Theme: Ethnoculture

  • THE ONLY WAY TO REFORM ISLAM: BAN COUSIN MARRIAGE OUT TO SIX GENERATIONS. It’s n

    THE ONLY WAY TO REFORM ISLAM: BAN COUSIN MARRIAGE OUT TO SIX GENERATIONS.

    It’s not complicated.


    Source date (UTC): 2013-11-29 09:01:00 UTC

  • EMMANUEL TODD’S FAMILY STRUCTURES (From HBD Chick) absolute nuclear family – no

    EMMANUEL TODD’S FAMILY STRUCTURES

    (From HBD Chick)

    absolute nuclear family

    – no cohabitation of married children with their parents

    – no precise inheritance rules; frequent use of wills

    – no marriage between the children of brothers

    – anglo-saxons, netherlands, denmark

    – christianity, capitalism, ‘libertarian’ liberalism, feminism

    egalitarian nuclear family

    – no cohabitation of married children with their parents

    – equality of brothers laid down by inheritance rules

    – no marriage between the children of brothers.

    – northern france, northern italy, central and southern spain, central portugal, greece, romania, poland, latin america, ethiopia

    – christianity (catholicism); the “liberte, egalite, fraternite” form of liberalism

    authoritarian family

    – cohabitation of the married heir with this parents

    – inequality of brothers laid down by inheritance rules, transfer of an unbroken patrimony to one of the sons

    – little or no marriage between the children of two brothers

    – germany, austria, sweden, norway, belgium, bohemia, scotland, ireland, peripheral regions of france, northern spain, northern portugal, japan, korea, jews, romany gypsies

    – edit 01/08/12: socialism/bureaucratic socialism or social democracy, catholicism. fascism sometimes, various separatist and autonomous (anti-universalist) movements (think german federalism)

    exogamous community family

    – cohabitation of married sons and their parents

    – equality between brothers defined by rules of inheritance

    – no marriage between the children of two brothers

    – russia, yugoslavia, slovakia, bulgaria, hungary, finland, albania, central italy, china, vietnam, cuba, north india (note that many of these countries, the eastern european ones, also have a tradition of marrying young)

    – communism, edit 01/08/12: socialism

    endogamous community family

    – cohabitation of married sons with their parents

    – equality between brothers established by inheritance rules

    – frequent marriage between the children of brothers

    – arab world, turkey, iran, afghanistan, pakistan, azerbaijan, turkmenistan, uzbekistan, tadzhikistan

    – islam

    asymmetrical community family

    – cohabitation of married sons and their parents

    – equality between brothers laid down by inheritance rules

    – prohibition on marriages between the children of brothers, but a preference for marriages between the children of brothers and sisters

    – southern India

    – hinduism; a variety of communism unlike that found elsewhere

    anomic family

    – cohabitation of married children with their parents rejected in theory but accepted in practice

    – uncertainty about equality between brothers: inheritance rules egalitarian in theory but flexible in practice

    – consanguine marriage possible and sometimes frequent

    – burma, cambodia, laos, thailand, malaysia, indonesia, philippines, madagascar, south-american indian cultures

    the eighth family type, which is additional to todd’s scheme (i.e. it doesn’t fit the three definitional dichotomies he uses, which maybe indicates a problem with his definitions?), is the african family. todd sort-of throws his hands up in the air and declares that african family systems are simply hopeless to understand (because they don’t fit his model) — and, anyway, there’s not enough data on them (which was prolly true in the early 1980s — and maybe still is now!). anyway, here’s all he has to say about the africans:

    african systems

    – instability of the household

    – polygyny


    Source date (UTC): 2013-11-29 07:55:00 UTC

  • OUTBREEDING, COUSIN MARRIAGE AND VIOLENCE I do understand that genetics are impo

    OUTBREEDING, COUSIN MARRIAGE AND VIOLENCE

    I do understand that genetics are important to the differences between groups, but I study institutions, not genes.

    “…To get rid of violence, you could get rid of clannishness. and to get rid of clannishness, you need to get rid of inbreeding. which is exactly what happened in medieval Europe starting in the early part of the period. the roman catholic church, supported by secular authorities, banned cousin and other close marriages beginning in 506.

    “Enforcement of the various cousin marriage bans, which ranged from first to sixth cousins depending on what century you’re talking about, wasn’t easy — at least not in the beginning. the church, for instance, didn’t require that a marriage ceremony take place in a church until something like 1000 or 1100, so enforcement by the church in the early middle ages was probably patchy at best.

    “However, there were LOTS of secular laws throughout nw Europe banning close marriage, including very much so in anglo-saxon England. just a couple of examples: the law of Wihtred from the 690s outlawed cousin marriage — and the punishment for cousin marriage in another anglo-saxon law from sometime the 900s-1000s was slavery for the perpetrators. again, difficult to know how well these laws were enforced; but that there were plenty of such laws indicates that the authorities were keen to do something about all this close marriage.

    “The law of Wihtred is, i think, the earliest anglo-saxon law that i’ve come across which made cousin marriage illegal (at least in the part of England where the law of Wihtred applied). so the push against inbreeding in anglo-saxon England started at least as early as 690 a.d. again, it may not have been very effective at that point, but England’s outbreeding project had begun by that point.

    “lorraine lancaster, still considered the authority on anglo-saxon kinship, concluded that, although its importance was beginning to wane (as indicated by a shift in who would be awarded wergeld in the event of a crime against a person, that person’s kinsmen or their guild), an individual’s extended kindred remained of importance in anglo-saxon/english society well into the 1000s. that suggests to me that “clannishness” was still around in the 1000s in England. feuding was definitely still a regular event.

