Tuesday, October 04, 2011
Koko on Kissin' Cousins
Koko the Talking Gorilla was recently interviewed by someone posing as a Der Spiegel journalist. Asked why she thinks the White and Yellow peoples will disappear, she said: "Because of Kissing Cousins".
"I mean because cousins are not kissing anymore. Animals need a certain level of inbreeding so deleterous mutations can be sifted out and their frequency reduced to tolerable levels. If not for inbreeding, bad genes will infect the gene pool, reducing the survivability of the population. In the last eight generations outbreeding and mixing is universal and the consequence is that the outbreeding gene pool has been filled with genetic pollution. The more mixed, the more unfit. Moreover," the non-stop chattering female continued, "when the only child is the rule, people has no sisters or cousins to kiss, so inbreeding becomes only a fantasy."
Colored people will survive because they are innocent of ideology and do what comes naturally. Some groups that never heard of HBD-Chick and are resistant to Political Correctness may also survive: the Pakistanis in Britain, that continue kissing their cousins even if the natives abhor the practice. The future is theirs. Elvis hit a nerve in "Kissin'Cousins" (pic) and his primitive hill tribe may survive too.
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3 comments:
Where did Koko study genetics? I always thought inbreeding was bad and hybrids had extra vigor. Inbreeding can reinforce certain traits but this cuts both ways - in the case of the Ashkenazim, you have high intelligence on the one hand, and various genetic diseases (Tay-Sachs, etc. ) on the other. Since many of these diseases are neurological, the two may not be unrelated.
K
@koko - 'Animals need a certain level of inbreeding so deleterous mutations can be sifted out and eliminated from the gene pool.'
yes, koko, i think you might need to hit the genetics books again. (~_^)
some extreme inbreeding will probably get rid of deleterious mutations since they will all be funnelled into one lineage, but more mild amounts of inbreeding will not have this effect. you'd have to inbreed so much that the line would die out to make this work.
like anonymous says, inbreeding cuts both ways -- it can be good or bad depending on which genes you're working with.
you do have great taste in movies, tho, koko! elvis! great choice! (^_^)
Koko says she was not talking about getting completely rid of deleterious mutated genes, but only to maintain them at a tolerable low frequency in the population.
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