversity is, and what kinds of diversity is valuable to improve the situation, or degrade it.
Unfortunately, we are a highly skilled, but not a very intelligent species, so rather than actually exploring what we could be doing to make the conditions of the world of the type that help us thrive, we use our resources to build tools to protect ourselves from those who are different to us.
Innovation takes more than thinking differently.
It also requires behaving differently.
Taraz
[ Gen1: Hive ]
Posted Using InLeo Alpha
Just asked my colleague after reading your post, about whether Slavic or Scandinavian women are the most beautiful, we both agreed on Slavic women :)
I might agree with you - the Vikings raided and traded through there also :)
However, we also talked about this region and if you think about the history of Russia and the like, there is a massive mix of people and cultures that were trading and travelling quite freely.
Very interesting. It sounds like it was a quite in depth conversation. I think the real value lies in the fact that it led you to research the topic a bit more. That's quite commendable. My background is about as white as white can get I think.
It tends to happen and I think that you picking up on that is a good indicator to why your wife is always surprised at how much useless information you store! :D
Haha good point. I think it just frustrates her the things I choose or randomly latch onto. I've never really been able to explain it myself. I think it has to do with the scattered way my brain works.
Interesting fact's I think it need more understanding
Besides thinking differently competition and drive to achieve better life drives progress. Once people settle down and are content with what they have progress stalls...
This happens a lot - Immigrant works hard to make a life. Children of immigrants have a hard-working role model and the tools to succeed. Children of the children have a pretty easy life.
This is a fascinating topic ! From a cultural perspective, it ties in with a personal theory I've got....
For at least the last 40,000 years, people have generally moved into Europe from east to west. It's a 40,000 year history of waves of migration and invasion, most of it not very peaceful. Each wave has had to learn how to overcome the settled remains of all the waves that went before it (some integrated, some just a veneer of ruling class over what was already there). So it's very much a Darwinian process.
By around 1500AD, the blended population of Europe had developed the most efficient martial culture on earth, and one that was ruthless in adapting technology to war. A good example is gunpowder - invented by China and used to make primitive rockets and pretty fireworks, turned into cannons and muskets by Europeans.
Europeans got so good at fending off invaders that they started winning, started pushing back, and built themselves colonial empires. I'm not saying that's a good or bad thing, it just is. They were just simply better at killing people, and more resistant to diseases bought by invaders (just ask the poor Incas...).
Exactly. There was a whole lot of natural/cultural selection that bred for attack/defense, rather than community. As you said - martial culture.
This last one about the "resistant to disease" is a big one, isn't it? The more homogenous a community genetically and across exposure to disease, the more prone to being wiped out.
Oooooof!
Your points are exactly why travel is so important. People in the US just don't travel aboard so much (definitely not nearly as much as Australians) because the US has so many incredible sites to visit, but also because Americans are constantly bombarded with "American #1" so why would you visit anywhere else? It's wild to think that America might be Number 1 because of all these outside influences... and that it could be so much better if the population was a lot more traveled and experienced.
You mentioned it briefly, but I'm concerned/curious to how climate change will affect resources of lands... could Northern Europe/Russia become more resourceful as the globe heats up and they get less snow? Or will there be other issues affecting crops? Who knows...
I have never been to the US, but I have heard they don't travel and it wasn't that long ago that, that the majority of senators hadn't been outside the US. That tells something I reckon.
Funny you should mention about the climate change affecting crops, because while we were talking (Client and I), he ate an apple and showed it first saying "It is from a colleague's garden, but they look like they have come from overseas"
While they might not be growing mangoes for a while, I suspect there ware going to be impacts on what can be grown. But, there are also likely to be some pretty major storms too as the climate shifts.
!PIZZA