    “The situation had changed quite a bit by the 1300s when nuclear families were all the rage and englishmen no longer relied so extensively on their extended families. people were still violent in 1300s England, but of course the shift from clannishness to non-clannishness — i.e. from violence to non-violence — would’ve taken some time. evolution doesn’t happen overnight.

    _____

    The state’s monopoly on violence and outbreeding don’t have to be mutually exclusive explanations for why there may have been a genetic change in nw europeans leading to a decline in violent behaviors. the answer might be both. like Jayman said…

    –“Inbreeding, and hence clannishness, can interfere with this process, because while the State is selecting for less violent people, clan conflict presents a counteracting selective pressure for people who are more violent (and can fight feuds).”–

    “…so in places where inbreeding has not abated or did not abate as early as in England — the arab world/middle east, china (or parts of it anyway), the highlands of Scotland, the Auvergne — the state hasn’t managed to quell violence as easily. the combo of outbreeding + an effective state seems to be a winning one. Better yet if you don’t need such a very strong state (modern nw Europe) and the population is just non-violent naturally.”

    -HBD_Chick and Jayman (Doing what academia seems to be afraid to.)


    Source date (UTC): 2013-11-29 06:19:00 UTC

  • Lotharingia. It matters

    http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=f54_1337075813Watch Lotharingia.

    It matters.


    Source date (UTC): 2013-11-27 17:34:00 UTC

  • One Thousand Years Of The Anglo Saxon Absolute Nuclear Family

      “The English are descended from the Germanic conquerors who brought to England the ‘integrated nuclear family,’ in which nuclear families formed separate households, but stayed close to their relatives for mutual cooperation and defense. These people were illiterate, so we have no written records from those times, and we cannot know precisely how they organized their family life. But what we do know for sure is that over time the original Germanic family type developed into the ‘Absolute Nuclear Family,’ or ‘ANF,’ which we have today. It appears that the family type we have now has existed for about a thousand years.” — America 3.0. p51

  • One Thousand Years Of The Anglo Saxon Absolute Nuclear Family

      “The English are descended from the Germanic conquerors who brought to England the ‘integrated nuclear family,’ in which nuclear families formed separate households, but stayed close to their relatives for mutual cooperation and defense. These people were illiterate, so we have no written records from those times, and we cannot know precisely how they organized their family life. But what we do know for sure is that over time the original Germanic family type developed into the ‘Absolute Nuclear Family,’ or ‘ANF,’ which we have today. It appears that the family type we have now has existed for about a thousand years.” — America 3.0. p51

  • BUT IS IT GENETIC?

      Yes, conservatives are INNATELY more critical of free-riders: “North Eurasian and Circumpolar hunter-gatherers (Hutterites and Amish, Puritans) will be more prone to altruistic punishment than those from Middle Old World culture area (Jews, Gypsies, Chinese)” “…. *** Puritan groups seem particularly prone to bouts of moralistic outrage directed at those of their own people seen as free riders and morally blameworthy.***” -Kevin MacDonald AND SO: Whether it is cultural or genetic or both doesn’t matter so much, although I’m in the 60/40 camp in favor of genetic on this topic. And the pareto rule would suggest that as long as you’re in a 90/10 proposition or less, diversity isn’t a problem. But two things are certain: a) people don’t actually assimilate outside of their gene pool, and b) our tribal differences – our tribal DIVERSITY is something very precious for everyone. Probably the ‘cuircumpolar’ in particular. Because that individualism is economically superior to group-ishness.

  • BUT IS IT GENETIC?

      Yes, conservatives are INNATELY more critical of free-riders: “North Eurasian and Circumpolar hunter-gatherers (Hutterites and Amish, Puritans) will be more prone to altruistic punishment than those from Middle Old World culture area (Jews, Gypsies, Chinese)” “…. *** Puritan groups seem particularly prone to bouts of moralistic outrage directed at those of their own people seen as free riders and morally blameworthy.***” -Kevin MacDonald AND SO: Whether it is cultural or genetic or both doesn’t matter so much, although I’m in the 60/40 camp in favor of genetic on this topic. And the pareto rule would suggest that as long as you’re in a 90/10 proposition or less, diversity isn’t a problem. But two things are certain: a) people don’t actually assimilate outside of their gene pool, and b) our tribal differences – our tribal DIVERSITY is something very precious for everyone. Probably the ‘cuircumpolar’ in particular. Because that individualism is economically superior to group-ishness.

  • The Melting Pot That Isn't

      Data is data. Turns out that what we melt is purely scientific, legal, and commercial; and what doesn’t melt is family, morality, metaphysics, and therefore politics. Or, what I would describe in Propertarian terms, as “explicitly calculable” implicit knowledge vs “inexplicitly calculable” tacit knowledge. We can structure formal institutions only for a subset of knowledge. Myth, tradition, ritual, family, morals, ethics, and manners are something that can also be institutionalized. And that us the conservative vision: formal institutions are not enough.

  • The Melting Pot That Isn’t

      Data is data. Turns out that what we melt is purely scientific, legal, and commercial; and what doesn’t melt is family, morality, metaphysics, and therefore politics. Or, what I would describe in Propertarian terms, as “explicitly calculable” implicit knowledge vs “inexplicitly calculable” tacit knowledge. We can structure formal institutions only for a subset of knowledge. Myth, tradition, ritual, family, morals, ethics, and manners are something that can also be institutionalized. And that us the conservative vision: formal institutions are not enough.